Harvard Public Health Review
Winter 2011
happiness & health Are good moods good medicine?
Also Inside: Biofuels from Algae Shrinking the Effects of the Obesity Epidemic Alumni Winners: What They Learned During Their Careers 2010 Gift Report
HARVARD
School of Public Health
Dean’s Message
The Multiplying Effect
“P
hilanthropy” comes to us from the ancient
The scientific insights sown at the School take root
Greek word “philanthropos,” which means
around the world. Whether it be the designated driver pro-
“loving humankind.”
gram, limiting trans fats in food, developing better treat-
Loving humankind. As flowery as that may sound
ment programs to prevent mother-to-child transmission of
today, it is the animating mission of the Harvard School of
AIDS, or analyzing the effects of health reforms around the
Public Health. All the work we do—from research to edu-
world, research at the School is saving lives and improving
cation to policy translation—has that value at its core.
the health of millions.
And as the School has shown, philanthropy has a
Over the centuries, philanthropy has taken different
proven multiplicative effect. It is an investment that pays off
forms. What began as charity is now seen as a practical
again and again—in the lives and dreams of individuals, in
means to create a better life. Today’s idea of civic invest-
the aspirations and well-being of societies.
ment—in which enlightened citizens invest in a worthy
This issue of the Review includes our annual reporting of those who have donated their time and their treasure to furthering the School’s mission. Their contributions help fund the training of 500 new
social cause—is one that I especially like. The returns are almost incalculable: the greater good of humankind. I would like to thank all those listed in this report for your philanthropy and for your investment in the health of
graduates who go out into the world each spring, fueled by
the world. Together with our students, faculty, and staff,
passion and knowledge, to make a difference.
you are truly contributing to that greater good.
Their donations finance early stages of research on an innovative idea, ultimately building a priceless scientific base. Their gifts enable the facts about “what works” in public health to find their way to key decision makers. Philanthropy’s multiplying effect can be seen at the highest echelons of global and national health policy. Six of the last 10 directors of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are HSPH alums. So is Gro Harlem Brundtland, the former prime minister of Norway, who served as director-general of the World Health Organization from 1998 to 2003. So is Suraya Dalil, acting minister of public health in Afghanistan. So are countless others ocglobal organizations, and business.
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Harvard Public Health Review
Julio Frenk Dean of the Faculty and T & G Angelopoulos Professor of Public Health and International Development, Harvard School of Public Health
Kent Dayton/HSPH
cupying influential positions in government, civil society,
Harvard Public Health Review
Winter 2011
8 Happiness & Health The biology of emotion—and what it may teach us about helping people to live longer
4
2 Dean’s Message The Multiplying Effect 4 From Pond to Pump HSPH student sees the future of energy production—and cleaner, healthier skies—in tiny green algae.
14
Also in this Issue 28 Harvard School of Public Health Annual Gift Report 2010 30 Event Highlights The Gift Report 34 Alumni
14 Shrinking the Effects of the Obesity Epidemic If we can’t stop Americans from getting heavier, can we at least prevent them from getting sick with obesity-related diseases?
40 Individuals
20 Alumni Weekend 2010
54 Founders Circle
21 Shattuck International House Nurturing an Extended Family
56 Faculty, Staff, and Faculty Emeriti
22 Alumni Award of Merit Our 2010 winners offer surprising lessons from their careers.
61 Financial Highlights
46 Corporations, Foundations, and Organizations 49 Annual Giving 53 Tribute Gifts
57 Volunteers
26 The Forum at Harvard School of Public Health Launching a high-tech, global conversation Image Credits: top, Kent Dayton/HSPH; center, Daniel Aguilar/Reuters; bottom, ©Ocean/Corbis
Environmental Health
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Harvard Public Health Review
B
irds no longer fall dead out of the sky in Mexico City. One of the most polluted spots on Earth 20 years ago—when it was dubbed “Makesicko City” by novelist Carlos Fuentes—Mexico City is emerging from the thick blanket of smog that afflicted residents with ailments ranging from irritated eyes and headaches to asthma, heart disease, and lung cancer. Actions taken by the Mexican government to reduce emissions have been praised by international experts as a model for the rest of the developing world. But as this sprawling metropolis of 20 million people—and 4 million vehicles—continues to grow, new solutions must be found to keep it moving in a healthy and sustainable direction. Harvard School of Public Health doctoral student Ramon Sanchez, who will graduate in 2011 with a degree in environmental
health, sees hope for the massive energy needs of Mexico City, and the rest of the world, in a new and sustainable source of biofuel: algae. Air Pollution: 2 million deaths yearly
handle, Getty Images; pond, Kent Dayton/HSPH at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University
According to the World Health Organization, air pollution causes approximately 2 million premature deaths worldwide each year. More than half of the disease burden from air pollution strikes in developing countries. WHO recommends lowering concentrations of several of the most common air contaminants emitted during the combustion of fossil fuels to reduce air pollution and improve health. Converting to cleaner-burning fuels derived from biomass such as algae, fermented corn and soybeans, or recycled cooking oil would help achieve this goal. In Mexico City, changing fuel for 165,000 diesel vehicles to biodiesel would go a long way toward reducing the amount of dangerous airborne
From Pond to Pump
particulates breathed in by its residents. For his thesis, Sanchez is using pollutant emissions and statistical models to study the potential health effects of such a change. Even increasing the proportion of biodiesel by just 20 percent, he says, would make a dramatic difference in the prevention of cardiopulmonary diseases and lung cancer, which could save the Mexican health system approximately $90 million annually. With Mexico pledging to reduce its carbon footprint by 50 percent by 2050 and having just hosted the December 2010 United Nations Climate Change Conference, the political climate could be ripe for such a change. Acquiring data is key to making an objective case for changing energy policy, says Sanchez. A mechanical engineer, he took up the cause of biofuels while working in the automotive industry. But he lacked the tools continued
HSPH student sees the future of energy production— and cleaner, healthier skies— in tiny green algae.
Winter 2011
5
Ramon Sanchez, SD ’11, holds a flask filled with algae—a potential source of biofuel.
to quantify why switching to cleaner fuel made good public health and economic sense. “It’s not enough to say, ‘I’m eating organic,’ or, ‘I’m changing my lightbulbs.’ Give me a number,” says Sanchez. “Only an accounting process can tell you what you are really accomplishing.” Renewable energy may be more expensive now, but when taking into account the longterm costs to society in health and environmental damage, petroleum is actually more expensive, he says.
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Harvard Public Health Review
Game Changer
“Ramon’s work is a game changer,” says his adviser, John Spengler, Akira Yamaguchi Professor of Environmental Health and Human Habitation. “Nobody else is looking at the production, cost, and health benefits of biofuels and quantifying them for Mexico.” This is important now, Spengler says, because in addition to the direct health consequences of air pollution, such as cardiovascular and respiratory ailments, the climate warming caused by pollution triggers additional health problems. According to Spengler, the recent uptick in extreme weather events and record temperatures has brought flooding to Pakistan, for example. It has also increased the risk of heatstroke and expanded the habitats of diseasespreading mosquitoes and ticks. “Public health is all about preventing disease,” Sanchez says. “I intend to prevent disease, but over a long time frame. Reducing carbon dioxide emissions today could prevent someone in
Microalgae produce six times more ethanol than corn and 40 times more biodiesel than soy. tial added benefit, an algae farm built near a high-polluting power plant or oil refinery could scrub the CO2 and other pollutants from the air, making the operation carbon-neutral with significant reductions in other pollutants. Corporations dipping their toes
The United States Department of Energy recently recognized the promise
This page, Kent Dayton/HSPH at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University; opposite, REUTERS/Daniel Aguilar
Unlike biofuel from corn and soybeans, algae farming doesn’t imperil the food supply and uses far fewer resources for a far higher yield. It can be produced on marginal lands such as deserts and supplied with wastewater.
Bangladesh from getting sick 40 years from now.” While he has been completing his studies at HSPH, Sanchez and his twin brother, Jose, who earned an SM in Environmental Health Management from HSPH in 2005, have been laying the groundwork for a microalgae farming operation back home in Mexico. Grown in ponds or other aquatic systems, microalgae thrive on carbon dioxide while pumping oxygen into the atmosphere. Unlike biofuel derived from corn and soybeans, algae farming doesn’t imperil the food supply. It uses far fewer resources—operations can be launched on marginal lands such as deserts and supplied with wastewater—for a far higher yield. Microalgae produce six times more ethanol than corn, for example, and 40 times more biodiesel than soy. The high-protein residue left behind after the oil is extracted can be used as animal feed. Some strains can be processed to produce oil for human consumption that is rich in healthy omega-3 fatty acids. And as a substan-
of microalgae, awarding $24 million in grants in June to three research groups exploring how to make algaebased biofuels commercially viable. Large corporations are also dipping their toes in the algae pond, in some cases even looking at genetically modified algae to increase production.
According to WHO, air pollution causes about 2 million premature deaths worldwide each year. Sanchez, who questions what the potential consequences to marine ecosystems could be if genetically modified algae were to escape the
production fields, chooses instead to work with local algae strains. This keeps production costs lower and reduces environmental risk, he says. He believes that microalgae currently are capable of supplying 5 percent of the world’s energy within 15 years—if substantial investment were made in infrastructure starting today. But in reality, he predicts it will take between 25 to 30 years. Developing countries may leapfrog ahead
Real innovation in the use of biofuel is likely to happen in the developing world, Sanchez says. With less invested in the fossil fuels infrastructure than in the U.S., countries
Estimated annual drop in health problems in Mexico City by substituting 20% of diesel fuel with biodiesel
136 Premature deaths from air pollution
21,440 Asthma attacks
10,523 Acute bronchitis episodes
398,050 Work days lost by adults because of health problems triggered by air pollution
558,737 Work days lost for women because their children’s activities are restricted due to air pollution
Mexico City’s Reforma Boulevard disappears into a haze of smog as the capital’s air quality descended to unhealthy levels in 1999. Developing nations are more apt to adopt new energy technologies.
like Mexico are more open to new solutions for providing much needed energy to their citizens. Just as many consumers in China and Africa bypassed land lines and went straight to cell phones, developing countries may leapfrog the rest of the world into a clean energy future, according to Sanchez. If the United States develops the political will to expand its use of biofuel from nonedible crops, Sanchez plans to be ready. Pointing to a raised floor in HSPH’s Department of Environmental Health, which houses its energy-saving heating and cooling system, he says, “This is what your experience of biofuel will be like 50 years from now—you won’t notice the difference. It will be seamless.” But the health benefits will be striking. Amy Roeder is assistant editor of the Review. Winter 2011
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Society, Human Development, & Health
The biology of emotion— and what it may teach us about helping people to live longer
8
Harvard Public Health Review
happiness & health fewer colds and less heart
C
detailed how negative emotions harm
explains that early childhood “toxic
disease?
the body. Serious, sustained stress or
stress”—the sustained activation of
fear can alter biological systems in a
the body’s stress response system
protect against hypertension, diabetes,
way that, over time, adds up to “wear
resulting from such early life experi-
and respiratory tract infections?
and tear” and, eventually, illnesses
ences as chronic neglect, exposure to
such as heart disease, stroke, and dia-
violence, or living alone with a parent
betes. Chronic anger and anxiety can
suffering severe mental illness—has
disrupt cardiac function by changing
harmful effects on the brain and oth-
that researchers are asking as they
the heart’s electrical stability, hasten-
er organ systems. Among these effects
explore a new—and sometimes con-
ing atherosclerosis, and increasing
is a hair-trigger physiological response
troversial—avenue of public health:
systemic inflammation.
to stress, which can lead to a faster
ould a sunny outlook mean
Do hope and curiosity somehow
Do happier people live longer— and, if so, why? These are the kinds of questions
documenting and understanding the
A vast scientific literature has
Jack P. Shonkoff, Julius B.
link between positive emotions and
Richmond FAMRI Professor of
good health.
Child Health and Development at
Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School,
heart rate, higher blood pressure, and a jump in stress hormones. continued
HSPH and at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and Professor of
Kent Dayton/HSPH
Winter 2011
9
Focusing on the Positive
a mystery. But when we understand
“But negative emotions are only
the set of processes involved, we will
Keys To
one-half of the equation,” says
have much more insight into how
Laura Kubzansky, HSPH associate
health works.”
A Happier, Healthier Life
professor of society, human develop-
Kubzansky is at the forefront of
ment, and health. “It looks like there
such research. In a 2007 study that
is a benefit of positive mental health
followed more than 6,000 men and
that goes beyond the fact that you’re
women aged 25 to 74 for 20 years, for
not depressed. What that is is still
example, she found that emotional
Long-term stress and negative moods alter biology in ways that, over time, add up to “wear and tear” on biological systems and, eventually, to illness.
vitality—a sense of enthusiasm, of hopefulness, of engagement in life, and the ability to face life’s stresses with emotional balance—appears to reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. The protective effect was distinct and measurable, even when taking into account such wholesome behaviors as not smoking and regular exercise. Among dozens of published papers, Kubzansky has shown that children who are able to stay focused on a task and have a more positive outlook at age 7 report better general health and fewer illnesses 30 years later. She has found that optimism cuts the risk of coronary heart disease by half. Kubzansky’s methods illustrate the creativity needed to do research at the novel intersection of experimental psychology and public health. In the emotional vitality study, for example, she used information that had originally been collected in the massive National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, or NHANES, an ongoing program that assesses the health and nutritional status of adults and children in the United States. Starting with the NHANES measure known as the “General Well-Being Schedule,” Kubzansky crafted an adaptation that instead
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Harvard Public Health Review
Research suggests that certain personal attributes— whether inborn or shaped by positive life circumstances— help some people avoid or healthfully manage diseases such as heart attacks, strokes, diabetes, and depression. These include: • Emotional vitality: a sense of enthusiasm, hopefulness, engagement • Optimism: the perspective that good things will happen, and that one’s actions account for the good things that occur in life • Supportive networks of family and friends • Being good at “selfregulation,” i.e.: Bouncing back from stressful challenges and knowing that things will eventually look up again Choosing healthy behaviors such as physical activity and eating well Avoiding risky behaviors such as unsafe sex, drinking alcohol to excess, and regular overeating
Laura Kubzansky doesn’t want her research on positive emotions to be used to blame people for getting sick.
reflected emotional vitality, and then
negative moods and self-destructive
up period, an effect unrelated to
scientifically validated her new mea-
habits. Kubzansky and others
behaviors such as smoking, drinking,
sure. Her research has also drawn on
disagree. They believe that there is
and physical activity. Social ties in-
preexisting data from the Veterans
more to the phenomenon—and that
cluded marriage, contact with friends
Administration Normative Aging
scientists are only beginning to glean
and relatives, organizational and
Study, the National Collaborative
the possible biological, behavioral,
church membership.
Perinatal Project, and other decades-
and cognitive mechanisms.
long prospective studies. In essence, Kubzansky is leveraging gold-standard epidemiological methods to ask new public health questions. “I’m being opportunistic,”
Kubzansky is drawing on preexisting data to ask new public health questions. “I’m being opportunistic,” she says. “I don’t want to wait 30 years for an answer.”
she says. “I don’t want to wait 30 years for an answer.” State of Mind = State of Body
Some public health professionals contend that the apparent beneficial effects of positive emotions do not Kent Dayton/HSPH
stem from anything intrinsically protective in upbeat mind states, but rather from the fact that positive emotions mark the absence of
Previous work supports this
A Happiness Policy?
contention. In 1979, Lisa Berkman,
If scientists proved unequivocally that
director of the Harvard Center for
positive moods improve health, would
Population and Development Studies,
policymakers act? Some observe that,
co-authored a seminal study of nearly
in the U.S., we define “happiness” in
7,000 adults in Alameda County,
economic terms—the pursuit of mate-
California. Participants who reported
rial goods. They contend that even an
fewer social ties at the beginning of
continued
the survey were more than twice as likely to die over the nine-year followWinter 2011
11
avalanche of research showing that
of chronic diseases related to these
emotional well-being protected health
conditions is enormous. “Imagine if
late to cultivate these qualities, she
would have no traction in the policy
we could enact a policy that would
says. While psychotherapy or medita-
world. Many Americans believe, after
reduce heart disease by just 1%,” sug-
tion may work for one person, some-
all, that people are responsible for
gests Shonkoff. “How many billions
one else may prefer faith-based activi-
their own lives.
of dollars and how many lives would
ties, sports, or simply spending time
that save? Now what if we could also
with friends. “My guess is that many
implications. “In public health, it’s
reduce diabetes—which is growing
of the people who are chronically dis-
important to understand how we can
in epidemic proportions—and even
tressed never figured out how to come
translate guidelines into behavior,”
stroke?” The point, Shonkoff says, is
back from a bad experience, focus on
notes Eric Rimm, HSPH associ-
that society pays a considerable cost
something different, or change their
ate professor in the Departments of
for treating chronic diseases in adult-
perspective.”
Epidemiology and Nutrition, and
hood, and reducing toxic stress early
director of the program in cardiovas-
in life may actually get out in front of
Mapping Happiness
cular epidemiology. “Seventy to 80
these diseases to prevent them.
Drawing on recently compiled data
But others see direct policy
Even in adulthood, it’s not too
from a nationally representative study
percent of heart attacks in this coun-
Kubzansky concedes that psy-
try occur not because of genetics nor
chological states such as anxiety or
of older adults, Kubzansky is begin-
through some mysterious causative
depression—or happiness and opti-
ning to map what she calls “the social
factors. It’s through lifestyle choices
mism—are forged by both nature and
distribution of well-being.” She is
people make: diet, smoking, exercise.
nurture. “They are 40–50 percent
working with information collected
Why are people choosing to do these things? Does mood come into play?” The toll of toxic stress goes far beyond poorer health for individuals—population-wide, the cost
One study showed that children able to stay focused on a task had a more positive outlook at age 7—and reported better health and fewer illnesses 30 years later. heritable, which means you may be born with the genetic predisposition. But this also suggests there is a lot of room to maneuver.” Her “dream prevention”: instill emotional and social competence in children—with
Jack Shonkoff’s research at HSPH shows that chronic stress in children creates a hair-trigger physiologic response to stress that includes a faster heart rate, higher blood pressure, and a jump in stress hormones.
