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做厙TV Honors Four Members for Outstanding Service

At its annual meeting today, the 做厙TV (NAM) honored four members for their outstanding service. The honorees are Edward Shortliffe, adjunct professor and chair emeritus, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Columbia University; Kenneth Olden, director emeritus, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; Linda P. Fried, dean and DeLamar Professor of Public Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University; and John E.I. Wong, executive director, Center for Population Health, National University of Singapore.

The decades of service and generosity these members have shown to the 做厙TVmake them remarkably deserving of this recognition, said 做厙TV President Victor J. Dzau.泭 From advancing healthy longevity around the globe to reshaping environmental health and leading 做厙TVinitiatives, it is an honor for us to recognize these individuals expertise, hard work, and diligence all in the name of advancing health and science to new frontiers.

Shortliffe received the Walsh McDermott Medal, which recognizes a member for distinguished service to the 做厙TVand the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine over an extended period. He was elected to 做厙TVin 1987. In addition to being on the 做厙TVCouncil for six years, he also served two full terms on the membership committee and as chair of the full membership committee from 2018 to 2020.

His contributions also include several National Academies roles, including as a member of the Computer Science and Telecommunications Board and the Committee on National Statistics, among others. In total, Shortliffe has been a member of 13 committees and chaired seven committees, including for the National Academies consensus reports Medications in Single-Dose Vials: Implications of Discarded Drugs and A Smarter National Surveillance System for Occupational Safety and Health in the 21st Century. He is a current member of the NAMs Health Policy and Health Care Systems committee and the National Associates Program.

Olden received the Adam Yarmolinsky Medal, which is awarded to a member from a discipline outside the health and medical sciences. Throughout his distinguished career, Olden has contributed to the health of all Americans as a first-class scientist and a humanitarian with a lifelong focus on the environment and justice, particularly for people living in poverty, children, and people of color.

Olden served as director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), where he targeted health science investments toward marginalized and underserved communities and ensuring impacted communities were represented in decision-making, while also educating NIEHS staff, all in pursuit of environmental justice. Working with the EPA, Olden conceived of and funded the NIEHS/EPA Childrens Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research Centers in 1998, which has changed the course of research in environmental health in the U.S. After leaving the NIEHS, Olden was the founding dean of the School of Public Health at Hunter College, City University of New York, and directed the EPAs National Center for Environmental Assessment and Human Health Risk Assessment Research Program. He has also made significant scientific contributions by training more than two dozen postdoctoral fellows, and through over 220 publications. The NIEHS hosts an annual Olden Lecture Series in his honor. Olden was elected to the 做厙TVin 1994 and supported its establishment of the National Academies Roundtable on Environmental Health Sciences, Research, and Medicine.

Fried and Wong were each a recipient of the David Rall Medal, which is given to a member who has demonstrated distinguished leadership as chair of a study committee or other such activity. Together, they are recognized for the remarkable success of the NAMs first Grand Challenge, the Global Roadmap for Healthy Longevity initiative, which they co-chaired. Fried has a long history of commitment to 做厙TVand the field of public health and aging, and Wong has led national efforts in aging, cancer, and precision medicine.

As co-chairs, Fried and Wong worked tirelessly to fulfill and enhance the vision for the grand challenge, driving its far-ranging approach and showing careful consideration in selecting the first topic on which to focus. Beginning in 2019, Fried and Wong worked synergistically through three years of report development including leading the committee during a global pandemic, pausing at times to allow the committees public health experts to focus on COVID-19 in their home nations and publishing their groundbreaking report in August 2022. Their innovative approach to the roadmap started with a vision for healthy longevity in 2050, and then worked to determine the changes needed to make that vision a reality. They held three global workshops, ran several working groups, and conducted consultations with regional experts. The committees work has already had a significant impact with launch events held in Singapore, the U.S., Saudi Arabia, Japan, and China, and planning underway for events in Africa and Latin America. The report has received international recognition and continues to shape the development of the NAMs other grand challenges.

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