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Agnes Higgins Award

 

Agnes Higgins Award, Maternal-Fetal Nutrition

Established in 1980, the March of Dimes Agnes Higgins Award honors the late Agnes Higgins of the Montreal Diet Dispensary for her innovation and years of service to the cause of improved maternal nutrition. A pioneer in devising methods of nutritional assessment and counseling, Mrs. Higgins greatly advanced the understanding of diet as a crucial factor in healthy pregnancy and prevention of low birthweight. The Agnes Higgins Award is presented in recognition of distinguished achievement in research, education or clinical services in the field of maternal-fetal nutrition.

Call for Nominations
The next call for nominations will be in 2010.

Nomination Criteria
Candidates for the Agnes Higgins Award must have:

  • Been widely involved in maternal-fetal nutrition through teaching, research and/or clinical practice for at least five years
  • Shown a demonstrable effect in raising the quality of maternal-fetal nutritional care through scholarly pursuits, research, education and/or practice
  • Demonstrated ability to apply maternal-fetal nutritional standards of practice and/or facilitate their implementation by others.

Recipients
Each statement below was written at the time the award was announced. 

2008—Susan E. Carlson, PhD
Dr. Carlson is the A. J. Rice Professor of Nutrition and Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Kansas Medical Center. She is also Clinical Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Dr. Carlson has devoted her career to understanding and promoting maternal and infant nutrition. She is internationally recognized for her work in maternal-fetal nutrition and specifically for her research on DHA, an omega-3 fatty acid. Dr. Carlson was the first to recognize and note the implications that human milk-fed infants had higher amounts of circulating DHA than formula-fed infants. n 2002, she was awarded honorary membership in the American Dietetic Association for her pioneering work leading to the recognition that DHA was a conditionally essential nutrient for infants. Since 2002, Dr. Carlson has taken an active role in the education of U.S. pediatricians, obstetricians, nurses and dietitians about the role of DHA in maternal and infant health. She has been involved nationally and internationally in evaluating the quality of evidence and establishing best-practice guidelines for intake of DHA by infants and pregnant women. 

2007—Anna Maria Siega-Riz, PhD, RD
Dr. Siega-Riz is Associate Professor of Epidemiology at the University of North Carolina, School of Public Health.  She has a joint appointment in the Department of Nutrition and is a fellow of the Carolina Population Center. She serves as the Director of the Nutrition Epidemiology Division and the Nutrition Epidemiology Core of the Clinical Nutrition Research Center. Dr. Siega-Riz's research interests include maternal nutritional status and its relationship to birth outcomes, gestational weight gain and obesity development, diet methodology, reproductive epidemiology, child and adolescent dietary behaviors, and trends in dietary intakes among minority populations. She is a co-investigator on the Pregnancy, Infection, and Nutrition (PIN) Study, a large prospective epidemiological study examining the role of infection, stress, physical activity, and nutrition on preterm births among women receiving prenatal care from public institutions. Dr. Siega-Riz is recognized as an outstanding researcher, teacher and mentor in maternal-fetal nutrition. She is known for her passion about the health of mothers and children.

2006—William W. Hay, Jr., MD
Dr. Hay is Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and Vice-President/President-Elect of the American Pediatric Society. He is widely recognized as one of the country's most distinguished academic pediatricians and a strong mentor of young scientists. Dr. Hay's career in nutrition research has spanned 34 years. His scientific interests include fetal and neonatal nutrition, intrauterine fetal growth, and fetal growth restriction, all of which have relevance to the fetal origins of adult diseases. Dr. Hay is recognized internationally for his contributions to the understanding of fetal glucose and amino acid deprivation. He is the author of numerous landmark books and papers that are required reading for many pediatricians in training across the United States.  

2005—Barbara Luke, ScD, MPH, RD
Dr. Luke is Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, with joint appointments in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Miami School of Medicine. Dr. Luke is internationally known for her work on improving outcomes in multiple pregnancies through enhanced prenatal care and patient education, including targeted weight gain recommendations and diet therapy. She is the founder of the University Consortium on Multiple Births, a collaborative group of researchers around the country who pool their maternal and neonatal data to evaluate factors affecting outcomes. She has written or edited 16 books. The latest When You're Expecting Twins, Triplets, Quads, co-authored with Tamara Eberlein and published by HarperCollins, won the Outstanding Book of the Year award in 2000 from the American Society for Journalists and Authors. It is among the top 10 best-selling pregnancy books in the U.S. Dr. Luke's goal is to help every child reach his or her full growth potential at birth through optimal maternal nutrition.

2004—Barbara Abrams, DrPH, RD
Dr. Abrams is Professor of Epidemiology, Public Health Nutrition and Maternal and Child Health at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Public Health where she also currently serves as Associate Dean of Student Affairs. After more than a decade of experience providing nutrition counseling and education directly to expectant mothers in prenatal clinical care settings, she turned her attention to conducting research studies to better understand how maternal weight and weight gain before, during and after pregnancy contribute to health outcomes in newborn infants and their mothers. She is most proud of her work educating future leaders in the field of maternal nutrition and public health.

2003— Lois Jovanovic, MD
Dr. Jovanovic is Director and Chief Scientific Officer at Sansum Medical Research Institute in Santa Barbara, CA and Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles.  Dr. Jovanovic is an internationally recognized expert in the nutritional management of gestational diabetes. She has made significant contributions in medical nutrition therapy of gestational diabetes, specifically in high-risk Hispanic-American women. Her goals are to provide pregnant women and clinicians with tools and methods for successful management of gestational diabetes and to reduce the numbers of macrosomic and malformed newborns born to diabetic women.

2002—Theresa O. Scholl, PhD, MPH
Dr. Scholl is Professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey School of Medicine.  For almost 20 years, Dr. Scholl has studied the relationship between nutrition and health outcomes in adolescent pregnancy. Specifically, her research has focused on effects of continued adolescent maternal growth during pregnancy; the impairment of maternal growth on nutrient transfer between mother and fetus, resulting in increased risk of low birthweight babies; improved pregnancy outcomes following material intake of dietary zinc, folate and multivitamins; the association of pre-pregnancy weight, prenatal weight gain and anemia with growth and preterm deliveries; and the possible adverse effects of oxidative damage to fetal DNA through dietary exposure.

Other Recipients
Lynn B. Bailey, PhD
Kathryn G. Dewey, PhD
Mary Frances Picciano, PhD
David M. Paige, MD, MPH
Godfrey P. Oakley, Jr., MD, MPH, and Paul B. Pencharz, MB, ChB, PhD, FRCP(C)
Paul B. Pencharz, MD, ChB, PhD, FRCP(C)
Frederick C. Battaglia, MD
M. Elizabeth Brannon, MS, RD
Judith E. Brown, PhD, MPH, RD
Mary Egan, MS, MPH
Norbert Freinkel, MD
Howard N. Jacobson, MD
Janet C. King, PhD, RD
William McGanity, MD
Charlotte G. Neumann, MD, MPH
Roy M. Pitkin, MD
Pedro Rosso, MD
Reginald C. Tsang, MD
Myron Winick, MD
Bonnie Worthington-Roberts, PhD

 


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