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Harvard Public Health Review
the help of parents, teachers, pediatricians, sports coaches, school counselors, mental health professionals, and policy makers—that would help confer not only good mental health but also physical resilience for a lifetime.
on participants’ sense of meaning and purpose, life satisfaction, and positive mood. By tracking how these measures and health fall out across traditional demographic categories such as race and ethnicity, education, income, gender, and other categories, she hopes to understand in a finegrained way what it is about certain social environments that confers better frame of mind and better physical health. The last thing she wants, Kubzansky says, is for her research to be used to blame people for not simply being happier—and therefore healthier. Referring to one of her first major studies, which found a link between worry and heart disease, she said: “My biggest fear was that
journalists would pick it up and the headlines would be, ‘Don’t worry, be happy.’ That’s useless. Not everyone lives in an environment where you can turn off worry. When you take this research out of the social context, it has the potential to be a slippery slope for victim blaming.” Being in the moment
Kubzansky, who is married and has A st r ess test o f a di f f e r e nt so r t
two young children, says her work
In Laura Kubzansky’s Society and Health Psychophysiology Lab—
has made her think a lot more about
modest and neutral as the blandest therapy office—volunteers re-
finding balance in her own life. To
sponding to a Craigslist ad for a research study are in for a surprise.
that end, she says, she recently signed
First, they are rigged up to a tangle of electrodes, which continu-
up for a yoga class. She also plays
ously monitor heart rate, cardiac output, and other measures. A cuff measures blood pressure. Test tube spittoons collect saliva to be tested for stress-related hormones such as cortisol and DHEA. Then comes the fun. The volunteers must give a five-minute improvised speech on a knotty topic, such as the gasoline tax or welfare reform. Next, they are asked to perform a complicated math exercise, such as counting backward from 2,027 by 13—swiftly, and with
“ Not everyone lives in an environment where they can turn off worry.” —Laura Kubzansky
a loud buzzer signaling a faulty calculation, after which they must start over. Two lab assistants occasionally toss off challenging re-
classical piano—both chamber music
marks. And the nerve-wracking performance is videotaped.
with friends and solo hours at the
The experiment gauges the potentially beneficial effects on heart health of oxytocin, a natural hormone that acts as a neurotransmit-
keyboard for her own enjoyment. “When I’m playing piano,” she
ter and is thought to be both a cause and effect of positive social
explains, “I’m in the moment. I’m
relationships. Kubzansky manipulates three variables: oxytocin lev-
not worrying or thinking or trying
els, stress, and social support. She administers oxytocin—a prescrip-
to work out a problem. I’m just doing
tion drug that cannot be purchased in a conventional drug store—
this thing that takes all my attention.”
through a nasal spray. She induces stress by asking the volunteers to publicly perform. And she creates social support by having some participants bring an encouraging friend with them, while others are instructed to show up alone.
That insight is also at the center of her research. “Everyone needs to find a way to be in the moment,” she says, “to find a restorative state that allows them
Bill Varle/Workbook Stock
The experiment is designed to answer several questions: How do the
to put down their burdens.”
stress-reduction benefits of oxytocin compare to those of social sup-
Sara Rimer is a Boston-based journalist and author. Madeline Drexler is editor of the Review.
port? Does oxytocin offer the same protective effects in women as in men? Most important, does oxytocin tamp down the damage from toxic stress hormones that course through the body under duress, causing corrosive effects over time?
Winter 2011
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Harvard Public Health Review
Genetics & Complex Diseases
Shrinking
the Effects of
the Obesity
Epidemic
If we can’t stop Americans from getting heavier, can we at least develop drugs that prevent them from getting sick with obesity-related diseases? The research career of Gökhan Hotamisligil, chair of the Harvard School of Public Health Department of Genetics and Complex Diseases, has circled around that question for more than two decades. Today, with findings from his lab poised to be translated into new drugs, the goal of averting long-term medical complications in an increasingly overweight population may be closer than ever. Since arriving at the School in 1995, Hotamisligil has pursued with Captain Ahab–like intensity one of the most important biomedical problems of our time: the spiraling epidemic of “metabolic” diseases, ©Ocean/Corbis
such as Type 2 diabetes and heart disease, associated with the relentless rise of obesity in America and, increasingly, around the world.
continued
Winter 2011
15
In October, his 2006 article in Nature,
racing against a surging epidemic
“Inflammation and Metabolic Disorders,” was named
When Hotamisligil launched his research here 15 years
the most-cited paper in clinical medicine research.
ago, the U.S. rate of overweight and obesity was already
Hotamisligil has “catalyzed a paradigm shift in our
56 percent; in lock step, the prevalence of diabetes was
understanding of the nature of metabolic disease,” said
surging. Today, the overweight rate is 66 percent, and
the International Association for the Study of Obesity,
the paired epidemics are rising so rapidly that, if current
which named him the 2010 winner of its prestigious
trends continue, by 2015, a shocking three of every four
Wertheimer Award, given every four years for outstand-
Americans will be overweight (and 41 percent obese) while
ing basic science contributions to the field.
15 percent of adults will be living with diabetes and its
Given the lack of success in curbing obesity, a bigger public health payoff may come in finding ways to blunt the body’s harmful responses to excess weight. often-devastating complications. (Normal weight is a body mass index—BMI—of under 25; overweight is 25 to 29.9, and a BMI exceeding 30 is considered obese. Obesity is also associated with a disproportionate amount of body fat.)* Given the lack of success in curbing obesity, a bigger public health payoff may come in finding better ways to blunt the body’s many harmful responses to excess weight. That means gaining a much more detailed understanding of the underlying pathology of chronic metabolic illnesses. At HSPH, Hotamisligil has doggedly hunted the complex and elusive biological links between obesity and insulin resistance—the first stage in developing metabolic illness. He has uncovered new molecular pathways and identified control points that may prove to be valuable targets for short-circuiting the connection between obesity and poor health. A New Picture of the Body
Over the years, Hotamisligil has expanded his investigations of the mechanisms behind inflammation—the
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Harvard Public Health Review
body’s complex biological response to injury, infection, and to the cellular stress caused by obesity. He has also * Body mass index is a measure of body fat based on height and weight in adults. To compute your BMI, go to wwww.nhlbisupport.com/bmi
Kent Dayton/HSPH
When Gökhan Hotamisligil began his career at HSPH 15 years ago, the overweight and obesity rate in the U.S. was 56 percent, and Type 2 diabetes was surging. Today, the overweight rate is 66 percent. By 2015, 75 percent of Americans will be overweight, and 41 percent obese.
Obesity: A Global Snapshot Worldwide, there are more than 1 billion overweight adults. An estimated 22 million children under five are overweight. urrent obesity levels range from below 5% in China, Japan, and certain African nations to C more than 75% in urban Samoa. Americans walk just 5,117 steps per day. By contrast, adults in western Australia average 9,695 steps; the Swiss average 9,650 steps; and the Japanese average 7,168 steps. A severely obese person is likely to die 8-10 years earlier than a person of normal weight. In 1997, the World Health Organization formally recognized obesity as a global epidemic.
Sources: World Health Organization; Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, October 2010; Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
delved into the role of lipid-binding proteins. Most
The Path from Obesity to Disease
recently, Hotamisligil has woven these discoveries into
In a recent interview, Hotamisligil reflected on the
a cohesive new picture of how the body normally main-
trajectory and implications of his prolific research. His
tains a healthy energy balance—and how so many bad
spacious office is artistically decorated and obsessively
things happen when the metabolic machinery becomes
neat, with piles of manuscripts and journals squared
overwhelmed by excess nutrients and fat and starts to
up perfectly at attention. A native of Turkey, he is, not
break down.
surprisingly, a lover of strong coffee, and although it’s
In his view, the metabolic balance of fuel and en-
late in the afternoon, he produces cups of espresso for
ergy in the body is regulated by two systems that have
himself and a visitor. “From the beginning,” he explains,
been intertwined through evolution. One is made up of
“The big question for me was why, in the presence of
networks of proteins that sense levels of nutrients and
even a few extra pounds of accumulated fat, do you
adjust their processing into energy; the other is the im-
become prone to so many different diseases, including
mune system cells that detect microbes and fight them
insulin resistance, diabetes, hypertension, asthma,
off. This integration of the two systems, according to
neurodegenerative diseases, and cancer?” He likens this
Hotamisligil, accounts for the inflammatory response to
condition to an accelerated form of aging of the body.
overweight and obesity, although this particular form of inflammation—he calls it “metaflammation”—is not the
The general idea is that when individuals gain and retain excess pounds, dietary fats are no longer safely
result of infection and does not resemble the classic fea-
continued
tures of inflammation at all.
Winter 2011
17
stored in cells called adipocytes. As a result, lipids—
weight, providing solid evidence that erroneous immune
blood-borne fats—spill into the circulation and deposit
response is triggered by excess nutrients and energy.
themselves in skeletal muscles, the liver, the heart, and
He later showed that mice lacking a particular fatty
blood vessels. There, through biochemical actions, the
acid binding protein (FABP) didn’t develop insulin re-
lipids throw a wrench into the normal uptake of glucose
sistance even when eating a high-fat diet. These escort
into muscle and other body cells by making the cells’ re-
proteins or “lipid chaperones” latch onto fat molecules
ceptors “deaf” to insulin signals. Insulin resistance creates
and transport them within cells and dictate their biologi-
a pre-diabetic state of rising blood sugar levels, triggering a
cal effects. Hotamisligil reported that when these FABP-
cascade of tissue-damaging events.
deficient mice were fed on high-fat diets, they were pro-
Hotamisligil and other scientists had discovered that
tected from diabetes, fatty liver, and heart disease.
adipocytes are not simply passive fat-storing cells; they also emit metabolic and hormonal signals, some of which help
Convincing the skeptics
regulate the immune system. During his earliest work at
These and other early discoveries began to implicate
the School, he attracted attention with a finding that when
immune system overreaction and inflammation as trig-
he knocked out one of these immune-activating signals in
gers of metabolic disease. But the upstart ideas ruffled
obese mice, they were less prone to the ill effects of excess
some feathers in the mainstream obesity community.
Hotamisligil’s research has created a cohesive picture of how the body normally maintains a health energy balance—and has identified a number of potential drug targets against obesity-triggered biological networks. “Many people were not convinced,” he says, referring to the early ’90s. Thus, Hotamisligil was gratified when he won the 2007 Outstanding Scientific Accomplishment Award of the American Diabetes Association for discovering the inflammatory basis of obesity and Type 2 diabetes. The award recognizes “independence of thought, originality, significance of discovery, and impact on his/her area of research.” Many more findings on this theme were to follow, and not just in mice. In 2006, Hotamisligil and HSPH Associate Professor Eric Rimm reported that obese individuals who had inherited another variation of a fatty acid binding protein gene were much less prone to Type 2 Normal healthy mouse, on left, and genetically modified obese supermouse—which, while massively overweight from a highfat diet, suffers no diabetes, heart disease, or liver disease.
diabetes, heart disease, and elevated triglycerides. In 2008, it was reported that blocking an inflammatory cytokine in humans treats insulin resistance and Type 2 diabetes.
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Harvard Public Health Review
Research suggests that aspirin-like anti-inflammatory drugs could blunt Type 2 diabetes and that a rare nutrient in nuts called palmetoleate might reverse insulin resistance and other complications of obesity. And in 2010, scientists at Harvard-affiliated Joslin
rare nutrient in nuts and other foods called palmetoleate.
Diabetes Center reported that an aspirin-like drug im-
Because it is a natural substance without known adverse
proved insulin function and other complications in dia-
effects, he says that if funding can be obtained, a clini-
betic patients, raising the prospect of treating diabetes
cal trial could happen “at any moment.” In collaboration
with off-the-shelf anti-inflammatory drugs.
with HSPH Professor Dariush Mozaffarian, recent work
Next: Drug Treatments
showed that people with high levels of this lipokine have
Although there is still much more to be unraveled,
marked protection against Type 2 diabetes.
Hotamisligil’s discoveries have already produced a
Obviously these efforts to combat obesity-related
number of targets within the obesity-triggered networks
diseases are very early and the outlook uncertain. Yet
that drug-makers have in their sights. Some potential
the groundwork being laid by Hotamisligil and others
drugs would hinder the action of fatty acid binding
in the field is promising, and the potential for reducing
proteins; others would inhibit molecular signals that rev
the insidious and extraordinarily worrying toll of obe-
up inflammation in response to cellular stress caused
sity is enormous.
by overburdened fat cells. This type of stress affects the
“Ten years from now, I hope that there will be
“minifactories” called endoplasmic reticulum within
drugs on the shelves emerging from this research—not
cells where proteins are made. In his most recent work,
necessarily from what we are doing, but related to it,”
Hotamisligil is developing strategies to beef up the mini-
he says. “I predict that such drugs will not be toxic to
factories’ ability to absorb the extra demands of obesity
the heart and have other bad side effects, which cur-
without sounding an inflammatory alarm. A prototype
rent diabetes medications do. I also hope that at least
medicine to fix the problem in endoplasmic reticulum
some of these drugs will be affordable and reach the
and reduce its stress also works in humans, as shown by
mass populations with desperate needs.” Looking farther
collaborative work published this year with Professor
ahead, Hotamisligil, who calls himself “pathologically
Samuel Klein at Washington University in St. Louis.
optimistic,” sees a future in which the food industry can
Now the hunt is on for new and more powerful mole-
tinker with thousands of individual nutrients in foods to
cules to replicate these early findings.
enhance their healthful properties. “That,” he says, “is
None of the newly developing compounds has yet reached clinical trials, but may in the next few years, Hotamisligil says. Another strategy that may bear fruit sooner involves hormones—which he calls “lipokines”—
the next frontier.” Richard Saltus has written about science, medicine, and public health for the Associated Press, the Boston Globe, the San Francisco Examiner, and The New York Times.
that Hotamisligil has identified in mice that halt or even reverse insulin resistance and other complications related to obesity and Type 2 diabetes. One such lipokine is a
Winter 2011
19
Alumni Weekend
Alumni Weekend Friends and Colleagues Gather from around the World
I
n a festive annual reunion, more than 100 Harvard School of Public Health alumni returned to the School on September 24–26 to reconnect with former classmates, network, and engage with current topics in public health. At the Alumni Weekend Symposium, Hamish Fraser, of Partners in Health, told attendees about the impact of building e-health systems in developing countries. Harvard Humanitarian Initiative Director Michael VanRooyen discussed academic and research engagement in war and conflict. And Leo Celi, MPH ’10, described Sana wireless technology, a groundbreaking project that he and other members of the HSPH class of 2010 developed to strengthen health systems in resource poor settings. (To see videos of these sessions, go to www.hsph.harvard.edu/alumni/alumni-weekend/ alumni-weekend-2010/index.html.) Alumni also honored the 2010 recipients of the Harvard School of Public Health Alumni Award of Merit—the highest honor presented to an alumna/us. The award is given each year to up to four individuals whose leadership, community service, contributions, and commitment to the field of public health exemplify the School’s ideals (see profiles, page 22). Attendees also celebrated with brunch and camaraderie the 50th anniversary of Shattuck International House (see story page 21). To view a slideshow of the Alumni Weekend, go to www.hsph.harvard.edu/multimedia/ slideshows/2010/alumniweekend/.
2010 Alumni Award of Merit winners, from left, Lynn Rosenberg, SM ’72, SD ’78; Fernando Guerra, MPH ’83; James Dalen, SM ’72; David Schottenfeld, SM ’63
Left to right: Slawa Rokicki, SM ’12; Chander Kapasi, MPH ’75; Yifan Lu, MPH ’11; Maliha Ali, MPH ’11; Alexander Yu, MPH ’11
Sarah Hogan; Martha Collins, MPH ’72; Jill Morris; Rita Pope, SM ’67 Left to right, Edmond Feeks, MPH ’96; Alumni Council President Royce Moser, Jr., MPH ’65, and Cecilia Gerard, SM ’09 Tola Ladejobi, MPH ’09, and Olumide Faniyan, MPH’11
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Harvard Public Health Review
Alumni Weekend
Shattuck International House Nurturing an Extended Family
W
ith no room left at his cousin’s
milestones and holidays together, stage
here once till 4 a.m.,” Lambrou confessed),
house, Punyamurtula Kishore,
talent and fashion shows showcasing their
a landscaped garden and playground, a
MPH’79, went searching for someplace to
diversity, and throw potluck meals featur-
well-stocked children’s playroom, a recy-
live in Boston. Kishore was a surgeon who
ing everything from homemade Japanese
cling center, and round-the-clock security.
had come from India to pursue his master’s
sushi to Mongolian meat stew to flaky
degree at the Harvard School of Public
Greek desserts. About 60 percent of its
of social and intellectual community that
Health. An administrator pointed him to-
residents are international students from
Shattuck House fosters. In addition to ex-
ward Shattuck International House, a com-
Asia, Africa, and Europe.
ploring each other’s cultures, residents from
plex of furnished apartments for HSPH stu-
In the 1960s, when the class was
dents and families. It was a perfect match.
smaller, the students enjoyed lots of inter-
“You can’t beat it, especially for
action, with many taking the same courses.
What time hasn’t changed is the sense
different disciplines and life stages discuss issues and careers within public health. Current resident Ramon Sanchez,
someone new to the U.S.,” says Kishore.
One alumnus (Royce Moser Jr., AB’57,
SM’07, an engineer pursuing his doctor-
“Without the camaraderie here, it would
MD’61, MPH’65, and his wife, Lois, of Salt
ate in environmental health [see page 4],
Former Shattuck International House residents celebrated the 50th anniversary of this home away from home. Shattuck House residents in 1967 Left, Kent Dayton/HSPH; right, Harvard School of Public Health 1967 Yearbook
have been very hard to survive. We all studied together and had so much fun. I
Lake City) did not live in Shattuck House, but experienced that fellowship palpably last he and his wife attended events there about fall. After he and his fiancée, Ana, married
met people from 60 or 70 countries at a
monthly. They recalled the time a class-
in Brookline, they threw a small reception
time. This became my family here—a fam-
mate from Kuwait arranged a lavish Middle
in Shattuck House’s Gund Room; residents
ily of choice.”
Eastern feast, complete with his favorite chef helped with decorations, appetizers, and a and belly dancers flown in from other cities. wedding cake.
Kishore, now a Brookline physician focusing on addiction medicine, gathered
“It was like a night in Arabia,” Lois remem-
with two dozen alumni, guests, and stu-
bers. “Royce and I were used to hot dogs
areas here, so we toasted with sparkling
dents on September 26, 2010, to celebrate
and macaroni casseroles.”
cider,” Sanchez recalls. “It felt like the best
the 50th anniversary of Shattuck House’s
Angeliki Lambrou, of Athens, a doc-
“We can’t have alcohol in common
champagne in the world because we were
opening. The informal reunion capped
toral candidate in epidemiology and a resi-
surrounded by all our friends.”
Alumni Weekend and drew people from as
dent community advisor at Shattuck House,
close as upstairs (current residents) and as
led a tour that underscored how much
far away as London and Salt Lake City.
has changed over the years, thanks in part
Debra Bradley Ruder is a Boston-based freelance writer and editor specializing in health care and education.
