BULLETIN
Concert Tomorrow (December 2)
The Longwood Symphony Orchestra, which is made up of musicians
from the Boston medical community, will hold a concert Saturday, Dec. 2,
to benefit New England SERVE Consortium for Children with Special Health
Care Needs. Judith Palfrey, the T. Berry Brazelton professor of pediatrics
at Children’s Hospital Boston and HMS, will be honored for her work
to improve health care systems. The concert begins at 8 p.m. at Jordan Hall,
30 Gainsborough Street. Tickets are $15–$28; to purchase, call 617-667-1527
or visit www.longwoodsymphony.org.
HMS Faculty Council Proceedings
HMS dean Joseph Martin began the Oct. 4 Faculty Council meeting, the first
of the academic year, by announcing that Lisa Iezzoni, HMS professor of medicine
at Massachusetts General Hospital, was elected as vice chair for the coming
academic year. He then introduced the new members of the Faculty Council.
Nancy Andrews, dean for basic sciences and graduate studies, updated the
council on the various programs she oversees. She noted that the MD–PhD
program now has two tracks, one in basic science and the second in social
science, and the Medical Scientist Training Program was renewed last year
with an excellent score. She said that the program is thriving, and more
slots are needed. The Health Sciences and Technology program was reviewed
in the spring of 2005, and Andrews said the focus on education will be sharpened.
Andrews noted that there are eight PhD programs based at HMS and HSDM,
with an almost equal number of PhD students as medical students. Most of
the programs have installed new leadership in the past two or three years.
She pointed out that with the state of NIH funding, support for graduate
education is becoming increasingly difficult. The Systems Biology Department
has continued to grow and a new chair of Social Medicine has been named.
She also noted that University-wide science planning continues, and a preliminary
report of the Planning Committee was made available to the community.
Dan Singer, associate dean for academic and clinical programs, updated the
council on the clinical translational science project. He explained that
it is part of the NIH Roadmap Initiative and is intended to create
academic environments that develop clinical and translational science and
train the next generation of scientists. Ultimately, it will replace the
individual General Clinical Research Centers when funding for them ends in
2010. In preparation, the School received a planning grant earlier this year,
with a full grant application target of November 2007. Consultants were hired
and an executive committee formed to assist in the effort.
Cynthia Walker, executive dean for administration, presented a brief financial
and administrative update. She highlighted the academic year’s educational,
research, and administrative priorities, which include finalizing plans to
compensate faculty for teaching, addressing the financial aid needs of students,
replacing lost training grants, space planning, prioritizing recruiting investments,
and budget management.
Ellice Lieberman, dean for faculty affairs, reported on the Task Force on
Promotion Criteria for Clinician-teachers and Clinical Investigators, which
was appointed by the dean to evaluate the appropriateness of the current
promotion criteria and to make recommendations for change. The task force
has been meeting since April and has evaluated theoretical cases that present
particular challenges and discussed faculty activities that might be used
to support promotion. The dean, Faculty Council, and provost review any changes
proposed by the task force.
Lieberman provided promotion statistics indicating that 40 percent of full-time
faculty at assistant professor or above were promoted on the clinician-teacher
criteria. She also gave the median number of years to promotion for each
set of criteria and academic rank. The council briefly discussed these numbers
and possible new criteria.
Martin outlined the major efforts in the coming months, including clinical
translational science, financial support for teaching, science planning,
departmental searches, and the future of HSPH.
Before adjourning, Martin announced his intention to step down as dean in July,
ending a 10-year tenure. He indicated that interim president Derek Bok will
form an advisory committee to identify candidates, with the new president making
the final selection.
Federal Grant Fuels DNA Sequencing at the Broad
The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard recently received a nearly $200 million
grant to support large-scale DNA sequencing. The Broad’s four-year
competitive renewal grant from the National Human Genome Research Institute
(NHGRI) is the largest of three awarded to institutions across the U.S.
The grant will help fund several Broad Institute projects. One is The Cancer
Genome Atlas pilot project (TCGA), which is working to identify mutations
associated with certain cancers. TCGA is jointly funded by the NHGRI award
and a grant from the National Cancer Institute.
The Broad is also sequencing the genomes of mammals such as the mouse, dog,
horse, and elephant. When the work is completed, scientists will be able
to compare the results to the human genome and identify DNA sequences
that have been conserved over time and across species, which may shed light
on human biological functions.
The grant will also support genomic studies of microscopic organisms such
as bacteria and viruses and the development of large-scale DNA sequencing
that is faster and less expensive than current methods.
Washington University School of Medicine and Baylor College of Medicine also
received grants from
the NHGRI.
Honors and Advances
• Frederick Alt, a Howard Hughes investigator and
the Charles A. Janeway professor of pediatrics at Children’s Hospital
Boston and HMS, was awarded the Alfred G. Knudson Award for Excellence in
Cancer Genetics from the National Cancer Institute. The honor recognizes
scientists making outstanding contributions to the cancer genetics field.
Alt, who is also the scientific director of the CBR Institute for Biomedical
Research, will be presented with the award at an NCI retreat in January,
where he will also give the award lecture.
