He was born to an orthodox Brahmin family in Srikakulam, Andhra Pradesh, South India
to V. Gumpaswami and V. Sundaramma. His father was a government
servant. The greatest single influence on Rama was that of his paternal
grandfather, Vulimiri Ramalingaswami, after whom he was named. His
grandfather carried the honorific title of ‘Pantulu Gaaru’ which in
Telugu means ‘respected teacher’. He was a scholar of Sanskrit, Telugu,
and English, and was a graduate in English literature from Madras
University. A staunch nationalist who did not want to serve under an
alien government, his grandfather chose to be headmaster of a high
school started by the Raja of Bobbili, which he developed into the best school in the Andhra Pradesh of that time. He received his medical education from Andhra Medical College, Vishakapatnam and then went on a scholarship to Oxford. His pioneering research on nutrition got him elected to the National Academy of Sciences, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences and the Royal Society of London. He was also the director of All India Institute of Medical Sciences and later on director general of Indian Council of Medical Research and President of the Indian National Science Academy.
He was regarded a teacher of international repute in the areas of nutritional deficiency.He became the Director of the institute and served the premier institute for 10 years 1969-1979). He became the Director General of Indian Council of Medical Research, New Delhi.
In remembrance of his great service, the Indian Government has decided
to name the Indian Council of Medical Research building after him
(Ramalingaswami Bhavan). He was also President of the Indian National Science Academy. He was Special Advisor to World Health Organization
and President of National Institute of Immunology. He has served as
Chair of the International Task Force on Health Research for Development
in Geneva (1990–93). He was Secretary-General of the International
Conference on Nutrition, in Rome in December 1992, which was held under
the auspices of the World Health Organization and the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. He was appointed to the
Board of Governors of the International Development Research Centre
(IDRC), Canada in 1999. His contributions to pathophysiology of protein
energy malnutrition are well known. His classical experiments on
correction of Iodine deficiency by supplementation of common salt with
potassium iodate laid foundation for the National Iodine Deficiency
Control Programme. He has significant contributions in the discovery of
new syndrome of Non-cirrhotic Portal Fibrosis (NCPF) and Indian
Childhood Cirrhosis. He has been honored with Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Award by Council of Scientific and Industrial Research in 1967 and Padma Shri in 1969, Padma Bhushan and Padma Vibhushan by Government of India, KK Birla National Award, and Basanti Devi Amirchand Prize (ICMR) in 1966. Leon Bernard Foundation Award was presented to him by Sir Harold Walter, president of the 1976 World Health Assembly.
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