Over brunch, attendees traded stories
to generous donors. The four-story brick
of this home-away-from-home on Park
building now has an exercise room, a com-
Drive. Shattuck House residents mark
puter lab with flat-screen units (“I stayed
Winter 2011
21
Alumni Weekend
Alumni Award Winners: What We Know Now We asked this year’s winners:
What do you know now about improving the public’s health that you didn’t when you started out in your career? My research is not on behavioral change, but increasingly I believe that this is where the action should be. We know how to prevent so many illnesses. For example, we know how to prevent a high proportion of diabetes and hypertension: get people to maintain a healthy weight. But we don’t know how to get people to change their behaviors. Our society has become toxic in so many ways: Kids go to school all day and don’t have a recess where they can exercise, some areas are too unsafe for people to go out for a walk, and people live in neighborhoods where they don’t have access to decent foods or can’t afford to buy them (and some of the worst foods are subsidized by our
B
ack in the very earliest days of my career, all the epide-
government). In my view, more work should be done on
miologic studies and randomized trials were of men.
how to effect institutional changes that would help rather
People finally realized that there were women as well, that
than hinder individual behavioral changes.
effects might be different in women than in men, and that women should be studied. There is always an accepted wisdom that people might be unaware of, but which is shaping their thinking. For
“ Be skeptical of the conventional wisdom.”
example, back then, the common wisdom was that female
Lynn Rosenberg SM ‘72, SD ‘78
hormone supplements were a good thing, based on the fact that women get heart disease later than men. People thought: What’s the main difference between men and women? It’s female hormones. That was the mind-set. It wasn’t easy to get a study funded to look at female hormone supplements in relation to heart disease because belief in their benefits was so strong. Although there had been studies showing adverse effects of hormone supplements, it took the Women’s Health Initiative to turn those beliefs around. Thus, if I were to give advice to someone starting out in the field today, I would say: Be skeptical of the conventional wisdom.
22
Harvard Public Health Review
Career Highlights Currently associate director of the Slone Epidemiology Center and professor of epidemiology at the Boston University School of Public Health. Principal investigator of the Black Women’s Health Study, which aims to elucidate the causes of breast cancer, other cancers, diabetes, lupus, and other serious illnesses, many of which occur disproportionately in black women. Conducted studies that established a link between oral contraceptives and heart attacks in female smokers, suggested that alcohol consumption increases the incidence of breast cancer, and tied aspirin to decreased incidence of large bowel cancer.
“Be creative, be a risk-taker, be adventuresome.”
Fernando Guerra MPH ‘83
I was sent to Vietnam as a partially trained pediatri-
But public health cannot improve conditions by itself.
cian. I became a battalion surgeon with one of the combat
Government policy, economic development, education
units. I was also responsible for working in the villages
are crucial. When you look at countries that have made
of the Vietnamese people—and I saw conditions that I
incredible progress—Singapore, for example—they in-
thought I would never see again: plague, tuberculosis, any
corporate changes in the social welfare system, education,
number of infectious diseases, and other life-threatening
economic development, and political leadership.
illnesses. Even at that time, I recognized that these condi-
A career in public health is an opportunity to be
tions could have been prevented with investments in infra-
creative, to be a risk taker, to be adventuresome, to enjoy
structure, plumbing, indoor sanitary facilities, potable
intellectual stimulation and curiosity. You start your day
water, things like that.
feeling good about what you hope to accomplish, and usu-
I came back to my own community, San Antonio, in
ally finish the day feeling pretty good, because maybe a
the early ’70s. And I saw cases of classical diphtheria—
little bit of what you’ve done has had some benefit. Would
right here in San Antonio, not unlike what I had seen in
I do it again? Absolutely.
the Republic of Vietnam. I thought: this just shouldn’t happen. Public health has to do better.
Career Highlights Currently director of health for the San Antonio Metropolitan Health District (Metro Health), the largest public health agency in San Antonio, Texas. In 2008, oversaw an unprecedented merger of medicine and public health. Working with Metro Health and the county hospital, integrated prevention, early detection, and continuity of care into clinical care services. Focuses on improving health care access for infants, women, children, and the elderly; has overseen efforts to prevent HIV infection, teen pregnancy, and vaccine-preventable diseases; has worked to prevent domestic and child abuse.
All photos, Kent Dayton/HSPH
In 1971, as a practicing pediatrician, founded the Barrio Comprehensive Child and Family Health Care Center in San Antonio.
continued Winter 2011
23
Alumni Weekend
F
rom my vantage point, I’ve always been very curious about disease mechanisms and understanding causal
pathways. You can’t proceed on the basis of what you knew 20 years ago. I’ve come to appreciate how complicated human biology is, and how necessary it is for each of us to be well schooled in the fundamental disciplines of human biology, pathology, molecular sciences, human genetics, and of nutrition in health and disease. The long-lasting thing that I learned at HSPH was to be a critical thinker. It was more of an attitude than a body of knowledge, because the body of knowledge was going to change dramatically over time. It was stimulating for me to take the knowledge that I had in medicine and human biology, and the attitude we have in med-
“Never stop being a student.” David Schottenfeld SM ‘63
icine—which is really a one-on-one, Good Samaritan approach—and look at the impact I might have on the population burden of disease. If I had to encapsulate what my life has been, it’s that — not to sound corny, but it’s been the joy of learning and never stopping being a student, while at the same time being a teacher, a mentor, and hopefully a leader. Even though you may reach retirement age or become emeritus, if you still have a passion for what you’re doing and the energy to pursue it, you shouldn’t stop.
Career Highlights Currently John G. Searle Professor Emeritus of Epidemiology and professor emeritus of internal medicine at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. From 1959 to 1961, served as a commissioned officer in the Epidemic Intelligence Service at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Research interests have included epidemiologic studies of breast, endometrial, prostate, testicular, colorectal, and lung cancers, and of the epidemiology of second primary cancers. In 2007, received the John Snow Award from the Epidemiology Section of the American Public Health Association.
24
Harvard Public Health Review
“ The people are ahead of their doctors.” James Dalen SM ‘72
I
n 1970, I was an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and director of the cardiac catheterization lab
at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. I was doing all the things you’re supposed to do: writing papers, getting grants. But I was bored, because I was doing the same thing every day. I felt isolated from what was really going on in the world. I enrolled at HSPH. The Harvard School of Public Health changed my whole orientation toward medicine. I continued to be a cardiologist, but instead of being an invasive cardiologist, I focused on preventive cardiology. One of the reasons that U.S. health parameters are so poor is that we don’t emphasize prevention. That ties
therapists—chiropractors, acupuncturists, nutrition
in with one of my strong interests: integrative medicine,
therapists, massage therapists—in addition to their
which combines conventional allopathic medicine with
physicians. But they don’t tell their physicians about it,
some unconventional approaches. I’m a conventional
because they think their physicians will say, “Don’t do
physician. I’ve had conventional training, conventional
that.” The people are ahead of their doctors.
schools. So why am I a supporter of integrative medicine? For two reasons. One is that integrative medicine is all
Career Highlights
about prevention. The second is that I have a master’s
Currently professor emeritus of medicine and public health at the University
degree in psychology, and the mind/body connection is
of Arizona. From 1988 to 2001, served as dean of the University of Arizona College of Medicine.
pretty obvious to me. In the field of cardiology, we have recently discovered that people who are depressed are more likely to have heart attacks. Well, that’s not rocket science. Laymen figured out this kind of connection 20 years ago. Nearly 50 percent of all Americans now go to unconventional
Established MPH programs at the University of Massachusetts at Worcester and the University of Arizona, and helped establish a college of public health at the University of Arizona. In 1972, became Harvard’s principal investigator of the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial, aimed at decreasing risk of coronary heart disease by controlling key risk factors for the disease. In 1999, helped found the Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine.
To view a video of this year’s Alumni Award of Merit winners, go to www.hsph.harvard.edu/multimedia/video/2010/alumniweekend/.
Winter 2011
25
Policy Translation
The Forum at Harvard School of Public Health
I
n November, the School presented a preview of The Forum at Harvard School of Public Health, featuring high-definition, broadcast-quality webcasts on key public health issues. From a new state-of-the-art studio, each webcast focus-
es on a critical health-related policy issue or science controversy faced by global decision makers in government, business, NGOs, foundations, and other areas
The Forum will convene leading scientific and academic experts with those in positions to change policy.
of leadership. Using the unique convening power of Harvard, The Forum brings together leading scientific and academic experts from around the world with those in positions to address the issues, change policy, and initiate action. The Forum
events will take place year-round, and will include both panel discussions and keynote addresses in front of large in-person audiences. The Forum is a flagship initiative of the new division of Policy Translation and Leadership Development. The Forum’s webcasts—which can be viewed live and on-demand on all ForumHSPH.org. The Web site features videos of The Forum events on-demand, expert written commentary on a separate “Decision of the Week” blog, and practical resources for decision makers and their staffs. Online viewers are encouraged
26
Harvard Public Health Review
Ned Brown/HSPH
types of video devices—can be seen on a lively new interactive Web site, www.
School sets stage for global conversation with state-of-the-art webcasts.
to become members of The Forum community, allowing them to join the discus-
The Forum’s preview event,
sion and post their own commentary on the health issues addressed.
“The Impact of the 2010 Elections
The Forum director is Robin Herman, assistant dean for research communications
on U.S. Health Care Reform.” From
at HSPH, who previously reported on health and social issues for The New York Times
left, moderator Maggie Fox, health
and the Washington Post. The chair of The Forum program planning committee is Jay
and science editor, Reuters; Douglas
Winsten, director of the Center for Health Communication at HSPH.
Holtz-Eakin of the American Action
“The Forum is a 21st-century venue for quickly communicating informa-
Forum and advisor on domestic
tion about evidence-based solutions among decision makers and scientists who
and economic policy to the 2008
are grappling with new and re-emerging health issues,” says Herman. “Modern
John McCain presidential campaign;
health challenges cross boundaries of geography and responsibility, requiring an
David Cutler, Harvard professor of
unprecedented cooperative response from leaders. In a technologically advanced
applied economics and advisor on
world, our ambition is to create a global virtual venue, enabling this community to
health policy to the 2008 Barack
more easily share information and experiences.”
Obama campaign; and Robert J.
The Forum’s Preview Event—which took place in November 2010 in collabora-
Blendon, HSPH professor of health
tion with Reuters news service—featured policy experts who discussed the impact
policy and political analysis, whose
of the 2010 congressional elections on the implementation of health care reform.
expertise focuses on public opinion
Panelists included Douglas Holtz-Eakin of the American Action Forum, David Cutler,
polling.
Harvard professor of applied economics, and Robert J. Blendon, HSPH professor of health policy and political analysis.
Winter 2011
27
HARVARD
School of Public Health
2010 Gift Report
28
Harvard Public Health Review
A Personal Thanks T
Scenes from the year’s events
he cover story in this issue of the Review describes innovative research at the School on the links between
happiness and health. I must confess that nothing puts me in a better frame of mind than seeing how much our donors care about today’s most urgent public health challenges. In fiscal year 2010, HSPH received $26.7 million in new gifts, pledges, and non-federal sponsored research grants from generous alumni, individuals, corporations, foundations, Ellie Starr, Vice Dean for External Relations, Harvard School of Public Health
and other organizations committed to our work. As the generous individuals and institutions highlighted in these pages well know, one gift really makes a difference. Helping to fund pilot studies on AIDS changes the contours
of this tragic epidemic. Helping to untangle the effects of big-city air pollution boosts quality of life for all urban dwellers. Helping to subsidize research on nutrition gives everyone a chance at a healthy diet. That our distinguished alumni continue to give back to HSPH says a great deal about the School’s pivotal place in the field of public health. On this note, I also want
Leadership Council members Prudence Crozier, left, and Eliot Snider
to congratulate this year’s Alumni Award of Merit winners, whose work has been transformative. And I want to congratulate Roslyn Payne, winner of the HSPH Volunteer Leadership Award, for her farseeing efforts and dedication. Finally, in the midst of the holiday season, I want to personally thank each and every individual, corporate, and foundation entity that stepped up and made a difference. In these pages we gratefully recognize gifts, pledges, and pledge payments made between July 1, 2009, and June 30, 2010. I invite you to join the ranks of these generous donors in the coming year. Just as every great idea radiates out and makes the world a better place, so every gift to the School ripples out across the globe, in both research and practice. I am deeply grateful for your openhearted engagement with the HSPH mission.
Susan Orkin and Leadership Council member Fredrick Orkin, SM ’01
Ellie Starr, Vice Dean for External Relations, Harvard School of Public Health
Kent Dayton/HSPH, Steve Gilbert
John Danilovich; Mara Hansen, SM ’11; Martín Lajous, SM ‘04, SD ’11
Irwin Schneiderman, LLB ’48, and Leadership Council member Roberta Schneiderman
Winter 2011
29
Event Highlights HSPH Leadership Council Annual Meeting: A New Agenda for Women and Health October 6–7, 2010 Left to right, Leadership Council member Ron Curhan, MBA ’57, DBA ’71; Robin LaFoley Dong, Joan Curhan
O
n October 6–7, the Leadership Council annual meeting explored a new agenda for
women and health. Dean Julio Frenk described his vision for such an agenda: one that would address all forms of disease and disability that women face throughout their lives, including chronic diseases such as cancer and heart disease, and a broad spectrum of sexual and reproductive health issues. It
Mara Hansen, SM ’11, left, and Roslyn Payne, MBA ’70, Volunteer Leadership Award recipient
would also encompass the experiences that shape women’s health, women’s unique health risks and sometimes unequal access to quality care, and the roles that women play as health care decision makers for families and society. Robert Blendon, senior associate dean for policy translation and leadership development, discussed how the School is working to create for leaders outside of public health evidence-based solutions for global health problems. These include The Forum at Harvard School of Public Health, which launched in 2010 elections will affect U.S. health care reform.
30
Harvard Public Health Review
Kent Dayton/HSPH, Steve Gilbert
November with a webcast discussion of how the
Leadership Council members Kristin Snow, SM ‘93, SD ‘00 and Therus Kolff, MPH ‘79
Dickerman Hollister, SM ’04, left, and Laurence Hagerty
Left to right, Paula Sneddon; Ron Marrocco, MPH ’05; Steven Sneddon, SM ’77, SD ’79; and Eleanor Shore, AB ’51, MD ’55, MPH ’70
Karell Pelle, PhD ‘13 and Adeoye Olukotun, MPH ’83
Healthy Cup Award Presentation
O
Dean Julio Frenk, Iowa Senator Tom Harkin, and Walter Willett, MPH ’73, DPH ’80, chair, Department of Nutrition
n May 17th the HSPH Nutrition Round Table honored Iowa Senator Tom Harkin with its Healthy Cup Award. The award cited Harkin for his leadership in developing policies that support and promote good nutrition, healthier lifestyles, and disease prevention. The award also noted his efforts to address obesity issues in children, cardiovascular disease, women’s health issues, and other efforts to lead the way towards a healthier country. Harkin helped create the Prevention and Public Health portion of the national health care reform bill and a program to provide free fresh fruit and vegetables to schoolchildren.
Winter 2011
31
Dean Frenk Joins World Leaders at United Nations Summit
O
n September 20-22, Dean Julio Frenk participated in
the United Nations Summit on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which are a series of global health and anti-poverty targets. Frenk is a member of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s MDG Advocacy Group, a task force of global leaders charged with building political will and mobilizing action around the MDGs. The task force includes two philanthropists Bill Gates and Ted Members of the U.N. Millennium Development Goal Advocacy Group, meeting in September in New York. Dean Frenk is in the top row, third from left.
Turner.
©The Lancet
Nobel laureates, businessmen, and
Event Launches New Book, Saturday Is for Funerals
M
32
Harvard Public Health Review
From left, Florence Koplow, Unity Dow, Max Essex, Beth Martignetti, and Julie Henry, MPH ’91. Koplow, Martignetti, and Henry are members of the HSPH Leadership Council. From left, Christopher Chenard, Cynthia Essex, Holly Steiger, and John Steiger
Steve Gilbert
ax Essex, chair of the Harvard School of Public Health AIDS Initiative and Mary Woodard Lasker Professor of Health Sciences, kicked off the book tour for Saturday Is for Funerals on May 17 at the Harvard Club. He was joined by co-author Unity Dow, author of four novels and the first woman to sit on Botswana’s High Court. The book explores both the science behind the AIDS epidemic in southern Africa and the epidemic’s profound consequences for individuals and entire societies. The event was co-hosted by HSPH Leadership Council Members Florence Koplow, Beth Martignetti, and Julie Henry, MPH ’91. See www.hsph.harvard.edu/ news/features/features/saturday-is-forfunerals.html for more about the book.
The Inaugural Thomas H. Weller Lecture and Award Presentation Ancient Diseases, Modern Killers: The Eradication of Infectious Disease
O
From left, HSPH Dean Julio Frenk; William Foege, MPH ’65, SD ’97; Dyann Wirth, AM ’90, chair, Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases; and Peter Weller, professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, and son of Thomas Weller
Leadership Council member Joel Lamstein, left, speaks with Marcia Castro, assistant professor of demography, Department of Global Health and Population, and Grace Wyshak, SM ’56, associate professor in the Department of Biostatistics and the Department of Global Health and Population.
©Bethany Versoy/V2Visuals
Leadership Council member, Steven Phillips, director, Global Issues and Projects, ExxonMobil Corporation (left) with Donald R. Hopkins, MPH ’70
n May 3, public health leaders discussed the profound impact infectious diseases have made on the history of humankind and on today’s global health picture at a symposium honoring the late Harvard School of Public Health Professor Thomas H. Weller, who died in 2008. A physician and virologist, Weller shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1954 for his work in culturing the polio virus, making it possible to create safe polio vaccines. William Foege, MPH ’65, received the first annual Thomas H. Weller Prize. Foege, a senior fellow in the Global Health Program at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, was honored as “one of the most influential figures in the modern fight against infectious diseases—from helping to eradicate smallpox, to raising worldwide rates of childhood vaccinations, to bringing attention to neglected infectious diseases in the developing world.” “I’m pleased to have been a mentee of Tom Weller,” Foege said in his acceptance speech. “I’m pleased to have been able to be a part of this moment, and I’m pleased that you’re keeping Tom’s contribution flowing on forever.”
Joseph Feczko, former chief medical officer, Pfizer Inc. (left) and Emilio Emini, chief scientific officer of vaccine research, Pfizer Inc.
Winter 2011
33
Alumni The School is profoundly grateful for contributions from alumni, unsung heroes who are now working around the world to improve the lives of millions of people. Their generosity is a testament to their confidence in the School’s ability to train generations of public health leaders. We thank all alumni for their support and recognize in the following list those who made cumulative gifts of $100 and above during the 2010 fiscal year.
1942
1955
James H. Steele
Joyce W. Hopp
1961
1966
Yvonne M. Bishop
Stephen J. Garza
Thomas L. Hall
Ralph E. Miller, Jr.
George C. Mohr
William M. Moore
Stephen J. Plank
William P. Reagan
James F. Wittmer
James H. Warram, Jr. Dorothy L. Wilson
1962 Harold N. Colburn
1967
Kenneth H. Cooper
Myron Allukian, Jr.
