2010 Research Laureate             Guidelines for Selecting AAHB Research Laureates


Dr. Kenneth R. McLeroy

Ken McLeroy is Awarded 2010 Research Laureate

Kenneth R. McLeroy, Ph.D., is Professor in the Department of Social and Behavioral Health at the Texas A&M School of Rural Public Health.  He is currently Principal Investigator on two large projects including a recently
funded five-year renewal of the CDC funded Center for Community Health Development ($3.9 million) and the National Center for Minority Health and Health Disparities (NCMHD) funded Program for Rural and Minority Health Disparities Research ($6.8 million). Dr. McLeroy has published extensively on social ecology, the development and evaluation of community-based interventions, and critical community concepts such as community capacity,
program institutionalization, and community coalitions. Dr. McLeroy has served as Editor or Editorial Board member of a number of professional journals, including the American Journal of Public Health, Health Education and Behavior, the American Journal of Health Promotion, Health Values, Health Education Research, and Public Health Reports.

Prior to joining the faculty at Texas A&M, Dr. McLeroy was Chair of the Department of Health Promotion Sciences at the University of Oklahoma School of Public Health (1994-1999), Assistant then Associate Professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro (1983-1994), and Senior Health Services Analyst at the Research Triangle Institute (1973-1983).

Dr. McLeroy was the keynote speaker at the 2010 AAHB Annual Meeting in  Clearwater Beach, FL, Feb 7-10, 2010.   As AAHB tradition, he was to be presented his award by the previous Research Laureate.  Due to weather related airport closings, Dr. Ray Niaura (2009 winner) was unable to attend to present the award.  Thus, Dr. Elbert Glover, the 2008 Research Laureate gave Dr. Niaura's introduction presentation on his behalf and presented the award. Click here for Dr Niaura's written introduction and click here for a copy of Dr. McLeroy's presentation.

Prior Research Laureates


Dr. Ray Niaura

2009 – Dr. Ray Niaura

Raymond Niaura, Ph.D. is Professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, and Director of Transdisciplinary Research at Butler Hospital. His primary research interests include tobacco dependence and psychological factors affecting metabolism and cardiovascular diseases. Dr. Niaura has served as principal investigator or co-investigator on more than 30 National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants, as well as numerous grants from other funding agencies, including serving as PI of 14 on-going or completed multicenter, industry-sponsored pharmacological smoking cessation trials.

   

   Intro by Dr. Elbert D. Glover (pdf)        Dr. Niaura's Presentation (pdf)

 

Dr. Elbert D. Glover
Dr. Elbert D. Glover

2008 – Dr. Elbert D. Glover

Elbert D. Glover "Glover", Ph.D., is Professor & Chair, Department of Public &

Community Health, & Director & Founder of the Center for Health Behavior Research at the University of Maryland College Park School of Public Health, College Park, MD. Dr. Glover is an internationally recognized authority on the topics of smoking cessation & smokeless tobacco, conducting hundreds of clinical trials with various nicotine pharmacologic adjunctsie, nicotine gum (2mg & 4mg), nicotine transdermal patches, nicotine oral inhaler, nicotine nasal spray, & the nicotine sublingual tablet.

   

   Intro by Dr. Bruce Simons-Morton (pdf)        Dr. Glover's Presentation (pdf)

 


Dr. Bruce Simons-Morton

2007 – Dr. Bruce Simons-Morton

Bruce Simons-Morton, Ed.D., M.P.H., is a senior investigator with the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD).  His primary research interests are early adolescent problem behavior prevention and the prevention of motor vehicle crashes among novice young drivers. His research focuses on both risk assessment and the development and evaluation of effective interventions.

 PDF of Presentation     PowerPoint Presentation

 

 

Dr. Herb Severson
Dr. Herb Severson

2006 – Dr. Herb Severson

Dr. Severson is internationally respected for his work in tobacco prevention and control and in child behavioral disorders. He has been an author on two Surgeon General’s reports on tobacco use and an Institute of Medicine report. In 2006 he was the principal investigator of six grants and co-investigator on six others; chair of the board of Oregon Research Institute; and president of two companies. His presentation shared personal perspectives about shifts in tobacco-related research highlighting clinical and public health cessation efforts, traditional prevention approaches, and a new focus on reducing antisocial behavior and promoting school adjustment as an innovative way to reduce the onset of tobacco use.

PDF of Introduction      PDF of Laureate Presentation

 

Dr. Steve Sussman
Dr. Steve Sussman

2005 – Dr. Steve Sussman

Among his many accomplishments, Dr. Sussman was the principal investigator of Project “Towards No Tobacco Use”, a tobacco-use prevention and cessation project among young teens that was disseminated nationally by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a “Program That Works” (1997-2002) and now is disseminated nationally by the Centers for Substance Abuse Prevention. It is recognized as a model program by the U.S. Department of Education, Sociometrics, Inc, the National Cancer Institute, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse. His presentation revisited the issue of assumptions behind the field of health behavior research.

PDF of Introduction      PDF of Laureate Presentation

 

 

Dr. Cheryl Perry
Dr. Cheryl Perry

2004 – Dr. Cheryl Perry

Dr. Perry is perhaps best known for her work in smoking prevention research and is a recognized leader in both community heart-diesease prevention and tobaco control circles. Among her many other highly visible achievements is her service the 1994 Surgeion General's Report, which was entitled "Preventing Tobacco Use Among Young People". Her presentation looked at two major compoennets of health behavior research, etiologic research and action research. She concludes that intervention programs including explicitedly creative components are successful in reducing alcohol use and activity patterns.

PDF of Introduction      PDF of Laureate Presentation

 

Dr. John Elder
Dr. John Elder

2003 – Dr. John Elder

Dr. Elder has been an inspiration to a field struggling with both the programmatic and methodological challenges of conducting research in multicultural contexts. His fluency in Spanish, his extensive work in Mexico, and his consulting in numerous other developing countries give him a broader than usual perspective on the application of behavioral and social sciences in public health and education. Dr Elder has consulted for USAID, Rockefeller Foundation and WHO projects in 15 different countries in Asia, Latin America, and Europe in the areas of child survival, maternal and child health, dengue fever control, research design, and social marketing.

PDF of Introduction      PDF of Laureate Presentation

 


Dr. Brian Fy

2002 – Dr. Brian R. Flay

Dr. Flay stands in the highest ranks among the investigators in our field, not only in the United States, but with international recognition as well. He has a broader than usual perspective on the application of behavioral and social sciences in public health and education. His work spans such applications in institutional settings as well as in the mass media and in community-wide efforts, with particular attention to the health and related problems of adolescents and increasing emphasis on the necessity of combining the institutional and community components in comprehensive, integrated, and coherent programs.

PDF of Introduction      PDF of Laureate Presentation

 


Dr. Lawrence Green

2001 – Dr. Lawrence Green

Of all the health education researchers and writers who have contributed to our understanding of health behavior, none have done it more voluminously than our special person in health education, Dr. Lawrence W. Green has. No one person in health education is more widely read or quoted than our first American Academy of Health Behavior Research Laureate honoree. Unequivocally, he has contributed more widely to health education than any other person, past or present. He best represents what The Academy is all about.

PDF of Introduction      PDF of Laureate Presentation

The American Academy of Health Behavior