DATE
March 31, 2023

Women's History Month NFID Leaders Collage

As Women’s History Month comes to an end, the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID) is celebrating pioneering women scientists and public health advocates who have collaborated with NFID throughout our 50-year history of educating and engaging the public, communities, and healthcare professionals about the prevention and treatment of infectious diseases. Read on for insights from some of these trailblazing women …

Katherine EdwardsThe greatest challenge of my career has been championing what I believe is needed to accomplish better research and better care of children with infectious diseases. This involves making sure that people are chosen and rewarded for their responsibilities based on qualifications and not race or gender, making sure that clinical research is funded adequately to address important and relevant questions, and making sure that patients continue to receive excellent clinical care in spite of financial challenges and restricted access.

Kathryn M. Edwards, MD, 2018 Recipient of the Maxwell Finland Award for Scientific Achievement

To date, shepherding the rotavirus vaccine through to regulatory approval and universal recommendation with my team and thousands of global partners who shared the same vision—a vaccine against the leading cause of diarrheal disease deaths in children is my greatest professional accomplishment to date. My advice to the next generation of infectious disease professionals is to follow what you love and seek out what ignites your passion, what you love learning about, and what will help you get out of bed every morning … You will have to take on things that may not fit your preferences perfectly—or that you are just unsure about. Take advantage of those opportunities to learn and experience new things.

Penny M. Heaton, MD, 2020 Recipient of the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Humanitarian Award

Julie MoritaThere has been an incredible awakening and acknowledgement of the structural inequities that have made it harder or impossible for some groups to protect themselves during the pandemic. Equity must be top of mind; we can do much to prevent disease and stop the spread of the virus, but if we do not do it consistently and equitably, many groups will be left unprotected and vulnerable …

Julie Morita, MD, Executive  Vice President, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and NFID Director

 Kathleen M. Neuzil Getting Vaccinated     Infectious IDeas podcast episode 3 Kathy Neuzil

Kathleen M. Neuzil, MD, MPH, NFID Vice President

Anne SchuchatOne of my first supervisors at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) set me on a course of passion for epidemiology, public health, and CDC. She urged me to take a long-term view in taking on projects, to focus on asking the right questions, and showed me that our work could be fun. My interest in infectious diseases came from my internship and residency in Internal Medicine in New York City from 1984-1988. Young people dying from AIDS accounted for a substantial portion of the patients I cared for, and they had a profound effect on my long-term career. Watching that infectious disease emerge with so much sorrow and pain, and working in the field before and after the availability of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) and then the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), showed me that even the worst problems of today can be solvable.

Anne Schuchat, MD, 2018 Recipient of the John P. Utz Leadership Award

 


 

To Hear More From Inspiring Women Leaders …


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