Suzanne Chanteau

1952 -

Suzanne Chanteau (born 27 June 1952) is a French Polynesian medical researcher who directed the Pasteur Institute in New Caledonia from 2008 to 2013. She is notable for developing rapid diagnostic tests for plague, cholera, and bacterial meningitis. Chanteau was born in Papeete. After studying biology in France, she worked at the Malardé Institute in Tahiti from 1975 to 1993, working on Ciguatera fish poisoningg and Lymphatic filariasis. In 1994 she began working for the Pasteur Institute, initially in Madagascar, where she worked on Tuberculosis and Plague. In Madagascar she developed a rapid diagnostic method for plague and a rapid test for Cholera. In 2002 she was appointed director of the Pasteur Institute's research center in Niger, studying Meningitis. Again, she developed a rapid diagnostic test for the disease. From 2008 to 2013 she was director of the Pasteur Institute in New Caledonia. Source: Wikipedia (en)

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