Convocation 2015: meet honorary grad Sir Richard Peto

Sir Richard Peto, FRS is professor of medical statistics and epidemiology at the University of Oxford, and co-director (with Professor Sir Rory Collins) of the Clinical Trial Service Unit and Epidemiological Studies Unit (CTSU).

He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1989 for introducing meta-analyses of randomised trials, was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 1999 for services to epidemiology, and received in 2010 and 2011 the Cancer Research UK and the BMJ Lifetime Achievement Award.

On Nov.11, the University of Toronto recognized Peto's extraordinary accomplishments during fall Convocation ceremonies with the awarding of a Doctor of Science, honoris causa.

Peto, Collins and others in the Oxford CTSU have, by their large randomised trials, significant prospective studies and worldwide meta-analyses, increased substantially the estimated importance of blood lipids, blood pressure and smoking as causes of premature death. Peto founded the Early Breast Cancer Trialists’ Collaborative Group (EBCTCG), which has demonstrated many moderate effects on long-term survival. He has recently collaborated in major studies of alcohol in Russia and of malaria in Africa and India.

His investigations into the worldwide health effects of smoking and benefits of stopping at particular ages have helped to communicate effectively the vast and growing burden of disease from tobacco use, have helped change national and international attitudes about smoking and public health, and have helped many smokers to stop.

He was the first to describe clearly the future worldwide health effects of current smoking patterns, predicting one billion deaths from tobacco in the present century if current smoking patterns persist, as against “only” 100 million in the 20th century.

Below, see Peto deliver an address at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine on Interpreting Large-scale, randomised evidence:

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