Aneisha Collins-Fairclough, Ph.D.
Dr. Collins-Fairclough is a molecular virologist who received her PhD in 2009 for her work in discovering three geminiviruses that circulate in Jamaica and describing their genetic and biological properties. This work provided substantial insights of the role of weeds in geminivirus infection of Jamaican crops and showed that wild plants threaten the viability of local agriculture as they may contribute to a resurgence of geminivirus epidemics of in Jamaican crops.
In 2010, Dr. Collins-Fairclough obtained a Fogarty AIDS International Training and Research Programme (AITRP) postdoctoral fellowship, which allowed her to gain training in HIV molecular epidemiology. In her postdoctoral research, Dr. Collins-Fairclough identified characteristic genetic features of HIV strains from Trinidad, that may account for HIV infected Trinidadians developing AIDS faster than other HIV infected cohorts globally. Dr. Collins-Fairclough currently lectures at the University of Technology, Jamaica.
Dr. Collins-Fairclough’s research interests include geminivirus molecular genetics and HIV molecular epidemiology and genetics. She has taught undergraduate courses in Biotechnology, General Biology, Human Biology, Introduction to Bioinformatics and Molecular Biology, is the primary author on 5 peer-reviewed journal publications and has coauthored additional scientific publications.
In the service arena, Dr. Collins-Fairclough is the Chairperson of the Projects Committee for the Jamaica Organic Agriculture Movement and reviewer and Editorial Team Member for the Journal of Aids and HIV Research (JAHR). She is also a guest lecturer for the annual “Concepts in Genetic Engineering Workshop” for Jamaican high school students and teachers.