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13 December 2023 | Story André Damons | Photo Charl Devenish
Prof Lotter receives Chancellor’s Medal for outstanding service
Prof Mattheus Lötter, former Head of the Department of Medical Physics and Chief Director at the University of the Free State (UFS), received the University of the Free State (UFS) Chancellor’s Medal for outstanding service during the university’s December graduation ceremonies.

Prof Mattheus Lötter, former Head of the Department of Medical Physics and Chief Director at the University of the Free State (UFS), was honoured with the prestigious UFS Chancellor’s Medal for outstanding service during the university’s December graduation ceremonies.

Prof Lötter received the Chancellor’s Medal from the Faculty of Health Sciences during the Friday (8 December 2023) graduation ceremony. The conferral was postponed from the April 2023 graduation ceremonies due to a personal loss experienced by Prof Lötter.

“It is a great honour. I did not expect it, as I have been retired for so long now. I was really surprised when I got a call from Prof (Francis) Petersen (Vice-Chancellor and Principal) to say that I was receiving this medal,” said Prof Lötter after the ceremony.

Great being at the UFS

According to him, it was great to be back at the UFS. He was impressed with the UFS Faculty of Health Sciences and the Department of Medical Physics, which he joined in 1972 as part of the joint staff of the UFS and Provincial Administration shortly after it was established.

The Chancellor’s Medal is awarded for outstanding service or achievement at local, national, or international level, or for service to the community or the university.

Prof Lötter holds a BSc, BScHons, and MSc in Physics as well as a PhD in Medical Sciences from Stellenbosch University. He started in medical physics at Addington Hospital in 1962, and in 1965 he registered as medical physicist with the Health Professions Board.

In 1975, he was awarded the Fogarty International Postdoctoral Fellowship for research in the Department of Nuclear Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, USA. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 1980, to Professor in 1982, and served from 1990 to 2004 as Head of the Department of Medical Physics and Chief Director.

Represented medical physicists

Prof Lötter represented medical physicists in the Health Professions Council from 1981 to retirement in 2004. During this period, educational standards and ethical rules for the medical physics profession were approved.

The required academic training and internship were successfully applied, and the Department of Medical Physics became the leading training centre and provided quality professional service at the Universitas Academic Hospital. The quality of training is reflected by the many senior positions in medical physics held by former students.

Prof Lötter was a member, as well as board member and president of the following scientific societies for a term: SA Association of Physicists in Medicine and Biology, and the SA Society of Nuclear Medicine. He was a member of the USA Society of Nuclear Medicine from 1972 to 2004.

He was appointed by the Minister of Health as member of the council of the South African Medical Research Council from 1991 to 1994.

News Archive

UFS presents unique rally
2005-06-07

On Friday 10 June 2005, the University of the Free State (UFS) will present the Kovsie version of the Amazing Race in Bloemfontein.

The Amazing Rainbow Rally will be held in aid of children and babies with serious diseases in the Department of Pediatrics and Child Health in the Faculty of Health Sciences.

By raising the necessary funds, equipment can be acquired to meet the unique health care needs of these special patients.  It will also enable the UFS to maintain the high standards of education, training and research in this field.

 The Amazing Rainbow Rally will give some residents of Bloemfontein an opportunity to test their knowledge of the city, as well as their time management skills, communication skills, team work and even their relationships! 

About 12 corporate teams from among others Vodacom, Eskom, Medi-Clinic, Mimosa Mall and Nedbank and four university teams must follow a specific route with various checkpoints by car.  Here they will have to complete activities or solve clues before receiving their clue to the next checkpoint.  Teams will be traveling with cars branded with the logo of the company they represent.

The rally will start at 09:00 at the Rooiplein of the UFS and will again end on the campus where they will complete the last task.  The first team to complete this task is the winner of Bloemfontein’s first Amazing Rainbow Rally.

OFM’s breakfast team will do live crossings on the day to reveal how teams are doing.

The Department of Pediatrics and Child Health at the UFS serves children with special needs, in other words children who need intensive care, or who suffer from cancer, heart disease, neurological diseases and conditions, endocrinological diseases or gastro-enterological conditions.

The Department provides secondary health care to more than 250 000 children in the southern parts of the Free State, but is responsible for the tertiary care of about a million children in the Free State and Northern Cape, as well as some parts of the North-West province, the Eastern Cape and Lesotho.  The intensive care units at Universitas and Pelonomi Hospitals serve approximately 1 300 neonatal and 350 intensive care patients annually.  The pediatric cardiology unit admits almost 300 high care heart patients per year.  Approximately 13 000 out-patients visit these two hospitals every year.

MEDIA RELEASE

Issued by:  Lacea Loader
   Media Representative
   Tel:  (051) 401-2584
   Cell:  083 645 2454
   E-mail:  loaderl.stg@mail.uovs.ac.za

7 June 2005
 

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