President of Iceland Honors Clinicians for Medical Fish Skin Research

Kerecis, the company pioneering the use of fish skin in tissue regeneration, announced that the President of Iceland, HE Gudni Johannesson, has awarded the company’s Aurora Award to nurse Lisa Anne Jeffers and Dr. Bryan Folkers.

REYKJAVIK, Iceland, March 8, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Kerecis, the company pioneering the use of fish skin in tissue regeneration, today announced that the President of Iceland, HE Gudni Johannesson, has awarded the company’s Aurora Award to nurse Lisa Anne Jeffers and Dr. Bryan Folkers.

The president of Iceland, HE Gudni Johannesson, presented the Kerecis Aurora Awards to plastic surgeon Bryan Folkers (D.O. FACOS) and nurse practitioner Lisa Jeffers (CRNP, CWS) at the company’s Northern Lights Workshop in Reykjavik, Iceland. The awards are given to the best clinical research on the use of the Kerecis fish skin products, which was developed by G. Fertram Sigurjonsson, president and CEO of Kerecis (right).

Kerecis develops fish-skin products to heal human wounds and tissue damage. Because no disease-transfer risk exists between cold-water fish and humans, Kerecis’ gently processed fish skin can be used as a substitute for human skin. Mammalian-sourced skin needs to be harshly processed to eliminate the risk of disease transfer, which makes it more dissimilar to human skin and less potent to heal human wounds and tissue damage. Fish skin also contains Omega3 fatty acids that enhance wound healing.

Established by Kerecis in 2018, the Aurora Awards are granted to the best clinical research on the use of the Kerecis fish skin. An independent medical committee selected the winners through a blind review.

Nurse practitioner Lisa Jeffers, CRNP, CWS, received an award for her case series on typical wounds where Kerecis Omega3 Wound was used to provide dermal regeneration on exposed bone.

Plastic surgeon Bryan Folkers, D.O. FACOS, received an award for his multiple surgical cases on the use of Kerecis Omega3 Wound immediately post debridement.

Presented at the end of the first day of the Northern Lights Wound Workshop held in Reykjavik, Iceland, the awards are intended to honour excellence in wound treatment and encourage clinicians to collect their clinical success series on Kerecis Omega3 Wound applications.

The twice-yearly workshop explores new developments in regenerative wound healing by using the Kerecis fish-skin technology.

Kerecis also gave 12 other contestants educational grants to submit and present their cases at international or U.S. conferences in 2019. “Their well-documented clinical results will be invaluable in furthering the knowledge of how best to use fish-skin grafts for wound treatment in the future,” said G. Fertram Sigurjonsson, president and CEO of Kerecis.

About Kerecis

Kerecis is pioneering the use of fish skin and fatty-acids in the globally expanding cellular therapy and regenerative medicine market. The fatty-acid rich (including Omega3) products from the company’s patented technologies enable the body to regenerate tissues, rather than simply repair them and risk scarring. The Kerecis products, which are based on Omega3 rich fish skin, are currently being used to regenerate tissue in trauma and chronic wounds such as burns and diabetic wounds. Kerecis is also developing products for areas such as oral surgery, plastic surgery and neurological applications. The company’s mission is to support the body’s ability to regenerate tissues and its vision is to become a world leader in tissue regeneration. For more information, visit www.kerecis.com.

Kerecis is a trademark of Kerecis. All other company and product names are trademarks of their respective owners.

Contact
Kay Paumier
Communications Plus
408-370-2143
Cell: 408-806-1177
kay@communicationsplus.net

Kerecis, developers of fish-skin wound treatment (PRNewsfoto/Kerecis)

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SOURCE Kerecis

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