2011 Benjamin H. Kean Fellows on the Record
The Benjamin H. Kean Traveling Fellowship in Tropical Medicine is
awarded annually to support medical students, house staff and fellows
involved in clinical or research electives in tropical areas. The
Fellowship is designed to encourage young people to continue their work
in tropical medicine and hygiene and recognize their achievements so
far.
The Fellowship is named after Benjamin H. Kean (1912-1993), the
founder of the tropical medical program and a
renowned professor of clinical tropical diseases and public health
at Cornell University. In addition to being one of the most respected
and admired educators at Cornell, Dr. Kean is known for his work in
discovering travelers' disease and for being a physician to many of the
best-known personalities of the 20th Century, ranging from artist
Salvador Dali to Broadway lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II to writer
Sherwood Anderson to the Shah of Iran.
ASTMH presents the Ben Kean Fellowships to strengthen the link
between the past accomplishments of the clinicians and researchers in
tropical medicine and hygiene and the next generation of leaders in the
field. Below, the 2011 Kean Fellows tell us a little about themselves,
their work to this point, what they see in their futures and what
earning the Kean Fellowship means to them:
Jonathan
Abelson, University of Virginia School of Medicine
Jonathan
Abraham, Harvard University School of Medicine
Andrew
Bouley, Duke University School of Medicine
Nicholas
Carter, Brown University
Whitney
E. Harrington, University of Washington
Nick
Janusz, University of Manitoba
Brian
Long, University of Virginia
Micah
Manary, University of California-San Diego
Emma
Mohr, University of Iowa
Connor
O'Brien, Columbia University College of Physicians and
Surgeons
Jennifer
Spicer, Emory University School of Medicine
Carla
Valenzuela, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Sarah
Ventre, SUNY Upstate Medical University
Emily
Wilkinson, University of Arizona College of Medicine
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