Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) received the Edwin C. Whitehead Award for Medical Research Advocacy. Collins is the chairman of the Senate Aging Committee and the founder and co-chair of the Senate Alzheimer’s Task Force. She is also the founder and co-chair of both the Senate Alzheimer’s Task Force and Senate Diabetes Caucus. Since the diabetes caucus was founded, funding for diabetes research has more than tripled from $319 million to more than $1 billion in 2017.
Atul Gawande, surgeon, writer, and public health researcher and advocate, received the Isadore Rosenfeld Award for Impact on Public Opinion. Gawande practices general and endocrine surgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and is a staff writer for The New Yorker magazine, publishing essays on the science and practice of medicine, from people’s individual experiences to the effects of national policy. He is professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Samuel O. Thier Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School. He is also Executive Director of Ariadne Labs, a joint center for health systems innovation through simple, scalable solutions that improve the delivery of care. Gawande is chairman of the non-profit organization Lifebox, which is bringing the Safe Surgery Checklist, shown to cut post-operative deaths in half, to low-income countries around the world.
Roger Glass, director of the Fogarty International Center and associate director for international research at the NIH, won the Geoffrey Beene Builders of Science Award. Glass oversees an extensive portfolio of grants and awards that support training of global health researchers and facilitates NIH’s research and training partnerships abroad. Glass’s research expertise is in the prevention of gastroenteritis from rotaviruses, noroviruses and cholera. He has maintained field studies in India, Bangladesh, Brazil, Mexico, Israel, Russia, Vietnam, China and elsewhere, and created a team of epidemiologists and virologists that spearheaded global efforts to research and introduce rotavirus vaccine worldwide.
Shari and Garen Staglin, founders of the Staglin Family Vineyard, received the Gordon and Llura Gund Leadership Award for their commitment to accelerating cures for brain disorders through scientific research. Their focus on brain health research is the result of their son Brandon’s diagnosis of schizophrenia in 1990. Brandon is now director of marketing and communications at One Mind Institute and his sister Shannon is president at the Staglin Family Vineyard. The Staglins founded One Mind, One Mind Institute and Bring Change2Mind to address brain disorders and stigma. For the last 23 years their annual Music Festival for Brain Health, along with their other advocacy efforts, have raised over $280 million for brain health research.
The EveryLife Foundation for Rare Diseases has been selected to receive the Paul G. Rogers Distinguished Organization Advocacy Award. The EveryLife Foundation was founded in 2009 to improve the regulatory process for drug development, from clinical trials to approval, by working with patient organizations, industry, academic scientists, FDA, and NIH to spur insightful scientific analysis and dialogue, expand grassroots support, and ultimately bring about key policy changes.
Peter Hotez, received the Research!America Advocacy Award for Sustained National Leadership for his far-reaching work in the areas of neglected tropical disease research and vaccine development. Hotez is dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine where he is also professor of pediatrics and molecular virology and microbiology. He serves as the director of the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, where he leads a product development partnership for developing new vaccines for hookworm infection, schistosomiasis, Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, and SARS/MERS, diseases that affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide. In 2006 at the Clinton Global Initiative, he co-founded a Global Network for NTDs to provide access to essential medicines for hundreds of millions of people. Hotez was among the first to predict Zika’s emergence in the U.S. and is recognized as an authority on vaccines.