C. Richard Dorn
Dorothy J. Ganick
Robert H. Neill
Judith D. Goldberg
Carlton J. Peterson
Frederick C. Hoesly
Jesse W. Tapp, Jr.
Charles T. Kaelber George W. Mathews, Jr.
Craig S. Lichtenwalner
1963
Richard R. Monson
1943
Leonard C. Mandell
Theodor Abelin
Raymond K. Neff
Helen M. Wallace
Saul T. Wilson
Earle R. Heine
Anthony N. Tse
1944
1956
Muhammad K. Muzayyin
1968
Catherine H. Petrou
Kenneth I. Chapman
Donald J. Rosato
N. Bruce Chase
David Schottenfeld
Joseph A. Cook
1948
1957
Bernard Shleien
Ronald D. Eckoff
Doris Wilson
Saovanee S. Chakpitak
Samuel Levey
1949
1964
Ralph L. Kent, Jr.
Lewis E. Patrie
Kathleen H. Acree
Leonard J. Kirschner
Martin P. Hines Hyman Israel
Douglas I. Hammer
Lenore Harney
Stanley L. Dryden
Gopal C. Pain
1958
Warren W. Hodge
Ronald T. Rozett
Eilert H. Eilertsen
Hope H. Snider
1950
Marion E. Highriter
W. Harding Le Riche
Ruth B. Kundsin
1965
Lynne M. Ausman
Arlene R. Warren
Justin L. Conrad
Charles J. Gibson
1951
1969
Johanna T. Dwyer
Augustine E. Moffitt, Jr.
Augusta F. Law
1959
Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr.
Cedric W. Porter, Jr.
Joseph Puleo, Jr.
Robert T. Cutting
Theodore Georgiadis
Henry W. Vaillant
Christian M. Hansen †
Elihu York
1952
1960
Tomio Hirohata
Mary Breed Brink
J. Robert Dille
Wayne A. Johnson
1970
James C. Roumas
Vaun A. Newill
Catherine C. Lastavica
Jane H. Chretien
Royce Moser, Jr.
Glenn E. Haughie
1953
Vern L. Schramm
Ralph H. Henderson
Isabelle Valadian
John J. Speidel
Margaret T. Howe
continued
34
Harvard Public Health Review
† deceased
A
s a student in the Health Policy and Management program, I took courses from an amazing group of faculty who really knew their stuff and who brought their knowledge of the real world into the classroom at every opportunity. I owe my career to HSPH and, even in my current role as Vice President for Human Resources at Brown University, I continue to use the skills and knowledge gained in my graduate program. I hope that my support helps to sustain HSPH—its students and its faculty—through good times and bad. One thing that makes the School such a special place is the interdisciplinary nature of its work. I’m particularly interested in the work the School does in health policy and the translation of health policy research into practice. This interest stems from my work over the years in a variety of U.S. settings, including a state health department, a city hospital system, several medical schools, and, most recently, in higher education. HSPH faculty and students do cutting-edge research on the priority public health issues of our time. Our alums provide public health leadership in a variety of settings around the world. How exciting is that!
Kent Dayton/HSPH
— Karen Davis, SM ’78 Vice President, Human Resources, Brown University
Winter 2011
35
Jennifer Leaning
Arthur R. Rhodes
1976
Milford W. Greene
Barry S. Levy
Fred G. Rueter
Kay W. Bander
Peter C. Karalekas, Jr.
Bess I. Miller
Stephen L. Silberman
Amy C. Barkin
James M. Laster
J. Dennis Mull
Alexander M. Walker
Patricia L. Brown
Louise Park MacMillan
Scott H. Nelson
Walter C. Willett
Stanley G. Burchfield
James Harvey Maguire
R. Heather Palmer
Beverly Winikoff
Phillip G. Clark
Daniel J. Nadler
Kenneth E. Powell
Gail E. Costa
John T. Nagurney
Gloria A. Rudisch
1974
Ileana M. Fajardo
Susan W. Robbins
Eleanor G. Shore
Louis M. Alpern
Henry Falk
Claudia R. Sanders
Gary F. Stein
Michael C. Alpert
Homero R. Garza
Phyllis D. Sims
Richard A. Bienia
Patricia Hartge
Charles P. Spickert
1971
Maura Bluestone
Richard A. Kaslow
Eileen Storey
Kenneth Bridbord
John D. Blum
Sew-Leong C. Kwa
Connie J. Evashwick
John D. Boice, Jr.
Barbara N. Lubash
1979
Jonathan E. Fielding
Irene Y. Cheung
Beth Myers
Debra D. Carey
Katherine A. Forrest
Douglas W. Dockery
Helen H. Wang
Lynne M. Cavanaugh
Carol A. Greenfield
Patricia T. Gabbe
William H. Hollinshead III
Siew-Ean Khoo
1977
William C. Feng
John C. Kepper
Mary Ann Lavin
Anonymous
Eileen P. Hayes
John C. Leadbeater
Harold L. May
Marcia J. Armstrong
Judith Izen
William V. Lipton
Barbara E. Millen
Rita D. Berkson
James M. Jaranson
Rudolph W. Pierce
Nancy E. Mueller
Judith B. Colla
Stephen P. Kelly
James M. Taylor
Philip T. Nicholson
Malcolm J. Curtis
Harold B. Leabman
William H. Wiese
Michael R. Pollard
Samuel A. Forman
Jeanne E. Loughlin
Daniel W. Rosenn
Mari Ito
Sue M. Marcus
1972
Stephen C. Schoenbaum
Andrew M. Jaffe
Maria E. Mazorra
Joseph A. Burke
Steven K. Shama
Thomas W. Kalinowski
Eileen D. Pearlman
Andrew G. Dean
Cynthia E. Winne
Walter H. McDonald
Johannes Plugge
Linda C. Niessen
Jo A. Shifrin
James D. Felsen
Cynthia J. Dutton
Joyce E. Gibson
1975
Bernard M. Olsen
Mark S. Siskind
Leslie J. Graitcer
Robert Berke
Barbara A. Ormond
Marcia L. Weisman
Philip L. Graitcer
Louis J. DiBerardinis
Philip E. Palmer
Georgiana K. White
Allen J. Herbert
Abby G. Ershow
Jonathan M. Samet
Joel Kavet
Carol W. Garvey
Steven L. Sneddon
1980
Walter L. Pelham
Daniel P. Greenfield
Jeffrie R. Strang
Elie M. Abemayor
Loren H. Roth
Christopher T. Hitt
Jay S. Weisfeld
Richard C. Antonelli
Susan S. Schermerhorn
Craig N. Melin
Scott T. Weiss
Virginia W. Arnold
Ronald A. Walter
Ann E. Moran
Earnestine Willis
Catherine S. Berkey
Camille L. Orso
Joseph C. d’Oronzio
1973
Harvey E. Pies
1978
Viola L. Dwight
Jennie A. Duffy
Kathleen M. Rasmussen
Elizabeth N. Allred
Kim Enomoto
Edward M. Elkin
Carol H. Rice
Sheila R. Bloom
Robert I. Field
David H. Gundy
Deborah Rose
Melanie C. Clarke
Rose H. Goldman
Maria P. Liteplo
William B. Stason
Karen L. Davis
Raymond S. Greenberg
John C. Perry
Howard R. Steinberg
Eric E. Fortess
36
Harvard Public Health Review
Bernard Guyer
Julie A. Goldstein
Tammy C. Harris
Marjorie A. Green
Lynn W. Herzog
Douglas N. Klaucke
Alice J. Hausman
Michelle G. Hutchinson
Chung-Cheng Hsieh
Eugene A. Mickey
David J. Hunter
Joanne A. Kimata
Carole L. Ju
Stephen E. Piwinski
Raja Iglewicz
Thomas H. Lee, Jr.
Linda W. Kalinowski
Virginia A. Rauh
Patrick L. Kirsop
Robert L. Mittendorf
Charles H. Klippel III
Abby L. Resnick
Vera R. Kurlantzick
Susan W. Peck
Robert B. Lutes
Wendy G. Rockefeller
Nancy T. McCall
John D. Piette
Candace G. Mandel
Daniel E. Singer
Nancy N. Menzel
Diane L. Rowley
James A. Manganello
Elizabeth A. Vanner
Donald K. Milton
Roderick N. Seamster
Charles B. Millstein
Carolyn A. Webster
Dale L. Morse
Darvin S. Smith
Carl M. Reddix
Anne E. Trontell Garrett R. Tucker III
Patrick J. Nalbone Jane W. Newburger
1983
Gary L. Rosner
Ann E. Spangler
Olayiwola B. Ayodeji
Elizabeth F. Ryder
Nancy Ung
Edwin S. Spirer
Julie E. Buring
Catherine A. Spino
Leonel Vela
Meir J. Stampfer
J. Jacques Carter
Paul J. Styrt
Kristian Vetlesen Brent C. Williams Albert S. Yeung
Yung-Cheng J. Chen
Carol Jean W. Suitor
1981
Fernando A. Guerra
Margaret M. Sullivan
Stanley M. Aronson
Patricia L. Moody
Susan P. Wood
Lisa S. Barnes
Thomas D. Polton
1988
DeWayne M. Pursley
1986
Jesse A. Berlin
Anthony J. Santangelo, Jr.
David W. Archibald
Roger B. Davis
Marilyn A. Fingerhut
Richard W. Steketee
Christina I. Braun
Elizabeth E. Drye
Elizabeth E. Hatch
Michael J. Thun
James J. Crall
Thomas B. Hanley
Nancy J. Fox
Paul K. Henneberger
Arthur E. Brown Alan B. Dash
Sonny V. Joseph Amy F. Judd
1984
Patricia A. Fraser
Mimi Y. Kim
M. Honor Keegan
Chantal Z. Buchanan
Unae K. Han
Michael D. Kneeland
Carol I. Master
Bettina Burbank
Leslie A. Kalish
John W. Lehmann
William P. Naylor
Jennifer S. Cassells
Wyman W. Lai
Stuart R. Lipsitz
Richard W. Rowe
Chau-Shyong D. Chen
Michael F. Mayo-Smith
Daniel R. Lucey
Stephen H. Soboroff
Roger S. Day
Thomas J. McElligott, Jr.
James C. Lynch
Doris N. Wong
Ruth E. Gold
Kimberly J. Oka
Koji Miura
Danielle E. Wuchenich
G. Rita Dudley-Grant
Deborah A. Roth
Donna S. Neuberg
Marvin Zatz
Katherine T. Halvorsen
Kevin G. Rowe
Bonnie M. Norton
JoAnn E. Manson
Joseph A. Stankaitis
Linda T. Poggensee
1982
Matthew P. Moeller
Maxine A. Whittaker
Eric Ruder
Phyllis S. Baer
George C. Piper
Barbara S. Wrightson
Barbara V. Schroeder
Stuart G. Baker
William M. Zinn
Kathleen H. Blandford
Heejoon Y. Sun 1987
Phyllis C. Tien
1985
Richard H. Aubry
Joel Tsevat
Mary E. Chamberland
Kevin C. Chang
Paul H. Campbell
Ulla-Birgitta Wallin
Rowland W. Chang
Walter K. Clair
Charles Deutsch
Elizabeth A. Wuerslin
Graham A. Colditz
Maria C. Plaus
Alison M. Dorries
Ronald D. Deprez
Joan C. Downey
Adam M. Finkel
Carole R. Dichter
Gina A. Dunston-Boone
Judy E. Garber
Paul R. Branch
continued
Winter 2011
37
1989
Christopher T. Spina
A. E. C. Rietveld
Joshua P. Metlay
Susan G. Albert
Masahiro Takeuchi
Steven M. Rudd
Howard H. Moffet
Jerry D. Beavers
Man-Sung Yim
Deborah L. Snyder
Siobhan M. O’Connor
Alison Cullen
Carol R. Regueiro
Kirsten E. Frederiksen
1992
1995
Jean-Marc R. Saffar
Kimberlee K. Gauvreau
Amy C. Benson
Elizabeth A. Bancroft
Mikhail P. Salganik
Courtney A. Jennings
Deborah L. Blacker
Michael A. Bolton
Allyn E. Segelman
Brinda R. Kamat
Lauren A. Dame
Su-chun Cheng
Laurie Sprung
Georgia Karapanos
Erica L. Drazen
Jay A. Clemens
Matthew P. Longnecker
Jeffery S. Garland
Karen Donelan
1998
Nancy J. Heidorn
Stephen N. Kales
Alison E. Field
Jennifer A. Hanner
Suresh Santanam
Paul M. LeVine
Amy W. Grace
Chung-Ming Hsieh
Jill S. Schield
Risa C. Shames
Hyungjin M. Kim
Simon D. Spivack
Priscilla Szneke
Stephen H. MacDonald
Shari Michelle Kessel Schneider
Fair H. Wang
William B. MacLeod
Roderick K. King
Peter A. Merkel
Kathleen M. Koehler
1990 Ian S. Ahwah
1993
Laury E. Saligman
Michael P. Lazarski
Gilbert Burgos
Anonymous
Kevin J. Schwartzman
Charles Lu
Deborah G. Chamblee
Linda G. Baer
Stanley E. Chartoff
Gabrielle Bercy
1996
Mark E. Ralston
Mark S. Clanton
Lena E. Dohlman-Gerhart
David J. Berck
Jennifer Retsinas
Kenneth M. Davis
Marian G. Ewell
Elizabeth R. Bertone-Johnson
Tabitha L. Rice
Russ B. Hauser
Virginia L. Hood
Peter Cardiello
Donald C. Simonson
Sarah A. Marshall
Ping Hu
Richard H. Chapman
Xiaolin Wang
Srinivas M. Sastry
Soyeon Kim
Mary Cushman
Yongyu Wang
Robert M. Segal
Qing Liang
Mei Sheng Duh
Robert G. Travnicek
Gregg S. Meyer
Terrence R. Gillen
1999
Jane R. Zucker
Judith Pinsker
Lynn M. Marshall
Stuart M. Berman
Phillip W. Sarocco
Joy R. Mockbee
Robert A. Bethel
1991
Kristin K. Snow
Constantia P. Petrou
Tianxi Cai
Terry A. Adirim
Sharon L. Swindell
Margaret B. Ruttenberg
Debbie Mien-Pay Cheng
Michele C. Aviles
John J. Whyte
Ibou Thior
Eunyoung Cho
Michiko Nakayama
Susan M. Duty
Bonnie B. Blanchfield Peter W. Choo
1994
1997
Sudhanva S. Hegde
Gary C. Curhan
Pamela A. Berenbaum
Andrea J. Apter
Jessica Kahn
Jo Ann David-Kasdan
Meghan B. Bishop
Patrick A. Bovier
James A. Kaye
Joel Diringer
Jeanine Boyle
Steven B. Duff
Jenny Lo
Julie E. Henry
Joanna Buffington
David N. Hayes
Sidney W. Rosen
Marjorie E. Kanof
Eugenie H. Coakley
Liza M. Hayes
Sarah L. Sinha
Tse-Jen Kao
Christopher P. Duggan
Nancy E. Isaac
Mary E. Wewers
Shirley Montini
Mawaheb T. El-Mouelhy
Robert S. Kahn
Ying Zhu
Farzad Mostashari
Shari I. Gelber
Satoshi Kaneko
Abbe F. Rosenbaum
Kathy L. Jenkins
Qian H. Li
2000
Thomas M. Slyter
David P. Kraft
Vicki E. Light
Jill E. Appel
Nanette E. Moss 38
Harvard Public Health Review
Josh Benner
Debra Buchan
John R. Madril
2005
Beverly J. Loudin
Jonathan L. French
Andrew T. McAfee
Edward J. Alfrey
Mark Phillippe
Jennifer N. Greenberg
Beth G. Raucher
Andrew B. Ashcroft
Lorenz Risch
Ellen S. Lerner
James M. Steven
Jeffrey B. Cohn
Arathi R. Setty
Eileen E. Ming
Nak Jin Sung
William R. DeFoor
Jonathan M. Spector
Tina T. Powderly
Takahiro Uchida
Bethany L. Hedt
Sherilyn Wheaton
Joel Yohai
Jennifer L. Kowalski
Xiaotian Zhong
Michael S. Radeos
Timothy J. Mahoney
Carla A. Romney Janet Y. Schrodi
2003
Maritza Morell
2008
Beverly G. Siegal
William R. Berry
Michael T. Rowland
Zeina N. Chemali
Gary M. Strauss
Raymond C. Chan
I-Fong Joanne Sun
Lindsey A. Cole
Tonya L. Villafana
Cheryl R. Clark
Boyd V. Washington
Herbert O. Davies
Robert O. Wright
Susanna J. Jacobus
Janice L. Weiner
Sean M. Dunbar
Elizabeth E. Powell
Anson Wright
Sean E. Hunt
2001
Cyril S. Rakovski
Mary T. Brophy
Jennifer A. Schumi
2006
Stephen J. Meraw
Mary L. Brown
Lon Gary Sherman
Angela M. Bader
Kelli N. McCartan O’Laughlin
Humayun J. Chaudhry
Monica L. Stallworth
Anthony L-T Chen
Anna Lai Choi
Ann M. Thomas
Lucy Y. Chie
2009
Shannon M. Escalante
Lujing Wang
Sharon G. Curhan
Greg A. Burnett
Victoria R. Hopkins
Bonnie R. Weinbach
Victoria P. de Menil
Cecilia Gerard
Patrik L. Johansson
Thomas W. White
Michelle A. DeNatale
Lyndon V. Hernandez
Soichi Koike
Erik J. Won
Kelly J. Dougherty
Benjamin M. Howard
Theodore W. Marcy
Summer L. Zheng
Walter D. Fitzhugh III
Morgan H. Jones
Oemer N. Goek
Katherine E. Kobus
2004
Wendy M. Golden
Ning Lu
William T. Peruzzi
Clement A. Adebamowo
Lorine W. Housworth
Khaled J. Saleh
Juliet V. Porch
Amy A. Adome
Jim M. John
Kate W. Sedgwick
Jeffrey L. Schnipper
Ruth S. Arestides
Elizabeth A. Kurs
Lisa V. Stone
Alfred J. Capelli
Timothy L. Mah
2010
Eugene D. Choi
Robert I. McCaslin
Jane Scott Lloyd
Anthony Dias
Scott W. McPhee
2002
Stacey J. Drubner
Yutaka Niihara
Rajalakshmi Balasubramanium
Ira R. Horowitz
Yuji Otake
William E. Downey
Caroline T. Korves
Lee S. Prisament
Joseph C. Finetti
Caron M. Lee
Natasa Rajicic
Camilla S. Graham
Patricia A. Moran
Stephanie Rosborough
Alan D. Guerci
Thomas R. Mote
Rebecca J. Wexler
Ming-Rong Harn
Erinn T. Rhodes
Afsaneh R. Zolfaghari
Ka He
John W. Robinson
Sok-Ja K. Janket
Kelly Claire Simon
2007
Carolyn M. Kaelin
Andrew M. Wiesenthal
Sanjay Aurora
Fredrick K. Orkin David Paniagua
Yoshio Uetsuka
Lisa M. Letourneau
John McNelis
Beatriz Casado James M. Grebosky Jay Won Lee Winter 2011
39
Individuals $10,000–$24,999
The generosity of individuals is vital to the School’s mission
Anonymous
of pursuing new knowledge, educating public health’s future
Christine Allen *
leaders, and communicating health messages to the public.
