Lynette Shek Pei Chi is currently Head and Senior Consultant of the Division of General Ambulatory Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine and also of the Division of Paediatric Allergy, Immunology and Rheumatology at the National University Hospital. She obtained her basic medical degree from the National University of Singapore with honours in 1994 and received her paediatric training at the National University Hospital from 1996 to 2001. She attained her postgraduate paediatric degree in 1997. She was accredited as a paediatric specialist by the Ministry of Health, Singapore in 2001 and became a Fellow of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore in 2004. She has been a member of the Faculty of Medicine, Department of Paediatrics since 1996, and was promoted to Associate Professor in 2007. She is also visiting consultant in Paediatric Rheumatology at KK Women's and Children's Hospital, Singapore. Her specialist training in allergy was undertaken from 2002 to 2003 at Mt Sinai School of Medicine, New York. There, she trained under Prof Hugh Sampson, a world-renowned expert in the field of allergy. She also spent some time under the tutelage of Prof Thomas Lehman, Chief, Division of Paediatric Rheumatology, at the Hospital for Special Surgery, New York. Since her return in 2004, she has practised as a paediatrician at NUH.
Her clinical practice involves all areas of general paediatrics, with special interests in the fields of allergy, immunodeficiency and rheumatology. She sees adult patients with allergy and immunodeficiency in NUH as well. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. She is also actively involved in research and is a member of both the Asthma & Allergy Research Programme and the Human & Molecular Research Programme at the National University of Singapore. She has published her work on allergy and rheumatology in numerous medical journals. Among the awards, she has received is the President's Scholarship to study medicine at NUS. She also received numerous undergraduate awards for being first in her medical school class 3 years in a row. She won the NUH Young Doctor's Award in 1999 for her research on the genetics of asthma and atopy in local Chinese Children. She was the youngest recipient of the NMRC-BMRC Clinician Scientist Investigator Award in 2005. In 2011, she won the Clinician Scientist (Investigator) Award for her work in early childhood rhinitis at the National Medical Research Council (NMRC) Awards Ceremony.
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