The 2009 Luther L. Terry Award
winners have been announced. The press release is below. Please join me
in congratulating the winners!
Catherine L. Jo, Manager, International Tobacco Control, American
Cancer Society
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Andrew Becker, American Cancer Society, 212-237-3899,
andrew.becker@cancer.org
ATLANTA December 11, 2008 The American Cancer Society
announced today the winners of the 2009 Luther L. Terry Awards for
Exemplary Leadership in
Tobacco Control. The awards are named for the late United States
Surgeon General Luther L. Terry, M.D., who led the landmark 1964
Surgeon General's
Report which connected tobacco use to lung cancer and other illnesses.
Dr. Terry's courageous and groundbreaking work established the
foundation for
public health scrutiny of the dangers of tobacco use. The awards are
presented triennially; the initial awards were presented at the 11th
World Conference on Tobacco OR Health in Chicago, Illinois, USA, in
2000, with subsequent awards presentations at the 12th and 13th World
Conferences on
Tobacco OR Health in 2003 and 2006 respectively. "Given the momentum of
the World Health Organization (WHO)'s Framework Convention on Tobacco
Control (FCTC), currently ratified by 161 countries including Costa
Rica, Croatia, Guinea-Bissau, Iraq, Lao People's Democratic Republic,
and Nepal, and the growing global movement to combat unprecedented and
aggressive worldwide tobacco marketing tactics, the timeliness of
recognizing these achievers' contributions is particularly relevant,"
said chief executive officer of the American Cancer Society, John R.
Seffrin, Ph.D. "As reported by the WHO, there are approximately 1.3
billion smokers in the world ? one-third of the global population aged
15 years and older," Seffrin continued. "Eventually, 650 million of
them will die from smoking. This number exceeds the expected number of
deaths from HIV, malaria, tuberculosis, automobile accidents, maternal
mortality, homicide, and
suicide combined."
The Luther L. Terry Awards recognize outstanding worldwide achievement
in the field of tobacco control and are presented 2009 during a special
ceremony on Wednesday, March 11, in Mumbai, India, as part of the 14th
World Conference on Tobacco OR Health.
The winners are as follows:
· The United States' Stanton Arnold Glantz, Ph.D., will receive
the Distinguished Career Award.
· The Ministry of Health of the Government of Uruguay will be
given the award for Exemplary Leadership by a Government Ministry.
· The United States' Ronald M. Davis, M.D., and India's K.
Srinath Reddy, M.D., will receive the award for Outstanding Individual
Leadership.
· The InterAmerican Heart Foundation will receive the
Outstanding Organization award.
· K. Michael Cummings, Ph.D., M.P.H., of the United States will
receive the award for Outstanding Research Contribution.
· The United States' Dileep G. Bal, M.D., and Thailand's Hatai
Chitanondh, M.D., will be given the award for Outstanding Community
Service.
Stanton Arnold Glantz, Ph.D.,
(United States) has been a leader in tobacco control for more than 30
years and is widely recognized as one of the world's outstanding
tobacco control advocates and researchers. Dr. Glantz is a professor of
medicine at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and
leads the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education. He is the
author of three books and more than 150 scientific papers, including
the first major review that identified involuntary smoking as a cause
of heart disease and the landmark July 19, 1995, issue of the Journal
of the American Medical Association that demonstrated that the tobacco
industry had known for decades that nicotine was addictive and that
smoking caused cancer. He has played a vital role in making tens of
millions of pages of industry documents available to tobacco control
and public health researchers by establishing the Legacy Tobacco
Documents Library at UCSF. Dr. Glantz has truly pushed the field of
tobacco control
in new directions.
The Ministry of Health of the
Government of Uruguay has made
tremendous achievements in tobacco control and, as a result of its
leadership and the commitment of the president of Uruguay, Dr.
Tabaré Vázquez, Uruguay became the world's first
middle-income country and the first country in the Americas to adopt a
comprehensive smoke-free law. Since going smoke-free on March 1, 2006,
Uruguay has served as a model of successful smoke-free implementation
and enforcement for countries around the world. Its tobacco control
success has not been limited to smoke-free policy: earlier this year
Uruguay was recognized by the World Health Organization as the country
with the highest degree of compliance with provisions of the Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control.
Ronald M. Davis, M.D., (United
States) (1956-2008) was a truly inspirational public health and tobacco
control leader. As a long-time officer and, eventually, president of
the American Medical Association (AMA), he was a talented physician and
a tireless advocate in the fight against tobacco. Dr. Davis contributed
to global tobacco control as the inaugural editor of Tobacco Control,
an international peer-reviewed journal published by the British Medical
Association; as the North American editor of the British Medical
Journal; as the author of numerous peer-reviewed articles on tobacco
control; as director of the U.S. Office on Smoking and Health; and as
the lead editor of the latest National Cancer Institute report on
tobacco and the media. Beyond these official duties, however, Dr. Davis
was a friend and mentor to innumerable tobacco control researchers and
advocates around the world, through whom his influence will continue
for generations.