Roger L. Barnett
The following list acknowledges individuals who made
Lynne and Roger S. Berkowitz
cumulative contributions of $250 or more during fiscal year
James J. Bochnowski
2010. An asterisk indicates individuals who have made a gift
David Cohen
for five or more consecutive years.
Howard E. Cox, Jr. Joan P. and Ronald C. Curhan *
$1,000,000+
$50,000–$99,999
Deborah Rose, SM’75
Anonymous
Joan Selig Damson and Barrie M. Damson
Lammot du Pont Copeland, Jr. * $500,000–$999,999 George D. Behrakis Roslyn B. Payne Penny S. Pritzker and Bryan Traubert *
Evelyn Byrd Donatelli and Mike M. Donatelli
Nicholas Galakatos Dorothy J. Ganick, SM’67 * Martin and Enid Gleich
Ruth F. Lazarus and Michael S. Feldberg
Laurence J. Hagerty
Julie E. Henry, MPH’91 and Bayard Henry *
Mark E. Jennings
Chung-Ming Hsieh, SD’98 Stephen B. Kay *
$250,000–$499,999
Jorge P. Lemann
James E. Issler *
Xiao Liang
Joel E. Smilow
Ronay A. and Richard L. Menschel*
Richard W. Smith
Mary Revelle Paci *
Deanne and Herbert S. Winokur, Jr.
Nathalie and Stephen R. Wong
$100,000–$249,999
$25,000–$49,999
Judy and Russell L. Carson *
Anonymous
Louise Park MacMillan, SM’78 and John H. MacMillan IV
Phyllis D. Collins *
Daniel Branton
Kristin W. and Stephen A. Mugford
Frank Denny
Thorley D. Briggs
Carol Paraskevas *
Sarah B. and Seth M. Glickenhaus *
Annette B. and Joseph A. Burke, SM’72
Irene Pollin
Mala G. Haarmann
Anthony Chase
Robert O. Preyer *
James M. Usdan *
Ambika Collins
Jeannine M. Rivet *
Christopher W. Walker
Kenneth H. Cooper, MPH’62 *
Leni and Adam D. Sender
J. Frederick Weintz, Jr. *
Ellen Feldberg Gordon
Charles B. Sheppard II
Mary M. and Jeffrey Zients
Sofia M. Gruskin William A. Haseltine
Eleanor G. Shore, MPH’70 and Miles F. Shore
Joan L. and Julius H. Jacobson II *
Richard M. Smith *
Florence R. Koplow
James A. Star
John L. McGoldrick
Irene M. Stare *
William A. Oates *
Howard H. Stevenson *
Barbara J. Wu and Eric C. Larson * Lucian L. Leape Arthur L. Loeb * Per Lofberg Francisco A. Lorenzo * Nancy T. Lukitsh
Herbert W. Richards Gloria and Bernard Salick * Kate W. Sedgwick, MPH’09 and Ambassador Theodore Sedgwick * Eliot I. Snider Fair H. Wang, SM’92 *
40
continued * individuals who have made a gift for five or more consecutive years
Harvard Public Health Review
Edwin Jay Taff * Linda Tao Isabelle Valadian, MPH’53 * Louisa von Clemm * Charlotte von Clemm Iselin Stefanie C. von Clemm Rui Wang Barbara G. and Henry S. White Mary Stare Wilkinson Doris Wilson, ‘48 Jason Yeung $5,000–$9,999 Loreen J. Arbus Mortimer Berkowitz III Jane Carpenter Bradley and John M. Bradley * Rosemary and John W. Brown Tianxi Cai, SD’99 Carrie S. Cox
I
have supported Harvard for many years and have focused more recently on the Harvard School of Public Health. Why? HSPH programs have immediate applications in areas of dire need. I have a special interest in African issues, due largely to my travels on that continent. The range of problems is infinite—education, sanitation, water quality, living conditions, high mortality, and, of course, the subjugation of women. Therefore, I want African graduate students to come to HSPH to acquire as much knowledge as possible and then go back home and apply what they have researched, studied, and learned. They can then identify and eradicate disease and associated problems. The HSPH program educates and trains problem-solvers who will also become leaders in their respective countries. The Briggs Scholarship program provides funds for African students to come to HSPH.
Madison Cox Erica L. Drazen, SD’92 and Jeffrey M. Drazen Samuel A. Forman, MPH’77, SM’80 John H. Foster Larry S. Gage Alice Galakatos Katie H. Gambill Serena M. Hatch and Francis W. Hatch, Jr. † Holly D. Hayes and Carl W. Stern, Jr. * Kathryn and Ned Hentz James J. Hummer Joyce and Anthony Kales Stephen N. Kales, MPH’92 Beth V. and Carmine A. Martignetti * Sue and Eugene A. Mickey, MPH’82 * Armene L. Milliken
— Thorley “Ted” D. Briggs, AB ’53, MBA ’55 Retired Chairman and former President and CEO of EMCON Associates, an environmental consulting firm
Winter 2011
41
Susan W. Peck, SM’87, SD’91 *
Susan and Fredrick K. Orkin, SM’01
Graham A. Colditz, MPH’82, DPH’82
Steven L. Sneddon, SM’77, SD’79
Susan Butler Plum
Gail E. Costa, SM’76
Denise Sobel
Carol Raphael
Norma Dana
Natasha P. and Richard H. Stowe
Charles A. Sanders
Kenneth M. Davis, SM’90
Irene M. and Lynn B. Weigel, Jr. *
Srinivas M. Sastry, MPH’90
Douglas W. Dockery, SM’74, SD’79 *
Dyann F. and Peter K. Wirth *
David I. Scheer
Mei Sheng Duh, SD’96
Stephen H. Wise
Roberta Schneiderman *
Myron E. Essex
Migs S. Woodside
Helen Bowdoin Spaulding
Harvey V. Fineberg *
George H. Strong
Marilyn A. Fingerhut, SM’81 Adam M. Finkel, SD’87
Arthur Bugs Baer *
Carol Jean W. Suitor, SM’85, SD’88 and Richard Suitor
Ruth A. Barron
Ronald A. Walter, SM’72 *
Frederick Frank *
James D. Blum
John J. Whyte, MPH’93
Jeffrey J. Fredberg
Aliki and Franz Brandenberg
Joan L. Kittredge Wyon *
Felicia M. Knaul and Julio J. Frenk
$2,500–$4,999
Justin Campbell
Fred N. Fishman *
Niki and A. Alan Friedberg *
Humayun J. Chaudhry, SM’01
$1,000–$2,499
Paula and Jose Garber
Su-chun Cheng, SD’95
Clement A. Adebamowo, SD’04
M. Dozier Gardner
Lucy Y. Chie, MPH’06
Paula Alprin *
Cheryl R. Clark, SD’03
Mary Ellen Avery
Shari I. Gelber, SM’94 and Richard D. Gelber
Kenneth C. Cox
Rajalakshmi Balasubramanium, SD’02
Susan M. Guillory *
Prudence S. Crozier *
Barbara D. Beck and Robert M. Bahn
Doreen and Charles Gumas
Karen L. Davis, SM’78 *
David J. Berck, MPH’96 *
David W. Haartz
Jean George
Alice J. Hausman, MPH’85 and Jesse A. Berlin, SD’88
Carol Haber *
Richard A. Bienia, MPH’74
Glenn E. Haughie, MPH’70
Irene Tilenius Bloom† and Barry R. Bloom *
Alice J. Hausman, MPH’85 and Jesse A. Berlin, SD’88
Gerald H. Blum *
Carol L. and William E. Hiller
Joshua A. Bookin
Christopher T. Hitt, SM’75
Jeanine Boyle, MPH’94
Mary B. and Kenneth D. Holmes
Irene S. and John Briedis
Joan X. Hu and Boxin Tang
Nancy Budge
Robert Hyatt
Debra H. and Kim J. Burchiel
Mari Ito, SM’77
Hossam Maksoud
Alfred J. Capelli, SM’04
Truda C. Jewett
Robert L. Mittendorf, MPH’87, DPH’91 *
Peter Cardiello, MPH’96
Carole C. and William M. Moore, MPH’66 *
Lynne M. Cavanaugh, SM’79 *
Linda W. Kalinowski, SM’80 and Thomas W. Kalinowski, SM’77, SD’81 *
Kevin C. Chang, MPH’85
Tse-Jen Kao, MPH’91
Wanda Olsen and Michael E. Jacobson *
Eugene D. Choi, SM’04 *
Ellen L. Kaplan
Stephanie and Peter W. Choo, MPH’91, DPH’96
Hyungjin M. Kim, SD’95
Eileen P. Hayes, SD’79 Judith E. and Laurence J. Hicks Courtney A. Jennings, SM’89 and Barry D. Jennings James A. Kaye, MPH’99, DPH’01 * Charles H. Klippel III, SM’80 Catherine C. Lastavica, MPH’65 Jennifer Leaning, SM’70 Barbara N. Lubash, SM’76 and Paul A. Moses
Deborah Hartnett
Soyeon Kim, SM’93, SD’96
Mark S. Clanton, MPH’90 Melanie C. Clarke, SM’78
42
* individuals who have made a gift for five or more consecutive years
Harvard Public Health Review
† deceased
Simeon M. Kriesberg *
Phillip W. Sarocco, SM’93
Mary E. Chamberland, MPH’82
Mary Ann Lavin, SM’74, SD’78
Valentine Schaffner
Raymond C. Chan, SM’03
Caroline R. Le Feuvre
Renate and Jack W. Schuler *
Jenny Cheuk
Sarah L. and John C. Lechleiter *
Nina F. Simonds
Walter K. Clair, MPH’85
Elizabeth K. Liao *
Sarah L. Sinha, SM’99
John A. Clements
Marguerite Littman
Alix and Joseph I. Smullin
Joseph A. Cook, MPH’68
Uri Loewenstein
Kristin K. Snow, SM’93, SD’00
Marcia Cross
Stephen H. Loring
Robert Snyder
Adam Cuddy
Jeanne E. Loughlin, SM’79
Naomi Sobel
Mary Cushman, SM’96 *
Daniel R. Lucey, MPH’88
Meir J. Stampfer, MPH’80, DPH’85
Robert T. Cutting, MPH’59
Timothy J. Mahoney, SM’05
Cheryl and Kenneth Stanley
Herbert O. Davies, SM’08
Isabel W. and Peter L. Malkin *
Ellie Starr
Dennis O. Dixon
James A. Manganello, MPH’80
Howard R. Steinberg, MPH’75
Lena E. Dohlman-Gerhart, MPH’93 *
JoAnn E. Manson, MPH’84, DPH’87 *
Eilert H. Eilertsen, MPH’58
T. John Martin
Phyllis C. Tien, SM’88 and D. Scott Smith, SM’87
Linda D. Masiello
Ming Tsai
Barbara J. Friedberg
Carol I. Master, SM’81, DPH’89 and Sherry Mayrent
Gerald Tulis *
Koene and John R. Graves
Katherine J. and John L. Vahle
Jennifer N. Greenberg, SM’00
Maria E. Mazorra, SM’79 *
Kelly Victory
Bernard Guyer, MPH‘80
William Shaw McDermott *
Tammy C. Harris, MPH’85 *
Nicholas P. McGrane
Alexander M. Walker, MPH’73, DPH’81 *
Dorothea P. Mead
Virginia G. Watkin
Lisa F. Miao
Mary Weinmann
Leah Modigliani
Andrew M. Wiesenthal, SM’04 *
Augustine E. Moffitt, Jr., SM’69, SD’73
Wing H. Wong
Thomas P.C. Monath
David A. Woodruff *
Ann E. Moran, MPH’75, DPH’80
Anson Wright, SM’05
Donna S. Neuberg, SD’88
Ellen M. Zane *
Thomas L. P. O’Donnell *
Alison E. Field, SD’95
Earle R. Heine, MPH’63 * Tomio Hirohata, SM’65, SD’68 Warren W. Hodge, MPH’64 Ping Hu, SM’93, SD’96 Michael D. Hughes Andrea M. Jacobs Patrik L. Johansson, MPH’01 Marjorie E. Kanof, MPH’91 * Stephen P. Kelly, SPH’79
William T. Peruzzi, SM’01
$500–$999
Stephen J. Plank, MPH’61, DPH’64
Elie M. Abemayor, SM’80 *
Muriel K. Pokross *
Kathleen H. Acree, MPH’64
Ruth S. and Thomas D. Polton, SM’83 *
Terry A. Adirim, MPH’91
Dorina Radeos
Laura and Louis M. Alpern, MPH’74 *
Justice E. Chouteau Levine and William M. Levine *
Michael S. Radeos, MPH’00
Jill E. Appel, SM’00
Leonard C. Mandell, SM’55 *
Mani Ramamurthy
Robert Berke, MPH’75
Bonnie Marcus
Donald J. Rosato, MPH’63
Paul Biddinger
Sarah A. Marshall, SM’90 *
Margaret B. Ruttenberg, SM’96
Yvonne M. Bishop, SM’61 *
Maurice McGregor
Jean-Marc R. Saffar, SM’97
Michael A. Bolton, SM’95
Jane and Brian D. McAuley
Mimi Y. Kim, SM’88, SD’90 Martha P. Leape John W. Lehmann, MPH’88
Patricia L. Brown Sheila A. Campbell J. Jacques Carter, MPH’83 *
continued
Winter 2011
43
Alexander McCall Smith
Jeffrie R. Strang, MPH’77
Gilbert Burgos, MPH’90 *
Philip E. Miles Jr.
Masahiro Takeuchi, SD’91
Paul H. Campbell, SD’87 *
Donald K. Milton, MIH’85, DPH’89
James M. Taylor, MPH’71
Stephen Hugh Campbell
Catherine M. and Matthew P. Moeller, SM’84
Leonel Vela, MPH’87
Debra D. Carey, SM’79
Helen H. Wang, MPH’76, DPH’79 *
Kiera and James C. Carlisle
Mark T. Munger *
Xiaolin Wang, SD’98
Beatriz Casado, MPH’07
Beth Myers, SM’76
Boyd V. Washington, SM’05
N. Bruce Chase, MPH‘68
John T. Nagurney, MPH’78
Deborah C. Webster-Clair
Zeina N. Chemali, MPH’08
Michiko Nakayama, MPH’98
Jay S. Weisfeld, MPH’77 *
Chau-Shyong D. Chen, MPH’84
Jane W. Newburger, MPH’80
Mary E. Wewers, MPH’99 *
Yung-Cheng J. Chen, MPH’83
Elizabeth M. and Philip T. Nicholson, SM’74 *
Walter C. Willett, MPH’73, DPH’80
Irene Y. Cheung, SM’74, SD’77
Paige L. Williams
Jane H. Chretien, MPH’70 *
Dorothy L. Wilson, MPH’66
Jeffrey B. Cohn, SM’05
Lee S. Prisament, MPH’06
Beverly Winikoff, MPH’73 and Michael C. Alpert, MPH’74 *
Lindsey A. Cole, SM’08
Shanna K. Quigley
James F. Wittmer, MPH’61 *
Carl M. Reddix, MPH’85
Victoria P. de Menil, SM’06
Erik J. Won, MPH’03
Arthur R. Rhodes, MPH’73 *
Charles Deutsch, SD’87
Danielle E. Wuchenich, MPH’81 *
Carol H. Rice, SM’75
Joseph C. d’Oronzio, MPH’80 *
Shirley and David R. Younkin
Kelly J. Dougherty, SM’06
Linda C. Niessen, MPH’77 Stephen E. Piwinski, MIH’82 *
A. E. C. Rietveld, MPH’94
Penelope and Andrei Constantinidi
Stanley L. Dryden, SM’64 *
Christy Robson
$250–$499
Abbe F. Rosenbaum, MPH’91
Anonymous
Jennie A. Duffy, SM’73 and Robert T. Duffy *
Daniel W. Rosenn, SM’74
Theodor Abelin, MPH’63
Viola L. Dwight, MPH’80
Deborah A. Roth, SM’86 *
R. Siisi Adu-Gyamfi
Kim Enomoto, MPH’80
Steven M. Rudd, MPH’94
Elizabeth N. Allred, ‘78 *
Marian G. Ewell, SD’93
Jonathan M. Samet, SM’77 *
Virginia W. Arnold, ‘80
James D. Felsen, MPH’72 *
Suresh Santanam, SD’89 *
Ruth and Herbert Aschkenasy
Jonathan E. Fielding, MPH’71
Tedd R. Saunders
Sanjay Aurora, MPH’07
Bertha B. Fitzer
Stephen C. Schoenbaum, MPH’74
Walter D. Fitzhugh III, MPH’06
Janet Y. Schrodi, MPH’00
Linda G. Baer, SM’93 and Alvin W. Lee
Jennifer A. Schumi, ‘03
Elizabeth A. Bancroft, SM’95
Nancy J. Fox, SM’86
Norman C. Severo
Robert B. Banzett
Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr., SM’65
Steven K. Shama, MPH’74
Lisa S. Barnes, SM’81 *
Jonathan L. French, SD’00
Bernard Shleien, SM’63 *
Josh Benner, SM’00, SD’02
Shoichi Fukayama
Donald C. Simonson, MPH’98, SM’99, SD’06
Rita D. Berkson, SM’77 and Randolph B. Reinhold *
Patricia T. Gabbe, MPH’74 *
Hope H. Snider, MPH’64 *
Bonnie B. Blanchfield, SM’91, SD’95
Richard W. Steketee, MPH’83
Sheila R. Bloom, SM’78 *
Eileen Storey, MPH’78
Paul R. Branch, SM’82
Laurence B. Flood *
Jeffery S. Garland, SM’92 * Homero R. Garza, MPH’76 Rebecca S. Gelman Theodore Georgiadis, SM’65
Mary Breed Brink, MPH’52 Arthur E. Brown, Jr., MPH’81 * Joanna Buffington, MPH’94 *
44
* individuals who have made a gift for five or more consecutive years
Harvard Public Health Review
Joyce E. Gibson, SM’72, SD’74 and Steven H. Gibson *
Robert B. Lutes, SM’80
B. Katherine Swartz
Stephen H. MacDonald, MPH’95
Roy N. Tamura
Terrence R. Gillen, SPH’96
Nancy J. Marr, SM’89
Robert G. Travnicek, MPH’90 *
Judith D. Goldberg, SM’67, SD’72 *
Lynn M. Marshall
Henry W. Vaillant, SM’69
Rose H. Goldman, MPH’80, SM’81
Nancy T. McCall, SM’85, SD’93
Elizabeth A. Vanner, SM’82 *
James M. Grebosky, SM’07
John McNelis, SM’08
Michael W. Voligny
Alan D. Guerci, SM’02 *
Peter A. Merkel, MPH’95 *
Helen M. Wallace, MPH’43
Fernando A. Guerra, MPH’83
Gregg S. Meyer, SM’93
Carolyn A. Webster, SM’82
Lan Jiang Guo
Patricia A. Moran, MPH’04
Bonnie R. Weinbach, SM’03
Christian M. Hansen, MPH’65 * †
Royce Moser, Jr., MPH’65 *
Marcia L. Weisman, SD’79
Ming-Rong Harn, ‘02
Soomi and Yutaka Niihara, MPH’06
Georgiana K. White, SM’79
Patricia Hartge, SM’76, SD’83 *
Victoria Nourafchan
Lynn F. and John A. Wilkes
Elizabeth E. Hatch, SM’81 and Francis W. Hatch III *
Bernard M. Olsen, SM’77
Earnestine Willis, MPH’77
Eileen D. Pearlman, SM’79 *
Saul T. Wilson, MPH’55
J. Christopher Perry, MPH’73
Cynthia E. Winne, MPH’74
Constantia P. Petrou, SD’96
Edward Yeh
Mark Phillippe, SM’07
Albert S. Yeung, SM’87, SD’92 *
Margaret T. Howe, SM’70, SD’75
Linda T. Poggensee, SM’88 and Robert R. Poggensee
Joel Yohai, SM’02
Raja Iglewicz, ‘85 and Boris Iglewicz
Cedric W. Porter, Jr., MPH’69 *
Susanna J. Jacobus, SM’03 Sok-Ja K. Janket, MPH’02 *
Tina T. Powderly, SM’00 and Tom Powderly *
Kathy L. Jenkins, MPH’94
Beth G. Raucher, SM’02
Vida T. and Dean R. Johnson
Michael Reid
Wayne A. Johnson, MPH’65
Erinn T. Rhodes, MPH’04 *
Joel Kavet, SD’72
Susan W. Robbins, MPH’78
Patrick L. Kirsop, SM’85
John W. Robinson, SM’04
Soichi Koike, MPH’01
Sheila C. Rocchio
Ruth B. Kundsin, SD’58 *
Wendy G. Rockefeller, SM’82 *
Augusta F. Law, MPH’51
Stephanie Rosborough, MPH’06
Russ B. Hauser, MPH’90, SD’94 * Ka He, SM’02, SD’03 Patricia M. and David C. Hinkle Benjamin M. Howard
John C. Leadbeater, MPH’71 *
Sidney W. Rosen, MPH’99 *
Caron M. Lee, SM’04
David Rosenstein
Lisa M. Letourneau, MPH’02
Mikhail P. Salganik, SM’97, SD’06
Samuel Levey, SM’63 *
Laury E. Saligman, SM’95
Paul M. LeVine, SM’92
Jill S. Schield, SM’89 *
Qian H. Li, SD’97
Kevin J. Schwartzman, MPH’95 *
Janet Scott Lloyd, MPH’10
Patricia A. Shea
Summer L. Zheng, ‘03 * individuals who have made a gift for five or more consecutive years † deceased
Kelly Claire Simon, SM’04, SD’07 and John Simon Edwin S. Spirer, MPH’80 Simon D. Spivack, MPH’89 James H. Steele, MPH’42 * James M. Steven, SM’02 *
Winter 2011
45
Corporations, Foundations and Organizations The School gratefully acknowledges the invaluable support of its many corporate, foundation, and institutional partners. Through their engagement, these organizations are helping to improve the health of people around the world. The following lists recognize organizations that, in fiscal year 2010, have provided grants of $1,000 and above or have made matching gifts to the School.
