Skip to main content
Louis Weinstein

The Louis Weinstein Lecture, established in 1977 by Tufts University School of Medicine, honors one of Tufts Medical Center's (Tufts MC) great teachers and the first Chief of Infectious Diseases at the hospital, Louis Weinstein, M.D., Ph.D.

The purpose of the lecture is to encourage interest in and understanding of the basic biological mechanisms of host-parasite relationships and the molecular basis of infectious diseases.

The 43rd Annual Weinstein Lecture

"A Tale of Two Epidemics"

Lecturer: Eric Rubin, MD, PhD
Editor-in-Chief of the New England Journal of Medicine
Alumnus of the MD-PhD program of Tufts University School of Medicine

Friday, September 30, 2022 at noon
Sheldon M. Wolff Auditorium
Tufts Medical Center
Atrium Basement
800 Washington Street
Boston, MA 02111

View our past lectures

Display title
Infectious Diseases Fellowship – Louis Weinstein Lecture

The Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Diseases at Tufts Medical Center (Tufts MC) is proud to be the institution where Frank Tally’s incredible legacy will be forever recognized through an endowed fellowship.  

The fellowship allows us to recruit some of the world’s finest talent – young physician-researchers who are deeply motivated, as Frank Tally was – to revolutionize the treatment of devastating infectious diseases.

Francis (Frank) P. Tally, M, D was a visionary leader in the fight against infectious diseases. As a physician, researcher and professor at Tufts MC and Tufts University School of Medicine from 1975 to 1986, Dr. Tally was an internationally recognized expert on mechanisms and transferability of bacterial drug resistance. Later, in the 1980s and until his death in October 2006, he led teams of scientists at Lederle Laboratories, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals and Cubist Pharmaceuticals, Inc., in developing 4 major intravenous antibacterial drugs. While serving as Chief Scientific Officer at Cubist, Dr. Tally became increasingly concerned about methicillin-resistant S. aureus and co-invented a key patent leading to the development of Cubicin® (daptomycin for injection), a revolutionary antibiotic used to treat bloodstream and heart infections.

When Frank Tally died at the peak of his career, his family and his colleagues at Cubist colleagues decided it was only fitting to honor his great achievements. His wife Barbara and 3 children, Dr. Kevin Tally, Michaela Tally and Patrick Tally, along with colleagues and friends at Cubist Pharmaceuticals, including Cubist’s President and Chief Executive Officer, Mike Bonney and his wife Alison, created the Dr. Francis P. Tally Endowed Fellowship in Infectious Diseases at Tufts MC. Their generosity, in partnership with the support of Cubist Pharmaceuticals, raised a total of $1.25 million. As an endowment, The Tally Fellowship will ensure that future generations of physicians can, in the spirit of Frank Tally, strive to find therapies that will help millions of patients worldwide.

Since the October 2011 celebration of the fellowship, the Tally Fellows include:

  • Eavan Muldoon, MD
  • Masako Mizusawa, MD
  • Bradley Gardiner, MBBS
  • Paul Adjei, MBBS
  • Jessica Penney, MD, MPH
  • Majd Alsoubani, MD
Display title
Infectious Diseases Fellowship – Tally Fellowship

During fellowship, fellows present at major national and international meetings including

  • ASM Microbe
  • ID Week (the joint meeting of several ID-related societies including the Infectious Diseases Society of America)
  • Society of Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) annual meeting,
  • the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI).
  • The American Society for Transplantation

Each fellow is sponsored by the program to attend at least one meeting during their fellowship. Our fellows have received multiple awards for their presentations.

  • Our fellow are well-prepared for boards with a 2 year curriculum of didactic lectures.
  • Former fellows are or have been medical school deans, chairs or vice-chairs of medicine departments, chiefs of infectious disease services, and leaders in our professional societies.
  • Our fellows compete successfully for NIH loan repayment and for NIH-sponsored career awards (K series).
  • Fellows take part in research projects that lead to a number of publications.
Tufts ID Fellows have incredible accomplishments during and after fellowship. Most importantly, Tufts ID Fellows are highly competitive for the jobs that they seek!
Our mentorship program has been cited as exemplary by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. We believe that attentive, individualized mentorship is most helpful in supporting our fellows in reaching their desired goals.

We have approximately 25 post-doctoral trainees each year who are supported by National Institutes of Health training programs as well as by federal and private agency funding to individual faculty. Our world-renowned researchers in infectious diseases facilitate the program and conduct ground-breaking research that has had large impacts on the field. Our faculty are also among the top editors of the Clinical Infectious Diseases journal.

The program is structured to train fellows with an MD degree, who have completed at least one year of clinical training in Infectious Diseases, as well as fellows with a PhD or DVM degree who wish to pursue postdoctoral studies.  During the first year of Infectious Diseases fellowship, fellows gain exposure to all the research in the Division through meetings and poster sessions, in order to facilitate the fellow's choice of mentor, mentorship committee and project that is a best fit for the fellow's career goals and aspirations.

 

Training in clinical, basic or translational Infectious Diseases research is a major focus of the Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Diseases.

Our fellows rotate through our inpatient and outpatient clinics, allowing them to gain experience in the full range of geographic medicine and infectious diseases. Highlights of our clinical fellowship include:

  • At least 6 months of protected time for research and at least 12 clinical months
  • Outpatient clinical training with 24 months of continuity clinic
  • 6 months of research tailored to the fellow's area of interest
  • At least 1 sponsored trip to a major infectious disease meeting
  • Opportunity to select a  specific area of concentration:
  • Formal training in how to be a clinician educator, with teaching opportunities
  • Training in how to use an electronic medical record to manage and interact with patients

Clinical rotations at the 3 program hospitals provide a rich and diverse experience in infectious diseases. Fellows encounter a wide variety of fascinating cases during their clinical training. Each hospital's infectious disease board-certified faculty supervises fellows in all inpatient and outpatient settings. Night and weekend on-call duties are distributed among the clinical fellows to cover Tufts Medical Center. There is no in-house overnight call.

Infectious Disease Clinical Training
Jump back to top