How the NIH Intramural Program Is Fighting the COVID-19 Pandemic
BY MICHAEL M. GOTTESMAN, DDIR
Given the constant presence of NIH leaders such as NIH Director Francis Collins and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Director Anthony Fauci in the media and in commentaries in academic journals, it is clear that the NIH has played a major role in strategic planning, communication of public-health requirements, and development of strategies to prevent, detect, and treat COVID-19. What may not be as clear are the major contributions that have been made by intramural—and extramural—scientists to this effort.
The Vietnam War and NIH’s Clinical Associates Program
BY ETHAN SMITH, NINR
It may seem like a coincidence that Nobel laureates Michael Brown, Joseph Goldstein, Harold Varmus, and Robert Lefkowitz all started their training at NIH in the summer of 1968. But it wasn’t just happenstance according, to Raymond Greenberg, a professor of Public Health at the University of Texas Health Center at Houston (Houston) and author of Medal Winners: How the Vietnam War Launched Nobel Careers. In a virtual presentation he gave at NIH in November 2020, he highlighted how his book tells this overlooked story through the lives of those four men.
Excerpts from Robert Lefkowitz’s memoir in which he describes being a “Yellow Beret” at the NIH, his time as a cardiologist, his transition to biochemistry, his work that led to the Nobel Prize, and more.
Read about NIH scientific advances and discoveries by intramural scientists: transcription factor FOXL2 linked to endometriosis; new blood test for early detection of heart–transplant rejection; salmonella swimming behavior may provide clues to infection; surprising findings comparing low-fat and low-carb diets; and more.
Journal of Women’s Health Special Issue Discusses Maternal Morbidity and Mortality
A special issue of the Journal of Women’s Health (JWH) characterizes the increasing problem of maternal morbidity and mortality (MMM) in the United States. The issue features articles by many NIH scientists.
Becoming a Resilient Scientist During My Trip to the Zoo
BY ERICA WYNNE-JONES, NIAID
I first heard about resilience when I was in primary school in rural Australia. It was part of a cognitive-behavioral program at the school called “You can do it!”
NHGRI Scientific Director Dan Kastner Awarded Crafoord Prize in Polyarthritis
BY ALYSSA JONES, NHGRI
The National Human Genome Research Institute’s director of intramural research, Dan Kastner, has been awarded the prestigious Crafoord Prize in polyarthritis by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for his pioneering work in “establishing the concept of autoinflammatory diseases.”
News about events, deadlines, lectures including the reopening of the FAES Bookstore; UNITE initiative to end structural racism and racial inequities in biomedical research; Management Intern Program; ORWH website; NLM History of Medicine Talks; Postbac Poster Day; and NIH Library Classes.