Posts Tagged ‘NIH’

Maggie
Schmerin

Spectrum Infection: Lessons Learned – H1N1 A Year Later

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

nicGreetings from the 44th National Immunization Conference in Atlanta! With the one year anniversary of the H1N1 outbreak upon us this week, there is not a more fitting place for officials from NIH, HHS, CDC, FDA, state and local health agencies, vaccine advocacy organizations and vaccine manufacturers to gather.

Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius delivered the conference’s keynote address, which focused on the response to the H1N1 flu pandemic, the lessons learned and efforts to strengthen America’s health security in the future.

On April 21, 2009, the CDC was alerted to a new strain of influenza in California and Texas, similar to one that was presenting in Mexico. Kathleen Sebelius was still serving as governor of Kansas, but seven short days later would be sworn in as our country’s 21st HHS Secretary and quickly whisked into the Situation Room at the White House where President Obama and other government leaders were beginning to mount an attack on what would become the world’s first pandemic in 40 years.

Over the course of the past 12 months, the federal government worked alongside state and local health agencies to ensure that Americans were prepared for and protected against H1N1, and the H1N1 vaccine was the keystone of these efforts. As Secretary Sebelius stated, “The H1N1 vaccine was the most ambitious immunization campaign ever.” (more…)

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John
Seng

An All-Around Winning Candidate

Thursday, July 9th, 2009
NIH Director Nominee Francis Collins, MD, PhD
NIH Director Nominee Francis Collins, MD, PhD

Many are applauding President Obama’s nomination of Dr. Francis Collins as the next director of the National Institutes of Health, and I join them in that applause.

I’ve been privileged to meet and work with Dr. Collins on several occasions in the past seven years. Spectrum helped him and the Progeria Research Foundation announce their discovery of the gene that causes Hutchinson Gilford
Francis Collins announces discovery of the gene responsible for Progeria at 2002 Washington press briefing

Collins announces discovery of the gene responsible for Progeria

progeria syndrome, or Progeria, at a 2002 National Press Club briefing.

Progeria is the disease that causes premature aging in children. Children with Progeria die at an average age of 13 from atherosclerosis. Dr. Collins’s passion for these children and their families, as well as for all his pursuits and accomplishments in science have set him apart in my view as one of the best to lead the world’s premier medical research organization.

Dr. Collins is distinct not only for his research and passion for Progeria, but also in the way he has treaded the waters of the sometimes heated debate between science and faith. A White House press release noted that Dr. Collins has a “longstanding interest in the interface between science and faith,” which he discusses in his book, The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief – an interesting read.

With such a diverse background, as well as his many accomplishments – he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in November 2007 and elected into the Institute of Medicine and the National Academy of Sciences – I’m confident that Dr. Collins is committed to promoting scientific integrity and revolutionary scientific research, but will do so with respect to the multitude of complex issues and viewpoints.

I’ve been to the NIH campus countless times. It’s large – plenty of room for the growing support of new and exciting research and a continued respect of various opinions. Mr. Obama’s nominee is truly good news, and let’s hope for a speedy confirmation process.

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