The Robert Koch Medal and Award are two prizes awarded annually by the German
Robert Koch Foundation [
de] for excellence in the biomedical sciences. These awards grew out of early attempts by German physician
Robert Koch to generate funding to support his research into the cause and cure for tuberculosis. Koch discovered the bacteria (Mycobacterium tuberculosis) responsible for the dreaded disease and rapidly acquired international support, including 500,000 gold marks from the Scottish-American philanthropist
Andrew Carnegie.
The Robert Koch Prize
Since 1970, the Robert Koch Foundation has awarded prizes for major advances in the biomedical sciences, particularly in the fields of
microbiology and
immunology. The prestige of this award has grown over the past decades so that it is now widely regarded as the leading international scientific prize in microbiology. As has been described by a jury member for the prize, the committee often asks, "What would Robert Koch work on today?” to decide on research that should be granted recognition.
The more specific Robert Koch Prize is commonly considered one of the stepping-stones (along with other prizes such as the
Lasker Award) to eventual
Nobel Prize recognition for scientists in the fields of microbiology and immunology, and a number of Robert Koch Prize winners subsequently became Nobel laureates, such as
César Milstein,
Susumu Tonegawa and
Harald zur Hausen. Other notable awardees include
Albert Sabin,
Jonas Salk and
John Enders for their pioneering work on the development of polio vaccines. Only Enders was recognized with a Nobel Prize, together with
Thomas Huckle Weller and
Frederick Chapman Robbins.
Two separate Robert Koch Awards are presented annually: The Gold Robert Koch Gold Medal for accumulated excellence in biomedical research and the Robert Koch Prize, worth €120,000, for a major discovery in biomedical science.