$50,000–$99,999 American Federation for Aging Research The Brinson Foundation Bristol-Myers Squibb Company Burroughs Wellcome Fund GDS Services International Limited Healthways Howard Hughes Medical Institute Raymond P. Lavietes Foundation
$1,000,000+ African Comprehensive HIV/AIDS
$100,000–$249,999
American Heart Association, Inc.
Accelerated Cure Project
Government of the Republic of Cyprus
Action on Smoking and Health International
Estate of Diana P. Reeve
Leukemia Society of America, Inc. Medtronic, Inc. Margaret T. Morris Foundation New Horizon Foundation Oxfam America
Flight Attendant Medical Research Institute
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Cabot Family Charitable Trust
$500,000–$999,999
Clarence and Anne Dillon Dunwalke Trust
American Diabetes Association
William J. Clinton Foundation
Towers Perrin Forster & Crosby
Behrakis Foundation
The Ellison Foundation
Wong Family Foundation
Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
Ellison Medical Foundation
ExxonMobil Foundation
Energy Foundation
$25,000–$49,999
Fidelity Non-Profit Management Foundation
Francis Family Foundation
California Walnut Commission
Frontier Science & Technology Research Foundation
Charles A. King Trust
Glickenhaus Foundation
David Bohnett Foundation
W. K. Kellogg Foundation
Harbor Lights Foundation
Dillon Fund
Ambrose Monell Foundation
The William & Flora Hewlett Foundation
Genzyme Corporation
Open Society Institute
GTN Holdings
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturing of America
Japan Foundation for the Promotion of International Medical Research Cooperation
Risk Management Foundation
A. G. Leventis Foundation
The Medtronic Foundation
North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International
$250,000–$499,999 Arthritis Foundation
American Institute for Cancer Research
Pfizer, Inc.
Press Ganey Associates, Inc. The Rockefeller Foundation Sanofi Pasteur Searle Scholars Program The TriZetto Group
Commonwealth Fund
Charles H. Hood Foundation Massachusetts General Hospital Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation Parkinson Study Group University of Maine
Philips Healthcare R3i Foundation
$10,000–$24,999
Schering-Plough Research Institute
Abbott Laboratories
Scleroderma Research Foundation
Aquidneck Foundation
H.H. Brown
J.T. Tai and Company Foundation, Inc.
Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence
Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
Teikyo University
Chevron Energy Technology Company
The Merck Company Foundation
Thrasher Research Fund
Population Reference Bureau
V Foundation for Cancer Research
Breast Cancer Research Foundation Footwear Association Charity Event, Inc.
John Templeton Foundation, Inc. 46
Harvard Public Health Review
continued
T
he rise of a global economy, with the concurrent increase in the amount and speed of international transportation, has led to a spread of diseases worldwide. The Harvard School of Public Health has been front and center in addressing this threatening development. The School has been fortunate to have outstanding leaders, including former Deans Harvey Fineberg and Barry Bloom, and the current Dean, Julio Frenk. It is for these reasons that the Monell Foundation has consistently supported the School’s Dean’s Discretionary Fund.
Kent Dayton/HSPH
— George Rowe, Jr. President and Director of The Ambrose Monell Foundation. Rowe is a senior partner in the law firm of Fulton, Rowe & Hart in New York City.
Winter 2011
47
Estate of Dr. Frank L. Babbott
$1,000–$4,999
Tulis, Miller & Company
Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research
Aetna
Uno Restaurants, LLC
Affymetrix, Inc.
Valley Anesthesiology Foundation
Genentech, Inc.
Applied Biosystems
Victory Health, LLC
Estate of Marshall J. Hanley
The Loreen Arbus Foundation
Victory Partners, LLP
Institute of International Education
AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, LP
White Mountains Regional High School
Leape Foundation for Patient Safety
ATV Capital Management, Incorporated
Leaves of Grass Fund
Biogen Idec, Incorporated
Matching Gift Organizations
Arthur L. Loeb Foundation
Blum Family Foundation, Inc.
Amgen Foundation, Inc.
Medco Health Solutions
Chinese-American Biomedical Association
Andersen Consulting Foundation
Oncology-Hematology Clinic Pinkerton Foundation
Concentra Health Services
Dow Jones & Company
Tuberous Sclerosis Alliance
Consulting in Healthcare Strategies, LLC
Eli Lilly and Company Foundation
U. S. Civilian Research and Development Foundation
Corners Fund
Elizabeth Doolittle Charitable Trusts
Cytel, Inc.
Michael & Louisa von Clemm Foundation
Exelon
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
ExxonMobil Foundation
David W. Haartz Trust
Fidelity Foundation
Dossia Service Corporation
GlaxoSmithKline Foundation
$5,000–$9,999
The Foundation for Enhancing Communities
IBM International Foundation
5 for Fairness
GlaxoSmithKline
American Statistical Association
Goldman Sachs & Co.
The Boston Foundation, Inc.
Haber Family Charitable Fund
Clarus Ventures, LLC
Harvard Club of New York Foundation
Combined Jewish Philanthropies
Illumina, Inc.
Cooper Clinic
International Rescue Committee
Dayton Foundation
Johnson & Johnson
Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation
JPC Support Services
Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories, Incorporated
Iacocca Foundation John Snow, Inc. Northern Lights Foundation Ropes & Gray LLP Safe Futures Fund of The Foundation for Enhancing Communities Sanofi-Aventis K.K. Schering-Plough Pharmaceuticals Tishri Fund
Madison Cox Design, Inc. Maksoud Pharm, Inc. Massachusetts Medical Society MSFS Student Association NeuroPhage Pharmaceuticals Oak Fund of Triangle Community Foundation Pointcross, Inc. The Adolphe Quetelet Society SAS Institute Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving Sinco, Inc.
48
Harvard Public Health Review
Burness Communications
Lone Pine Foundation, Inc. Novartis Pfizer Schering-Plough Foundation, Inc. Wachovia Foundation
Annual Giving The success of Annual Giving in fiscal year 2010 was the result of hard work on the part of many loyal HSPH alumni and friends. These donors understand that annual giving plays a critical role in meeting ongoing needs for student financial aid, seed funding for innovative research, and general operating support.
Henry Pickering Walcott Society ($25,000 +) Thorley D. Briggs Judy and Russell L. Carson Anthony Chase Ambika Collins Phyllis D. Collins Kenneth H. Cooper, MPH’62 Sarah B. and Seth M. Glickenhaus Ellen Feldberg Gordon Sofia M. Gruskin Mala G. Haarmann Julie E. Henry, MPH’91 and Bayard Henry James E. Issler Joan L. and Julius H. Jacobson II Xiao Liang John L. McGoldrick William A. Oates Roslyn B. Payne Gloria and Bernard Salick Richard W. Smith James M. Usdan Christopher W. Walker Fair H. Wang, SM’92 Nathalie and Stephen R. Wong
A
s chief executive of the leading natural nutrition company in the United States, I have a deep interest in helping people live healthier lives. I think the HSPH is a fantastic institution that engages in cutting-edge research and provides proven solutions to challenges in critical areas of health. The School has the capacity to educate and inform the public in part because of its credibility as a Harvard institution. A personal passion of mine is to help eradicate under-nutrition in the world. There is simply no reason it should exist. I also want to educate people about the dangers of exposure to chemicals through products in their homes and workplaces. The faculty at HSPH is truly doing groundbreaking work in these and other fields. It is a privilege to be able to spend time with them and to support their mission.
— Roger L. Barnett, MBA ’91 Chairman and CEO, Shaklee Corporation
James Steven Simmons Society ($10,000–$24,999) Christine Allen Roger L. Barnett Lynne and Roger S. Berkowitz
Winter 2011
49
James J. Bochnowski
Shattuck Family Society
Courtney A. Jennings, SM’89
Howard E. Cox, Jr.
($5,000–$9,999)
James A. Kaye, MPH’99, DPH’01
Joan Selig Damson and Barrie M. Damson
Loreen J. Arbus
Catherine C. Lastavica, MPH’65
Mortimer Berkowitz III
Jennifer Leaning, SM’70
Estate of Dr. Frank L. Babbott Katie H. Gambill
Jane Carpenter Bradley and John M. Bradley
Barbara N. Lubash, SM’76 and Paul A. Moses
Dorothy J. Ganick, SM’67
Rosemary and John W. Brown
Hossam Maksoud
Martin and Enid Gleich
Carrie S. Cox
Robert L. Mittendorf, MPH’87, DPH’91
Laurence J. Hagerty
Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation
Carole C. and William M. Moore, MPH’66
Samuel A. Forman, MPH’77, SM’80
Susan and Fredrick K. Orkin, SM’01
John H. Foster
Srinivas M. Sastry, MPH’90
Larry S. Gage
David I. Scheer
Serena M. Hatch and Francis W. Hatch, Jr. †
Roberta Schneiderman
Holly D. Hayes and Carl W. Stern, Jr.
George H. Strong
Kathryn and Ned Hentz James J. Hummer
Carol Jean W. Suitor, SM’85, SD’88 and Richard Suitor
Anthony Kales
Isabelle Valadian, MPH’53
Stephen N. Kales, MPH’92
Ronald A. Walter, SM’72
Beth V. and Carmine A. Martignetti
John J. Whyte, MPH’93
Sue and Eugene A. Mickey, MPH’82
Joan L. Kittredge Wyon
Mark E. Jennings Stephen B. Kay Florence R. Koplow Barbara J. Wu and Eric C. Larson Lucian L. Leape Arthur L. Loeb Per Lofberg Francisco A. Lorenzo Nancy T. Lukitsh Louise Park MacMillan, SM’78 and John H. MacMillan IV Kristin W. and Stephen A. Mugford Mary Revelle Paci Irene Pollin Robert O. Preyer Carol Raphael Jeannine M. Rivet Kate W. Sedgwick, MPH’09 and Ambassador Theodore Sedgwick Leni and Adam D. Sender Charles B. Sheppard II Eleanor G. Shore, MPH’70 and Miles F. Shore
Helen Bowdoin Spaulding
Susan W. Peck, SM’87, SD’91 Penelope and Michael R. Pollard, MPH’74
Jonathan M. Mann Society
Denise Sobel
Clement A. Adebamowo, SD’04
Natasha P. and Richard H. Stowe
Mary Ellen Avery
Irene M. and Lynn B. Weigel, Jr.
