November 7, 2002
Contact:
Eileen Walsh, (650) 736-2881 or Eileen.Walsh@lpfch.org
Noted
Pediatrician Joins Children’s Health Foundation
PALO ALTO -
Ron G. Rosenfeld, M.D., chair of the Department of Pediatrics at
Oregon Health and Sciences University for the past nine years, has
joined the staff of the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s
Health as its new senior vice president for medical affairs.
Rosenfeld,
who also is physician-in-chief of Doernbecher Children’s Hospital
in Portland, will oversee and direct a seven-year, $230 million
grant made to the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s
Health by the separate David and Lucile Packard Foundation. The
children’s health foundation will in turn use the funds to
advance patient and family care at Lucile Packard Children’s
Hospital and the pediatric research and training programs of the
Stanford University School of Medicine.
"The Packard
grant is without precedent in the history of pediatrics,”
said Rosenfeld. “It will provide the opportunity for Packard
Children's Hospital to develop as one of the truly outstanding pediatric
facilities in the world, both clinically and academically."
Rosenfeld succeeds
Richard E. Behrman, M.D., who has served as senior vice president
for medical affairs at the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s
Health since 2000. Behrman, who helped establish the five-year-old
foundation, is now the executive chair of the Pediatric Education
Steering Committee of the Federation of Pediatric Organizations,
which includes the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American
Pediatric Society.
“Dr. Behrman
set the bar very high for his successor,” said Stephen Peeps,
president and CEO of the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s
Health. “We are delighted that, in Ron Rosenfeld, we have
attracted a luminary in his own right, who will raise the bar to
a whole new level of excellence. Children near and far will be the
beneficiaries.”
A professor
of cell and developmental biology, Rosenfeld is an internationally
renowned authority on the endocrine basis of growth and development.
He has been at the forefront of understanding the biology of growth
hormones and growth factors for more than 25 years. Rosenfeld has
received numerous awards, including a Mellon Foundation Fellowship,
the Basil O’Connor Award from the March of Dimes, and an NIH
Career Development Award. He has written more than 500 publications
and edited eight books. He earned a B.A., with highest honors, from
Columbia University in 1968, and his medical degree with honors
from Stanford University in 1973.
Rosenfeld continued
his postgraduate work at Stanford, ultimately joining its faculty
and becoming a professor of pediatrics in 1989.
He will join
the foundation officially on December 30.
The Lucile Packard
Foundation for Children’s Health was established in 1996 as
an independent public charity to promote and protect the health
of children. The foundation raises funds for, and awards grants
to, Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital and the pediatric programs
at the Stanford School of Medicine. The foundation also awards grants
to community organizations that promote the health and well-being
of children in San Mateo and Santa Clara counties, and it disseminates
information on children’s health issues.
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