During Research Day, medical students present their research projects to faculty, peers and juniors // Credit: Pixel.i Photography for Duke-NUS
How Professor
Wang Linfa of the
Emerging Infectious Diseases Programme at Duke-NUS, and Dr Wharton Chan, an MD-PhD student of the Class of 2025, met was, like all the best collaborations, entirely by chance.
While Chan was completing the last year of his undergraduate degree at the University of Oxford, Wang happened to be visiting his son—and taking the concurrent opportunity to give a guest lecture at the University. Sitting in the audience at Wang’s seminar, Chan was so inspired by Wang’s novel work in bat biology and emerging bat viruses that he had to act. As soon as the seminar was over, Chan wrote an email to Wang to request working under his supervision as a PhD candidate.
It helped that Chan had already been considering Duke-NUS as one of his options for postgraduate study, with his eyes on the MD-PhD programme, where students get to do a four-year PhD, sandwiched between four years of medical education. “I knew I wanted to do research, but closer to home, which is in Hong Kong.”
Describing how research fits into a clinician’s playbook, Chan said: “I think it’s an indispensable toolset for clinicians—not all clinicians need to do research, but in interpreting and analysing data, and to further clinical acumen and prowess, it is very important, especially as medicine is a rapidly advancing field in science.” Because of this focus on research, and research that “has real-world implications and reach” in particular, Duke-NUS would eventually become Chan’s land of plenty—when it came to academic inquiry—for the better part of a decade.
Wang, reading Chan’s email, had his interest piqued, yet took his usual critical approach to the offer. “Of course, being from Oxford, and actively pursuing [an MD-PhD], were tick marks in my book. But I don’t just take students based on one email,” Wang laughed. He proceeded to offer Chan a summer internship so they might be able to have a chance at a “mutual selection”—it was important to Wang that they meshed well, and not merely intellectually.
Wang mused, “I would say that sometimes I think I’m really lucky, and sometimes Wharton thinks he’s really lucky, especially from something like a chance encounter.” For Wang, it was Chan’s excellent work ethic and attitude that made him stand out as a candidate for mentorship. Even the other members of the lab, all highly motivated and dedicated in their own right, had told Wang that he had to accept Chan into the laboratory, such was the impression the aspiring clinician-scientist had made.