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Comstock dies after 12-year battle with prostate cancer November 30, 1999
Researcher George Comstock dies at 92 July 16, 2007
Local researcher honored August 12, 2005
Research center opened to honor George W. Comstock Facility a tribute to nationally known tuberculosis researcher June 01, 2011 | By MAEGAN CLEARWOOD | maegan.clearwood@herald-mail.com HAGERSTOWN — The grand opening of the George W. Comstock Center for Public Health Research and Prevention on Wednesday was a tribute to its namesake, who dedicated his life to public health.
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The main lobby of the facility at 1100 Dual Highway was crowded with friends and admirers of the late Dr. Comstock, articles written by and about him and memorabilia from some of his research projects.
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Comstock, a nationally known tuberculosis researcher, died in 2007 at the age of 92. The new research center combines staffs from two units, including one that had been at the Washington County Health Department and has state-of-the-art medical equipment for research and testing funded by theNational Institutes of Health. The center’s history dates to 1921 when Johns Hopkins University started conducting medical research in Washington County. In 1962, Comstock founded the Johns Hopkins Training Center for Public Health Research and Prevention in Washington County and led it for 42 years. Researchers at the center — renamed the George W. Comstock Center for Public Health Research and Prevention in 2005 — have studied such conditions as sleep apnea and heart disease. Hugging friends and family and smiling for pictures, Comstock’s widow, Emma Lou Comstock, was enthusiastic about the grand opening. She attended the event with Comstock’s children and friends. “I think this is monumental, a very fitting place for the whole operation to be. It’s great seeing the two units combined,” she said. “It’s a fitting tribute.” The center’s director, Josef Coresh, said plans for the new building had been in the works for two years. He said that the location has accessible parking, which is ideal for its older research participants. “It’s exciting that everything is coming together. We’re heading in the right direction,” he said. Eight people spoke at the celebration, including Michael Klag, the dean of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. The event drew a diverse group of people, including representatives from Johns Hopkins University, the Meritus Medical Center and the National Cancer Institute. Participants of the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study, a long-term epidemiologic research project, were also at the center Wednesday afternoon for their fifth examination. Over that 25-year study, Coresh said there has been a 90 percent retention rate among participants. Such dedication among county residents was, according to Comstock’s daughter, Martha Comstock, one of the reasons her father was committed to research in the area. “It’s a microcosm of all of America. It’s rural and urban, has a stable population, you could do long-term studies there. That was part of his joy being here. It was a wealth of information,” Martha Comstock said. Administrative Coordinator Laura Camarata said she understood Comstock’s dedication to Washington County. “The people who work here and the participants are great. They have a real sense of community. They’re a very dedicated, close-knit group,” Camarata said. Comstock “thought that research and being part of the community was very important,” Martha Comstock said. “He would have been pleased that it is going to continue. That was his concern, that it continue after he was gone.”