K. Srinath Reddy M.D., D.M.,
M.Sc., F.A.M.S., (India) is a practicing physician and a world leader
in preventive cardiology and public health. He has provided outstanding
leadership in tobacco control through his work as an academic
researcher and teacher, an advisor to governments, a WHO resource
expert and advocate for a strong FCTC, and a public health activist.
Dr. Reddy not only serves as the president of the Public Health
Foundation of India (PHFI), but he has also played a major role in
stimulating and supporting informed health advocacy by young people in
India and around the world. He founded the HRIDAY-SHAN program, which
has galvanized youth action for tobacco control in the schools and
colleges of Delhi and other parts of India and the world. Given his
proven ability to link research, policy development, advocacy, campaign
implementation, and coalition building, Dr. Reddy has been a role model
to young and experienced health professionals alike.
The InterAmerican Heart Foundation
(IAHF) was established in 1992 with a focus on promoting healthy
lifestyles and preventing cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases.
Over the years it has honed in on the issue of tobacco control,
advocating for the ratification and strong implementation of the
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in the Latin American and
Caribbean region. The IAHF has encouraged a strategic, action-oriented,
and collaborative approach in the Americas, identifying and supporting
local leaders, developing strategic plans, and working with local
advocates to drive policy change. The organization has had a very
significant influence on the region, playing a major role in the
smoke-free initiatives in Mexico City and Argentina and co-organizing
the first Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (SRNT) Latin
American Conference on Tobacco Control. K. Michael Cummings, Ph.D.,
M.P.H., (United States) is chair of the health behavior department and
director of the Tobacco Cessation Center at the Roswell Park Cancer
Institute, one of the premiere tobacco control research institutions in
the world. Dr. Cummings' achievements include contributions to an
extensive compendium of publications, including influential chapters in
two U.S. Surgeon Generals? Reports, and a role as the deputy editor of
the international journal Tobacco Control from 1991 to 2004 and
co-editor of a recently released International Agency for Research on
Cancer handbook on the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control policy
evaluation. He is a dedicated researcher with the ability to translate
sound science into terms that decision makers can understand and turn
into action. Dr. Cummings is also a passionate advocate, famous for his
powerful legislative testimony against the tobacco companies.
Dileep G. Bal, M.D., M.P.H.,
M.S., (United States) is known nationally and internationally as the
former director and founder of California's influential and
exceptionally effective Tobacco Control Program and is currently the
district health officer for the Hawaii Department of Health on the
island of Kauai. Under his outstanding leadership, California made
tremendous progress in tobacco control, and the state's tobacco control
program has emerged as a model not only for other states in the U.S.
but also globally. Over the last decade, Dr. Bal has become
increasingly involved in global tobacco control initiatives. In 2004 he
served as an editorial advisory board member for the Report on Tobacco
Control in India, which was commissioned by the Government of India,
and in 2006 he served as co-chair of the World Conference on Tobacco OR
Health. He has earned a reputation for making courageous decisions and
taking calculated risks to advance public health and tobacco control to
unprecedented levels of effectiveness.
Hatai Chitanondh M.D.,
F.I.C.S., F.R.C.S. (T.), (Thailand) is the former deputy permanent
secretary general of the Ministry of Public Health of the Royal Thai
Government. In that position, he successfully spearheaded the effort to
prevent foreign cigarettes from being imported into Thailand, resisting
pressure from the U.S. Trade Representative?s Office from 1988 to 1991.
He continues to advise the Thai Government on tobacco control policies
and government initiatives, and in 1992 he authored two comprehensive
national tobacco control laws. Dr. Chitanondh is recognized in Thailand
as a unique source of wisdom of the history and precedents of Thai
tobacco control and as a sentinel of important opportunities for future
tobacco control action and victory. Most recently, he served as chair
of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control's Conference of the
Parties in Durban, South Africa.
Award nominations were reviewed by an international selection
committee of previous Luther L. Terry Award winners, including; Simon
F. Chapman, Ph.D., Australia; Prakash C. Gupta, M.Sc., Ph.D., India;
Margaretha Haglund, Sweden; Laurent Huber, Switzerland; Luk Joossens,
Belgium; Mary Assunta Kolandai, M.P.H., Ph.D., Australia; Isabel
Mortara, M.B.A., Switzerland; Matthew Myers, United States; Michael
Pertschuk, J.D., United States; Richard Peto, M.Sc., M.A., United
Kingdom; Anbumani Ramadoss, M.D., India; Bungon Ritthiphakdee, M.S.W.,
Thailand; Kenneth E. Warner, Ph.D., United States; and Witold Zatonski,
M.D., Ph.D., Poland. The effort was chaired by Thomas Glynn, Ph.D. with
Michael Heron as American Cancer Society Emeritus, Catherine Jo as
executive director, and Carys Horgan as secretariat. The American
Cancer Society is dedicated to eliminating cancer as a major health
problem by saving lives, diminishing suffering, and preventing cancer,
through research, education, advocacy, and service. Founded in
1913 and with national headquarters in Atlanta, the Society has 13
regional Divisions and local offices in 3,400 communities, involving
millions of volunteers across the United States. For more information
anytime, call toll free 1-800-ACS-2345 or visit www.cancer.org.