David J. Berck, MPH’96
Dyann F. and Peter K. Wirth Stephen H. Wise
Alice J. Hausman, MPH’85 and Jesse A. Berlin, SD’88
Migs S. Woodside
Richard A. Bienia, MPH’74
($1,000–$2,499)
Gerald H. Blum
Richard M. Smith
Milton J. Rosenau Society
Joshua A. Bookin
David B. Snow
($2,500–$4,999)
Jeanine Boyle, MPH’94
Howard H. Stevenson
Arthur Bugs Baer
Irene S. and John Briedis
Edwin Jay Taff
Ruth A. Barron
Nancy Budge
Linda Tao
James D. Blum
Kim J. Burchiel
Louisa von Clemm
Justin Campbell
Alfred J. Capelli, SM’04
Barbara G. and Henry S. White
Humayun J. Chaudhry, SM’01
Lynne M. Cavanaugh, SM’79
Jared S. White
Lucy Y. Chie, MPH’06
Kevin C. Chang, MPH’85
Jason Yeung
Madison Cox Prudence S. Crozier
Stephanie and Peter W. Choo, MPH’91, DPH’96
Karen L. Davis, SM’78
Mark S. Clanton, MPH’90
Eileen P. Hayes, SD’79
Graham A. Colditz, MPH’82, DPH’82
Judith E. and Laurence J. Hicks
Gail E. Costa, SM’76
Wanda Olsen and Michael E. Jacobson 50
Harvard Public Health Review
† deceased
Norma Dana
Renate and Jack W. Schuler
Barbara J. Friedberg
Douglas W. Dockery, SM’74, SD’79
Nina F. Simonds
Koene and John R. Graves
Harvey V. Fineberg
Kristin Kendall Snow, SM’93, SD’00
Jennifer N. Greenberg, SM’00
Marilyn A. Fingerhut, SM’81
Robert Snyder
Glenn E. Haughie, MPH’70
Adam M. Finkel, SD’87
Naomi Sobel
Tomio Hirohata, SM’65, SD’68
Fred N. Fishman
Meir J. Stampfer, MPH’80, DPH’85
Andrea M. Jacobs
Frederick Frank
Ellie Starr
Susanna J. Jacobus, SM’03
Felicia M. Knaul and Julio J. Frenk
Howard R. Steinberg, MPH’75
Patrik L. Johansson, MPH’01
Niki and A. Alan Friedberg
Stephen P. Kelly, SPH’79
Paula and Jose Garber
Phyllis C. Tien, SM’88 and D. Scott Smith, SM’87
M. Dozier Garnder
Ming Tsai
Susan M. Guillory
Gerald Tulis
Justice E. Chouteau Levine and William M. Levine
Carol Haber
Kelly Victory
Timothy J. Mahoney, SM’05
Carol L. Hiller
Alexander M. Walker, MPH’73, DPH’81
Bonnie Marcus
Mari Ito, SM’77
Virginia G. Watkin
Maria E. Mazorra, SM’79
Truda C. Jewett
Mary Weinmann
Donald K. Milton, MIH’85, DPH’89
Linda W. Kalinowski, SM’80 and Thomas W. Kalinowski, SM’77, SD’81
Andrew M. Wiesenthal, SM’04 Anson Wright, SM’05
Catherine M. and Matthew P. Moeller, SM’84
Tse-Jen Kao, MPH’91
Ellen M. Zane
Mark T. Munger
John W. Lehmann, MPH’88
Beth Myers, SM’76
Ellen L. Kaplan Simeon M. Kriesberg
Alice Hamilton Society
Michiko Nakayama, MPH’98
Mary Ann Lavin, SM’74, SD’78
($500–$999)
Caroline R. Le Feuvre
Kathleen H. Acree, MPH’64
Elizabeth M. and Philip T. Nicholson, SM’74
Sarah L. and John C. Lechleiter
Laura and Louis M. Alpern, MPH’74
Elizabeth K. Liao
Jill E. Appel, SM’00
Daniel R. Lucey, MPH’88
Robert Berke, MPH’75
Isabel W. and Peter L. Malkin
Paul Biddinger
James A. Manganello, MPH’80
Yvonne M. Bishop, SM’61
JoAnn E. Manson, MPH’84, DPH’87
Michael A. Bolton, SM’95
Linda D. Masiello
Patricia L. Brown, MPH’76
Carol I. Master, SM’81, DPH’89 and Sherry Mayrent
J. Jacques Carter, MPH’83
William Shaw McDermott Nicholas P. McGrane Leah Modigliani Augustine E. Moffitt, Jr., SM’69, SD’73 Thomas P.C. Monath Ann E. Moran, MPH’75, DPH’80 Thomas L. P. O’Donnell William T. Peruzzi, SM’01 Michael S. Radeos, MPH’00 Donald J. Rosato, MPH’63 Margaret B. Ruttenberg, SM’96 Jean-Marc R. Saffar, SM’97 Valentine Schaffner
Mary Eileen Chamberland, MPH’82 Raymond C. Chan, SM’03 Jenny Cheuk Walter K. Clair, MPH’85 Melanie C. Clarke, SM’78 Joseph A. Cook Marcia Cross
Linda C. Niessen, MPH’77 Stephen E. Piwinski, MIH’82 Stephen J. Plank Ruth S. and Thomas D. Polton, SM’83 Lee S. Prisament, MPH’06 Shanna K. Quigley Carl M. Reddix, MPH’85 Carol H. Rice, SM’75 Abbe F. Rosenbaum, MPH’91 Daniel W. Rosenn, SM’74 Steven M. Rudd, MPH’94 Jonathan M. Samet, SM’77 Suresh Santanam, SD’89 Stephen C. Schoenbaum, MPH’74 Steven K. Sham, MPH’74
Adam Cuddy
Donald C. Simonson, MPH’98, SM’99, SD’06
Mary Cushman, SM’96
Sarah L. Sinha, SM’99
Herbert O. Davies, SM’08
Hope H. Snider, MPH’64
Kenneth M. Davis, SM’90
Richard W. Steketee, MPH’83
Lena E. Dohlman-Gerhart, MPH’93
Eileen Storey, MPH’78
Mei Sheng Duh, SD’96
Jeffrie R. Strang
Eilert H. Eilertsen, MPH’58
continued Winter 2011
51
Leonel Vela, MPH’87
Charles Deutsch, SD’87
Royce Moser, Jr., MPH’65
Helen H. Wang, MPH’76, DPH’79
Joseph C. d’Oronzio, MPH’80
John T. Nagurney, MPH’78
Boyd V. Washington, SM’05
Kelly J. Dougherty, SM’06
Jane W. Newburger, MPH’80
Jason S. Weisfeld, MPH’77
Stanley L. Dryden, SM’64
Soomi and Yutaka Niihara, MPH’06
Dorothy L. Wilson, MPH’66
Kim Enomoto, MPH’80
Victoria Nourafchan
Beverly Winikoff, MPH’73 and Michael C. Alpert, MPH’74
Jonathan E. Fielding, MPH’71
Bernard M. Olsen, SM’77
Bertha B. Fitzer
J. Christopher Perry, MPH’73
James F. Wittmer, MPH’61
Laurence B. Flood
Erik J. Won, MPH’03
Nancy J. Fox, SM’86
Linda T. Poggensee, SM’88 and Robert R. Poggensee
Danielle E. Wuchenich, MPH’81
Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr., SM’65
Cedric W. Porter, Jr., MPH’69
Shirley and David R. Younkin
Jeffery S. Garland, SM’92
Tina T. Powderly, SM’00 and Tom Powderly
Homero R. Garza, MPH’76
Beth G. Raucher, SM’02
Cecil K. and Philip Drinker Society
Theodore Georgiadis, SM’65
($250–$499)
Terrance R. Gillen, SPH’96
Anonymous
Judith D. Goldberg, SM’67, SD’72
Theodor Abelin, MPH’63
Rose H. Goldman, MPH’80, SM’81
Terry A. Adirim, MPH’91
James M. Grebosky, SM’07
R. Siisi Adu-Gyamfi
Alan D. Guerci, SM’02
Elizabeth N. Allred, ‘78
Fernando A. Guerra, MPH’83
Virginia W. Arnold, ‘80
Bernard Guyer, MPH‘80
Ruth and Herbert Aschkenasy
Ming-Rong Harn, ‘02
Sanjay Aurora, MPH’07
Tammy C. Harris
Elizabeth A. Bancroft, SM’95
Patricia Hartge, SM’76, SD’83
Lisa S. Barnes, SM’81
Elizabeth E. Hatch, SM’81 and Francis W. Hatch III
Josh Brenner
Arthur Russell Rhodes, MPH’73 Erinn T. Rhodes, MPH’04 A. E. C. Rietveld, MPH’94 John W. Robinson, SM’04 Christy Robson Sheila C. Rocchio Wendy G. Rockefeller, SM’82 Stephanie Rosborough, MPH’06 David Rosenstein Deborah A. Roth Jill S. Schield, SM’89 Janet Y. Schrodi, MPH’00
Rita D. Berkson, SM’77 and Randolph B. Reinhold
Ka He, SM’02, SD’03
Kevin J. Schwartzman, MPH’95
E. Rodman Heine
Bernard Shleien, SM’63
Bonnie B. Blanchfield, SM’91, SD’95
Warren W. Hodge, MPH’64
Sheila R. Bloom, SM’78
Benjamin M. Howard
Kelly Claire Simon, SM’04, SD’07 and John Simon
Paul R. Branch, SM’82
Ping Hu, SM’93, SD’96
Arthur E. Brown, Jr., MPH’81
Sok-Ja K. Janket, MPH’02
Gilbert Burgos, MPH’90
Vida T. and Dean R. Johnson
Sheila A. Campbell
Wayne A. Johnson, MPH’65
Debra D. Carey, SM’79
Marjorie E. Kanof
Kiera and James C. Carlisle
Joel Kavet, SD’72
Beatriz Casado, MPH’07
Soichi Koike, MPH’01
N. Bruce Chase, MPH’68
Ruth B. Kundsin, SD’58
Zeina N. Chemali, MPH’08
Augusta F. Law, MPH’51
Chau-Shyong D. Chen, MPH’84
John C. Leadbeater, MPH’71
Yung-Cheng J. Chen, MPH’83
Caron M. Lee, SM’04
Irene Y. Cheung, SM’74, SD’77
Samuel Levey, SM’63
Eugene D. Choi
Stephen H. MacDonald, MPH’95
Jeffrey B. Cohn, SM’05
Leonard C. Mandell
Robert T. Cutting, MPH’59
Nancy J. Marr, SM’89
Victoria P. de Menil, SM’06
Nancy T. McCall, SM’85, SD’93 John McNelis, SM’08
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James H. Steele, MPH’42 James M. Steven, SM’02 J. Michael Taylor Robert G. Travnicek, MPH’90 Henry W. Vaillant, SM’69 Elizabeth Anne Vanner, SM’82 Helen M. Wallace, MPH’43 Bonnie R. Weinbach, SM’03 Marcia L. Weisman, SD’79 Mary E. Wewers, MPH‘99
Georgiana K. White, SM’79 Lynn F. and John A. Wilkes Earnestine Willis, MPH’77 Saul T. Wilson, MPH’55 Cynthia E. Winne, MPH’74 Joel Yohai
Tribute Gifts Tribute Gifts offer a meaningful way to advance public health while also recognizing a beloved family member, special friend, or colleague. Individuals who were honored or memorialized with a tribute gift in fiscal year 2010 are listed below. The names of their corresponding donors appear throughout this report.
Honored Mrs. William McCormick Blair, Jr. Barry R. Bloom Marcia Cross Myron E. Essex Mary Revelle Paci Louise M. Ryan Shan V. Sayles Janine E. Luke and Melvin R. Seiden
Stephen Lagakos, HSPH professor of biostatistics and international leader in biostatistics and AIDS research, who died in 2009
Steven L. Sneddon, SM’77, SD’79 Meir J. Stampfer, MPH’80, DPH’85 Nancy Turnbull Thelma and Marvin Zelen Memorialized Don Berry James W. Bridges Richard B. Gamble Helen Lagakos Regina Lagakos Stephen W. Lagakos Alan S. Morrison, SM’69, SD’72
O
n October 12, 2009, the HSPH community lost a beloved longtime faculty member and an international leader in biostatistics and AIDS research when Stephen Lagakos, 63, died in a tragic auto collision in Peterborough, N.H. Lagakos helped develop intellectual foundations for clinical and epidemiological research on AIDS that had great impact on science and on public health during his lifetime. He also educated several generations of students, who were devoted to him as an inspirational teacher and mentor. The Lagakos Family Fund was established in memory of the Lagakos family to support the Department of Biostatistics.
Ralph S. Paffenbarger, Jr. Samuel Serino Frances Skornik William A. Skornik Armen H. Tashjian, Jr.
Winter 2011
53
Founders Circle The Harvard School of Public Health deeply appreciates members of the Founders Circle, who demonstrate special foresight by making gifts to the School through their wills or estate plans. Their planned gifts help ensure that HSPH faculty and students will continue their pioneering work for decades to come.
Theodore A. Montgomery, MPH’55 Richard Ng, SM’74 Chong Moo Park, MPH’54 George Putnam Kakaraparti V. Rao, SM’72 Helen Z. Reinherz, SM’62, SD’65 Margo C. and August T. Rossano, SM’41, SD’54
Anonymous
Virginia O. Fine
Ida E. Rubin † and Jerome S. Rubin
Joan M. Altekruse, MPH’65 and Ernest B. Altekruse
Katherine A. Forrest, MPH’71
Louise M. and Paul R. Schloerb
Niki and A. Alan Friedberg
Dorothy Q. and David B. Arnold, Jr.
The Estate of Kate and Murray Seiden
Barbara Gales, SM’91
Nelson K. Aweh III
Janine E. Luke and Melvin R. Seiden
Vida and Arthur L. Goldstein
Katherine L. Rhyne and Charles W. Axten
Adnan Shakir, SM’54
G. Rita Dudley-Grant, MPH’84
Marjorie W. and Mitchell B. Sharmat
Peter O. Haughie, SM’98
Bernard Shleien, SM’63
Francis J. Helminski, MPH’85
Joel E. and Joan Smilow
Terry M. Bennett, MPH’69
Maria Helena F.T. Henriques-Mueller, SD’84
Ruth and Eliot I. Snider
Eugene P. Berg, Jr.
Robin C. Herman and Paul F. Horovitz
Rita D. Berkson, SM’77 and Randolph B. Reinhold
Jose R. Hernandez-Montoya, MPH’80
Joan R. and Arthur Bugs Baer Amy Claire Barkin, MPH’76
Mrs. William McCormick Blair, Jr. Marie C. McCormick and Robert Blendon
Olive W. Holmes Lilli and Donald F. Hornig Howard Hu, MPH’82, SM’86, SD’90
Stanley P. Bohrer, MPH’75
Joan L. and Julius H. Jacobson II
Gary P. Bond, SM’76
Marion A. Jordan, SM’77
Daniel and Lana Branton
Apa Juntavee, MPH’95
Robert D. Brodley
Maurice E. Keenan, MPH’77
Annette B. and Joseph A. Burke, SM’72
Karim F. Lalji, SM’91
Deanna Lee Byck, SD’98
Stanley N. Lapidus
Steven D. Colome, SD’98
Mary Ann Lavin, SM’74, SD’78
Johanna F.H. Coy, ‘48
Paul S. Lee, Jr.
Joan Selig Damson and Barrie M. Damson
Ann M. Lewicki, MPH’76
Frank Denny
Nancy J. Heidorn, SM’89
Jean M. Doherty-Greenberg, MPH’79 and David A. Greenberg, MPH’80
Keitaro Matsuo, SM’03
Mary Kerr Donaldson Patricia A. and William B. Donovan, SM’70 Sumner Feldberg
Peter B. Strong Lee L. and Marvin S. Traub Isabelle Valadian, MPH’53 Hasi Venkatachalam, MPH’43 Helen M. Wallace, MPH’43 Marilyn and Ronald Walter SM’72 Jason S. Weisfeld, MPH’77 Thomas G. White, SM’52 Doris Wilson, ‘48 Enid Wilson
Chunhua Liu, SM’98, SD’00
Walter F. Mazzone, SM’64 Steven U. McKane, MPH’79 Marjorie J. McLemore Jeffrey W. Mecaskey, SM’90 Diana H. and S. Noel Melvin Roger J. Meyer, MPH’59 Robert L. Mittendorf, MPH’87, DPH’91
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† deceased
Dyann F. and Peter K. Wirth Elihu York, MPH’69 Anthony J. Zangara, MPH’62
T
Kent Dayton/HSPH
here is a similarity between the oil business, in which I have spent most of my life, and the Harvard School of Public Health. They both engage in exploration. They both seek to find something that hasn’t been discovered before and, if successful, will help mankind. There is, however, one major difference: The oil business seeks profits; the School seeks to make people healthier and therefore needs some of the business “profits.” One way to fund the School is through a charitable remainder trust. With the Barrie M. Damson 2006 Charitable Remainder Unitrust, I was able to give a specific amount that would not be dependent upon events in the future, such as a change in my will or my net worth. I received a tax benefit and an annual income based on the donated amount. Upon my demise, the trust will continue to pay my wife, Joan, an income during her lifetime. I did not specify the use of the proceeds, as I believe the School will be in a far better position to determine its needs at the time of receipt. Dean Frenk has clearly set the guidelines for the School’s success with his concept of a “Circle of Knowledge.” I believe in the Dean’s concept—and it can only be achieved by our continuing to strengthen the Harvard School of Public Health.
— Barrie Damson, AB ’56, President and Chairman, Damson Financial Resources, Inc., Westport, CT
Winter 2011
55
Faculty, Staff, and Faculty Emeriti Deep gratitude is due to members of the faculty and staff who extended their already extraordinary commitment to the School with contributions of financial support. We thank all members of our HSPH community who work to make a difference every day and recognize those who made gifts of $100 or more in fiscal year 2010 in the following list.
Anonymous Robert B. Banzett Paul Biddinger Deborah L. Blacker Barry R. Bloom Julie E. Buring, SD’83 Tianxi Cai, SD’99 Sheila A. Campbell Paul H. Campbell, SD’87 Graham A. Colditz, DPH’86 Gary C. Curhan, SD’96 Roger B. Davis, SD’88 Charles Deutsch, SD’87
I
n every HSPH department, people are working on the most important public health issues in the world: malaria, HIV, genetics, environmental health, nutrition. What’s unique here at the School is that every topic is both fascinating and morally urgent. The School is a global gathering place. The brightest minds— young scientists and public health leaders from around the world— come here to understand how to improve the health and well-being of the human population, in every setting. We gain insights from their views of issues and problems. As a faculty member, this is the best possible place to be.
Douglas W. Dockery, SM’74, SD’79 Jeffrey M. Drazen Johanna T. Dwyer, SM’65, SD’69 Myron E. Essex
— Walter Willett, MPH ’73, DPH ’80 Chair, Department of Nutrition and Fredrick John Stare Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition
Harvey V. Fineberg Lucian L. Leape
Alix Smullin
Felicia M. Knaul and Julio J. Frenk
Thomas H. Lee, Jr., SM’87
Meir J. Stampfer, MPH’80, DPH’85
Kimberlee K. Gauvreau, SM’89, SD’92
JoAnn E. Manson, SM’67, SD’80
Kenneth Stanley
Richard D. Gelber
Kenneth McIntosh
Ellie Starr
Rebecca S. Gelman
Michael F. McNally
B. Katherine Swartz
Rose H. Goldman, MPH’90, SD’94
Cyrus Mehta
Isabelle Valadian, MPH’53
Sofia M. Gruskin
Donald K. Milton, MIH’85, DPH’89
Michael W. Voligny
Russ B. Hauser, MPH’90, SD’94
Thomas P.C. Monath
Alexander M. Walker, MPH’73, DPH’81
Martin S. Hirsch
Richard R. Monson, SM’67, SD’69
Rui Wang
Chung-Cheng Hsieh, SM’80, SD’85
Nancy E. Mueller, SM’74, SD’80
Scott T. Weiss, SM’77
David J. Hunter, MPH’85, SD’88
Donna S. Neuberg, SD’88
Walter C. Willett, MPH’73, DPH’80
Stephen N. Kales, MPH’92
R. Heather Palmer, SM’70
Paige L. Williams
Joel Lamstein
Patricia A. Shea
Dyann F. Wirth
Jennifer Leaning, SM’70
Daniel E. Singer
Robert O. Wright, MPH’00
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Jeffrey J. Fredberg
Volunteers The School is tremendously grateful to the many
Board of Dean’s Advisors (as of November 1, 2010)
Melinda A. Cavicchia
volunteers who, in partnership with faculty
Jeanne Bari Ackman
members and staff, are helping to advance the
Humayun J. Chaudhry, SM’01
Theodore Angelopoulos
field of public health. The following people are
George D. Behrakis
Lilian W. Cheung, SM’75, SD’78
recognized for their service and commitment to
Katherine States Burke
Tammy S. Ching
HSPH and the committees on which they serve.
Jack Connors, Jr.
Bernard K. Chiu
Jamie A. Cooper-Hohn
Mark S. Clanton, MPH’90
Antonio O. Garza
Lawrence H. Cohn
Mala Gaonkar Haarmann
Ambika Collins
Walter Channing, Jr.
Visiting Committee
Alumni Council
C. Boyden Gray
Phyllis D. Collins
Jeffrey P. Koplan, MPH’78, Chair
Royce Moser, Jr., MPH’65, President
Rajat K. Gupta
Francis L. Coolidge
Alejandro Ramirez
Tyler C. Cooper, MPH’05
Ruth L. Berkelman
Elsbeth Kalenderian, MPH’89, President-Elect
Richard Menschel, Emeritus
Anthony Dias, MPH’04, Secretary
Roslyn B. Payne
Lammot du Pont Copeland, Jr.
Swati A. Piramal
Gail E. Costa, SM’76
Carlos E. Represas
Howard E. Cox, Jr.
Tore Godal
Mark S. Clanton, MPH’90, Immediate Past President
Richard W. Smith
Prudence S. Crozier
Jo Handelsman
Teresa Chahine, SD’10
Howard H. Stevenson
Joan P. Curhan
Risa J. Lavizzo-Mourey
Sameh El-Saharty, MPH’91
Samuel O. Thier
Bancroft Littlefield, Jr.
Chandek Ghosh, MPH’00
Lawrence J. D’Angelo, MPH’72
Nancy T. Lukitsh
Marina Anderson, MPH’03
Vickie M. Mays
Rey de Castro, ScD’00
HSPH Leadership Council Executive Committee
Michael H. Merson
Cecilia Gerard, SM’09
Barrie M. Damson
Rey de Castro
Anne Mills
Mitchell L. Dong
Alan Doft
Kenneth Olden
G. Rita Dudley-Grant, MPH’84
Julie E. Henry, MPH’91
John W. Rowe
Sean Dunbar, SM’08
Paula K. Ivey Henry, SM’95
Jean M. Doherty-Greenberg, MPH’79
Bernard Salick
Maxine Whittaker, MPH’86
Beth V. Martignetti
Burton R. Singer
Roderick King, MPH’98
Kate W. Sedgwick, MPH’09
Monisha Machado-Pereira, SM’07
HSPH Leadership Council
Gloria Rudisch, MPH’70
G. Rita Dudley-Grant, MPH’84
Christine Allen
Sean M. Dunbar, SM’08
Marina G. Anderson, MPH’03 Harvard Alumni Association Appointed Directors
Michael S. Feldberg
Loreen J. Arbus
Marilyn A. Fingerhut, SM’81
Arthur Bugs Baer
Paul J. Finnegan
J. Jacques Carter, MPH’83
Roger L. Barnett
Fred N. Fishman
Mark S. Clanton, MPH’90
Sloan Barnett
James W. Fordyce
Mortimer Berkowitz III
Elizabeth R. Foster
Roger S. Berkowitz
John H. Foster
Jeanine Boyle, MPH’94
Frederick Frank
Jane Carpenter Bradley
Robert B. Fraser
Katherine States Burke
A. Alan Friedberg
Gilbert Butler, Jr.