• The International Society for Eye Research awarded the Ludwig von Sallmann
Prize in Ophthalmology to Eliot Berson, the William F. Chatlos
professor of ophthalmology at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary and
HMS. Berson was given the award, which honors the former director of the
Ophthalmology Branch of the National Institutes of Health, for his research
on hereditary retinal diseases. The award was presented at the International
Congress of Eye Research in Buenos Aires in October, where Berson also presented
a lecture.
• Richard Cash, HSPH senior lecturer on international health,
is a recipient of the 2006 Prince Mahidol Award, which honors “exemplary
contributions in the field of public health.” Cash, along with his
colleagues David Nalin and Dilip Mahalanabis, are being honored for their
work in oral rehydration therapy in developing countries. Cash was part of
the first clinical trial for the therapy. The winners will be presented with
the award at a ceremony in Bangkok in January.
• Lucy Epstein, HMS clinical fellow in psychiatry, was recently
named a Laughlin Fellow. The fellowships are awarded by the American College
of Psychiatrists to third- or fourth-year residents who show potential to
make significant contributions to the field. Epstein, a fourth-year resident
at Massachusetts General Hospital, is also the administrative chief resident
and the clinic liaison chief resident at the hospital.
• Massachusetts General Hospital has appointed Joren
Madsen,
associate professor of surgery, the first director of the MGH Transplant
Center. Under Madsen’s leadership, the center will foster a multidisciplinary
approach to patient care, education, and research and offer more comprehensive
services for patients in end-stage organ failure. Jay Fishman,
HMS associate professor of medicine, was named the center’s new associate
director.
• Richard Scott, HMS professor of orthopedic surgery at Brigham
and Women’s Hospital, recently received the lifetime achievement award
from the Asian Pacific Arthroplasty Society at its annual meeting in Shanghai,
China. Scott was honored for his innovations in hip and knee joint replacement
surgery, including designing prostheses that are used all over the world.
His book Total Knee Arthroplasty was recently translated into Chinese.
• Jay Shendure, a fourth-year medical student, was recently
named a 2006 Young Innovator by MIT’s Technology Review magazine.
The honor is given to scientists and researchers under the age of 35 who
are working on new and innovative projects. Shendure developed a way to sequence
the DNA of a bacterial genome at a much quicker rate and much lower cost
than traditional DNA sequencing. He is now working on making his method even
more efficient with the hope that some day, biologists will be able to sequence
a person’s genome for $1,000.
• Bruce Spiegelman, HMS professor
of cell biology, was recently elected to the European Molecular Biology Organization.
EMBO members are elected on the basis of scientific excellence and provide
scientific input for the organization’s programs and activities. Since
members must be European, Spiegelman was named an associate member. It is
an honor given to only a few scientists outside of Europe that recognizes
the importance of their work on a global scale.
In Memoriam
Hermes Grillo, HMS professor of surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital,
died on Oct. 14 in a car accident in Italy. He was 83.
Grillo received his AB summa cum laude from Brown University in 1943 and
his MD from HMS in 1947. His training in general and thoracic surgery at
Massachusetts General Hospital was interrupted by two years as a combat surgeon
with the 1st Marine Division during the Korean War. He returned to Boston
and MGH, completed his surgical training, and joined the staff of HMS and
MGH in 1954. He served as chief of the Division of General Thoracic Surgery
from 1969 to 1994. He was appointed professor of surgery in 1973, and in
2002, the Hermes C. Grillo professorship in thoracic surgery was established
in his honor.
Grillo’s research focused on the mechanisms of wound healing and the
restoration of the trachea following surgery for stenosis and malignant obstructions.
Over the years, he developed an entire school of tracheo-bronchial surgery
and is widely recognized as the father of modern tracheal surgery. His 2004
textbook, Surgery of the Trachea and Bronchi, was immediately accepted
as the authoritative text in the field.
Grillo served the HMS community on many committees over the years. Paul
Russell, chairperson of the HMS Memorial Minutes Committee on which he served,
said, “Hermes Grillo was a highly cultured person. He loved ‘the
finer things of life’ and included a sense of style in everything he
did. In his careful and skillful work in the operating room, close attention
to detail meant survival of many of his patients who came to him for a final
chance for cure.”
Memorial services will be planned at HMS early next year.
Joseph Harrington, HSPH professor of environmental health engineering and
the Gordon McKay professor of environmental engineering at the Faculty of
Arts and Sciences, passed away Oct. 9 at the age of 69. He was the chair
of the Department of Environmental Science and Physiology (now the Department
of Environmental Health) at HSPH from 1982 to 1986.
Harrington received an AM in 1959 and a PhD in 1963 from the Harvard Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences. In 1960, he joined the Harvard Water Program,
helping to guide the country’s water resource planning, which launched
his 42-year career with Harvard.
In addition to chairing the Department of Environmental Science and Physiology,
Harrington served in several leadership positions at HSPH. He was the founding
director of the Master of Science Program in Health Policy and Management
and director of the Physical Sciences and Engineering Program (now the Exposure,
Epidemiology, and Risk Program) at HSPH. He also served as the acting or
interim head of several other departments and programs.
Harrington also served as a consultant for federal, state, and local governments
on matters concerning public health, water supply, and the environment.
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