Michael E. A. Gellert
J. Jacques Carter, MPH’83
Cecilia Gerard
Joshua S. Boger Walter K. Clair Nicholas N. Eberstadt, ‘77
Barrie M. Damson Karen L. Davis, SM’78
Mike M. Donatelli Mitchell L. Dong Robin LaFoley Dong
Lynne M. Cavanaugh, SM’79
Winter 2011
continued
57
M
ore than a decade ago, we attended a Harvard program on interdisciplinary initiatives, featuring faculty collaborations across schools at the University. We noted that HSPH was represented on every panel. The School touches so many global health issues—from AIDS to nutrition to the environment—and does so in an interdisciplinary way. We focus our philanthropic efforts on three areas of scientific interests that we have shared for decades: discovery and exploration, health, and environment. At HSPH, all three areas are well served. We look at early stage research projects like a venture capital investment. After some discussions with Max Essex, chair of the HSPH AIDS Initiative and the Botswana-Harvard AIDS Institute Partnership, we realized that a little seed money for some pilot studies would easily translate to subsequent support from the National Institutes of Health. And indeed, that has happened. This makes giving to HSPH so appealing. It is targeted seed money that propels research to the next level. HSPH is a place where basic research provides policymakers with evidence-based data. It gives us a good feeling to have an impact on public health globally. And we love the fact that people who choose to study public health do so with their hearts.
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Kent Dayton/HSPH
— Barbara (B) Wu, PhD ’81, and Eric Larson, AB ’77 Wilmette, IL
Sarah B. Glickenhaus
HSPH AIDS Initiative International Advisory Council
Charles A. Sanders
Seth M. Glickenhaus
Catherine C. Lastavica, MPH’65
Maxine W. Goldenson
Per Lofberg
Srinivas M. Sastry, MPH’90
C. Boyden Gray
Nancy T. Lukitsh
David I. Scheer
David A. Greenberg, MPH’80
Monisha R. MachadoPereira, SM’07
Ruth C. Scheer
Mrs. William McCormick Blair, Jr., Co-Chair
Louise Park MacMillan, SM’78
Roberta Schneiderman
Susan M. Guillory
Bruce A. Beal
Thomas A. Scully
Peter A. Chernin
Beth V. Martignetti
Kate W. Sedgwick, MPH’09
Joanne M. Cipolla
David H. M. Matheson
Risa C. Shames, SM’92
Susan M. Curren
William Shaw McDermott
Eleanor G. Shore, MPH’70
Norma Dana
John L. McGoldrick
Charlotte V. Smith
Ambassador John Danilovich
Robin B. McLay
Richard W. Smith
Mitchell L. Dong
Richard L. Menschel
Steven L. Sneddon, SM’77, SD’79
Robin LaFoley Dong
Rajat K. Gupta Laurence J. Hagerty Glenn E. Haughie, MPH’70 Eileen P. Hayes, SD’79 Holly D. Hayes Bayard Henry Julie E. Henry, MPH’91 Judith E. Hicks Christopher T. Hitt, SM’75 Olive W. Holmes
Eugene A. Mickey, MPH’82 Robert L. Mittendorf, MPH’87, DPH’91
Phillip W. Sarocco, SM’93
Eliot I. Snider Helen Bowdoin Spaulding Carl W. Stern, Jr.
James J. Hummer
Augustine E. Moffitt, Jr., SM’69, SD’73
Joseph A. Ierardi, SM’80
Ahmed Mohiuddin
Natasha Pearl Stowe
Paula K. Ivey Henry, SM’95
James F. Moore
Richard H. Stowe
Joan L. Jacobson
William M. Moore, MPH’66
George H. Strong
Julius H. Jacobson II
Royce Moser, Jr., MPH’65
James M. Usdan
Anula K. Jayasuriya
Mark O’Friel
Randall G. Vickery
Courtney A. Jennings, SM’89
William A. Oates
Kelly Victory
Thomas L. P. O’Donnell
Robert C. Waggoner
Mark E. Jennings
Adebayo O. Ogunlesi
Michael P. Walsh
G. Timothy Johnson, MPH’76
Adeoye Y. Olukotun, MPH’83
Ronald A. Walter, SM’72
Elsbeth G. Kalenderian, MPH’89
Fredrick K. Orkin, SM’01
Ruth J. Katz, MPH’80 Stephen B. Kay James A. Kaye, MPH’99, DPH’01
Mary Revelle Paci Carol Paraskevas Dinesh Patel Roslyn B. Payne
Maurice E. Keenan, MPH’77
William T. Peruzzi, SM’01
Rachel K. King
Steven C. Phillips
Roderick K. King, MPH’98
Muriel K. Pokross
Charles H. Klippel III, SM’80
Michael R. Pollard, MPH’74
Therus C. Kolff, MPH’79
Thomas D. Polton, SM’83
Florence R. Koplow
Robert O. Preyer
Daman M. Kowalski
James H. Rand IV
Joel Lamstein
Jeannine M. Rivet
William C. Landreth
Deborah Rose, SM’75
Eric C. Larson
Jerome S. Rubin
Howard H. Stevenson
Fair H. Wang, SM’92 Irene M. Weigel Lynn B. Weigel, Jr. J. Frederick Weintz, Jr. Maxine A. Whittaker, MPH’86
Maurice Tempelsman, Chair
Pierre G. Durand Douglass B. Given Cathy Graham David A. Hamburg Lisa M. Henson John A. Lithgow Marguerite Littman Vincent P. McCarthy Mary Revelle Paci Susan B. Plum Sidney Poitier Kate W. Sedgwick, MPH’09 Richard M. Smith Salwa J. Smith Victoria Brooks Stafford Barbara J. Wu Soon-Young Yoon
John J. Whyte, MPH’93
China Initiative Advisory Council
Herbert S. Winokur, Jr.
Tammy S. Ching
Stephen H. Wise
Bernard K. Chiu
Migs S. Woodside
Phyllis D. Collins
Barbara J. Wu
James E. Issler
Joan L. Kittredge Wyon
Mark P. Lindberg
Bertram A. Yaffe
Linda Tao
Ellen M. Zane
M. T. Geoffrey Yeh
Paul J. Zofnass
Gloria A. Rudisch, MPH’70
continued
Bernard Salick
Winter 2011
59
HSPH-Cyprus International Initiative Executive Council Abdulatif Y. Al-Hamad S. John Brademas Philip Christopher Harriet M. Fulbright Walid Khadduri Achilleas Kyprianou
Kenan Sahin Martin E. Segal Stanley S. Shuman Richard M. Smith Ann Tenenbaum Grant A. Tinker Ruth A. Wooden
Nutrition Round Table Steering Committee
Louise Park MacMillan, SM’78
Roger S. Berkowitz
Carmine A. Martignetti
Lilian W. Cheung, SM’75, SD’78
Linda D. Masiello
Joan P. Curhan Robin LaFoley Dong Susan M. Guillory Barbara J. Lind
Ted Mayer Ahmed Mohiuddin Patricia Mohiuddin William A. Oates Muriel K. Pokross
Nikos Mouyiaris
Health Policy and Management Executive Council
Nicholas V. Papadopoulos
Jeannine M. Rivet, Chair
Peter Papanicolaou
Kenneth S. Abramowitz
Nutrition Round Table
Efthyvoulos Paraskevaides
James J. Bochnowski
Edwin Jay Taff, Chair
Harris Pastides
John W. Brown
Roger S. Berkowitz
Photos Photiades
Walter Channing, Jr.
Jane Carpenter Bradley
Demetrius C. Trakatellis
Carrie S. Cox
Martin T. Breslin
John T. Triphyllis
Howard E. Cox Jr.
Lilian W. Cheung, SM’75, SD’78
Thomas Daschle
Kenneth H. Cooper, MPH’62
John H. Foster
Prudence S. Crozier
Larry S. Gage
Joan P. Curhan
Katie H. Gambill
Ronald C. Curhan
Laurence J. Hagerty
Mitchell L. Dong
Mark E. Jennings
Robin LaFoley Dong
Stephen B. Kay
Frank Guidara
Charles H. Klippel III, SM’80
Susan M. Guillory
Unfinished Agenda of Infectious Diseases Executive Committee
Per Lofberg
Holly D. Hayes
David I. Scheer, Chair
Carol Raphael
Ned Hentz
Thomas A. Scully
Thomas Herskovits
Adeoye Y. Olukotun, MPH’83
David B. Snow
Judith E. Hicks
Richard H. Stowe
Lee A. Iacocca
James M. Usdan
Michael E. Jacobson
Josef H. von Rickenbach
Ellen L. Kaplan
Michael P. Walsh
Louisa Kasdon
Ellen M. Zane
Mollie Katzen
Dimitrios Linos
Center for Health Communications Advisory Board Daniel H. Adler Raymond G. Chambers Megan Chernin Barry Diller Lindsay Doran Daniel R. Glickman Michael A. Helfant Howard H. Hiatt Arianna Huffington Jeffrey Jacobs Quincy D. Jones, Jr. Thomas H. Kean Frank W. Marshall Newton N. Minow Irene Pollin Charles Rosin Peter Roth
Irene Pollin Edwin Jay Taff
Irene Pollin Gloria W. Sakata Srinivas M. Sastry, MPH’90 Nina F. Simonds Jennifer W. Steans Ming Tsai Randall G. Vickery Robert C. Waggoner Joan L. Kittredge Wyon Bertram A. Yaffe Peter M. Yeracaris, MPH’98 Youko Yeracaris Marc Zammit
Steven C. Phillips Stephen H. Wise
Eric C. Larson Barbara J. Lind Francisco A. Lorenzo
Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the 2010 Volunteer and Gift Report. We apologize for any errors. Please report any discrepancies to Andrew Yakoobian, Assistant Director of Donor Relations. phone: (617) 998-1059 email: ayakoobi@hsph.harvard.edu
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Harvard Public Health Review
Financial Highlights July 1, 2009–June 30, 2010 Fiscal Year 2010 Sources of Revenue
M
anagement at Harvard School of Public Health worked to weather the global financial downturn in fiscal 2010 through a combination of strategies that seek to
50.9% Federal Sponsored Research
balance declines in endowment income with efforts to contain costs and attract additional research funding from government and other sources. HSPH closed fiscal 2010 with total operating revenues of $333.9 million, a 3.4% decline from the prior year. This decline is predominantly due to the impact of the University’s decision to reduce amounts distributed to endowment accounts for operating support, as well as reduced interest earned on deposits,
7.8% Non-federal Sponsored Research 9.5% Tuition & Executive Education 13.2% Endowment Income
12.7% Research Facility & Administrative Costs Recovery
5.9% Gifts & Other Revenue
resulting in a combined decrease of $11.6 million year-over-year. The School was successful in securing $44.0 million in grants through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA); $7.5 million of this was recorded in fiscal 2010, and an additional $36.5 million is expected over the next three years. While revenues declined, expenses remained flat. The School maintained a commitment to growing financial aid, as well as investing in junior faculty recruitment. To offset this expense growth, opportunities for more efficient and effective use of resources were identified, yielding savings in such areas as utilities costs and building maintenance. FUNDRAISING HIGHLIGHTS New gifts and pledges from generous alumni, individuals, corporations, foundations, and other organizations totaled nearly $11.0 million in fiscal year 2010. In addition, $15.7 million was generated from research grants from corporations, foundations, and other non-federal sponsors. Together, gifts, non-federal grants, and endowment income advanced research in
Fiscal Year 2010 Expenses
areas such as HIV/AIDS, health care reform, obesity, environmental threats to health, and global health security. While somewhat less than in the prior year, funding generated through
50.2% Federal Sponsored Research
philanthropy continues to be a critical resource for seed funding, junior faculty support, student financial aid and other unrestricted areas. Notable gifts to the School in fiscal year 2010 included a $1.5 million pledge from Deborah Rose, SM’75, to endow the Rose Traveling Fellowship program, a fund that supports
8.4% Non-federal Sponsored Research
international travel and research for graduate and postdoctoral students in the Departments
2.4% University Assessment
$600,000 pledge.
of Epidemiology and Biostatistics. Roslyn Payne renewed her commitment to Project Antares, a cross-University program addressing poverty and health in developing countries, with a The School also continues to benefit from our corporate and foundation partners. ExxonMobil sustained its generosity towards malaria research and training at the School
19.3% Academic Support
9.4% Administration & Development 10.3% Facilities
with a $710,000 contribution. In addition, the Monell Foundation continued its invaluable unrestricted support with a $500,000 grant to the Dean’s Discretionary Fund. Our faculty play a critical role in attracting resources through non-federal sponsored research grants. With a $6.8 million multi-year grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the School is pioneering research in a number of areas to improve health in developing countries and combat tuberculosis, malaria, and malnutrition. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation continued its support of the School at the $1.0 million level, providing
Fiscal Year 2010 operating expenses were $338 million.
funding for multiple areas, such as postdoctoral training at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies and research regarding the effect of neighborhoods on health.
Winter 2011
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Harvard Public Health Review Dean of the Faculty Julio Frenk Alumni Council As of November 2010 Officers Royce Moser, Jr., mph ’65 President Elsbeth Kalenderian, mph ’89 President-Elect Anthony Dias, mph ’04 Secretary Mark S. Clanton, mph ’90 Immediate Past President Alumni Councilors 2008-2011 G. Rita Dudley-Grant, MPH ‘84 Sean Dunbar, SM ‘08* Maxine Whittaker, MPH ‘86
Visiting Committee Jeffrey P. Koplan, MPH’78 Chair Ruth L. Berkelman Joshua Boger Walter Clair Nicholas N. Eberstadt, ’77 Tore Godal Jo Handelsman Risa Lavizzo-Mourey Bancroft Littlefield Nancy T. Lukitsh Vickie M. Mays Michael H. Merson Anne Mills Kenneth Olden John W. Rowe Bernard Salick Burton Singer
Board of Dean’s advisors Jeanne B. Ackman Theodore Angelopoulos George D. Behrakis Katherine S. Burke Jack Connors, Jr. Jamie A. Cooper-Hohn Antonio O. Garza C. Boyden Gray Rajat K. Gupta Mala Gaonkar Haarmann Richard L. Menschel emeritus Roslyn B. Payne Swati A. Piramal Alejandro Ramirez Carlos E. Represas Richard W. Smith Howard Stevenson Samuel O. Thier
2009-2012 Marina Anderson, mph ’03 Rey de Castro, SD ’00 Cecilia Gerard, SM ’09* 2010-2013 Teresa Chahine, SD ’10 Sameh El-Saharty, MPH ‘91 Chandek Ghosh, MPH ‘00
The Harvard Public Health Review is published three times a year for supporters and alumni of the Harvard School of Public Health. Its readers share a commitment to the School’s mission: advancing the public’s health through learning, discovery, and communication. Harvard Public Health Review Harvard School of Public Health Office for External Relations Third Floor, East Atrium 401 Park Drive Boston, Massachusetts 02215 (617) 384-8991 Please visit www.hsph.harvard.edu/review and email comments and suggestions to review@hsph.harvard.edu. Dean of the Faculty Julio Frenk T & G Angelopoulos Professor of Public Health and International Development Vice Dean for External Relations Ellie Starr Associate Vice Dean for Communications Julie Fitzpatrick Rafferty Editor Madeline Drexler Senior Art Director Anne Hubbard Assistant Editor Amy Roeder
*Class Representative
Principal Photographer Kent Dayton
For information about making a gift to the Harvard School of Public Health, please contact:
Contributing Writers Sara Rimer, Debra Bradley Ruder, Richard Saltus
Ellie Starr Vice Dean for External Relations Office for External Relations Harvard School of Public Health Third Floor, East Atrium 401 Park Drive Boston, Massachusetts 02215 (617) 384-8970 or estarr@hsph.harvard.edu For information regarding alumni relations and programs, please contact, at the above address: Jim Smith, Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs (617) 998-8813 or jsmith@hsph.harvard.edu www.hsph.harvard.edu/give
Cover Kent Dayton/HSPH © 2010–2011 President and Fellows of Harvard College
Meet Madina. Her work will change the world. Name:
Madina Agénor Place of birth:
Schoelcher, Martinique Degree Program:
ScD, Department of Society, Human Development, and Health Focus:
Social inequalities in cervical cancer screening among women of color Mission:
“I want to stop tens of thousands of women worldwide from dying of cervical cancer—a disease that is almost entirely preventable.”
Madina is able to pursue her mission thanks to the generosity of Steve Kay and the Kay Family Scholarship in Public Health. 350 students just as promising as Madina just entered HSPH. They need your support.
Every gift, of any size, can help change the world. Please give to the HSPH Annual Fund today. www.hsph.harvard.edu/give
Nonprofit Org. U.S. Postage PD Burlington, VT Permit No. 586
Office for External Relations East Atrium, Third Floor 401 Park Drive Boston, Massachusetts 02215
Change Service Requested
Continuing Professional Education Programs, 2011 Where theory informs practice and practice informs theory January 2011 January 9–21 Program for Chiefs of Clinical Services January 24–28 & May 16-20 Leadership Strategies for Information Technology in Health Care February/March 2011 February 28–March 3, 2011 Safety in Design and Construction: A Lifecycle Approach March 14–16 Basic Hands-On CAMEO Training March 21–24 Analyzing Risk: Science, Assessment, and Management
March 28–30 Management and Leadership Skills for Environmental Health and Safety Professionals
April 2011 April 25–28 Principles and Practices of Radiation Safety: Occupational and Environmental Radiation Protection
May 2011 May 16–18 Effective Risk Communication: Theory, Tools, and Practical Skills for Communicating about Risk
June 2011 June 6–10 Radiation Safety Officer Training for Laboratory Professionals June 6–8 Advanced Hands-On CAMEO Training June 13–17 Comprehensive Industrial Hygiene: The Applications of Basic Principles June 20–24 Guidelines for Laboratory Design: Health and Safety Considerations
Customized programs are also available. All programs are held in Boston unless otherwise noted. Contact: Deputy Director Paul Tumolo (617) 384-8675 ptumolo@hsph.harvard.edu For additional information or to register, contact: (617) 384-8692 contedu@hsph.harvard.edu https://ccpe.sph.harvard.edu Harvard School of Public Health Center for Continuing Professional Education 677 Huntington Ave. CCPE-Dept. A Boston, MA 02115