HOUSTON – (June 23, 2010)
– Last night at the 38th annual Jefferson Awards,
Mark W. Kline,
M.D., physician-in-chief at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston and
chair of pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine, was honored with
the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Award for “Outstanding Community
Service Benefiting Local Communities” for his dedication to treating
children affected by HIV/AIDS around the world.
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Kline was selected by an independent community panel of citizens for
The Jefferson Award, also known as the “Nobel Prize for public
service,” which honors an individual for “outstanding, unique and
heroic” personal acts that have made a positive impact on a
community, helping hundreds, and in his case, thousands of others in
the spirit of public service.In 1996, while chief of the
retrovirology clinic at Texas Children’s Hospital, Kline founded the
Baylor International Pediatric AIDS Initiative (BIPAI) to bring the most
advanced pediatric HIV/AIDS treatments to children in the developing
world. What started out as a single clinic in Romania has grown
exponentially over the past 14 years. BIPAI now provides medication
and care to roughly 70,000 children and families in eight countries
which is more than double the number of HIV-infected children in
every medical center in the United States, Canada and Western Europe
combined.
“When Texas Children’s selected Dr. Kline as our physician-in-chief
in 2009 we knew we had chosen an outstanding leader and a phenomenal
human being,” said Texas Children’s President and CEO Mark A.
Wallace. “It’s extremely gratifying to see him recognized for these
qualities on a national stage. We congratulate Dr. Kline on this
incredible honor and thank him for his extraordinary work to heal
sick children all around the world.”
Attended by political leaders, dignitaries, philanthropists and
luminaries from the arts and sciences, the Jefferson Awards are
presented each year during a special gala ceremony in Washington,
D.C. where a broad array of honorees are recognized whose lives,
careers and volunteer activities embody the finest examples of
public service in a range of human endeavors.
Co-founded in 1973 by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, U.S. Senator
Robert Taft Jr. and Sam Beard, the Jefferson Awards recognizes both
the famous and the unknown, individuals and organizations and the
young and old. The awards reflect one of the founding ideals of our
nation, that of contributing toward the larger good. As Thomas
Jefferson himself wrote, “Private charities as well as contributions
to public purposes in proportion to everyone's circumstances are
certainly among the duties we owe to society." Past recipients of
the award include Lance Armstrong, Hubert Humphrey, Dr. C. Everett
Koop, General Colin Powell and Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.
“The Jefferson Awards are a celebration of that sense of duty to our
fellow citizens, our communities and beyond,” said Sam Beard,
founder and president of the Jefferson Awards. “At this moment in
our nation’s history, with so many of our citizens burdened by
economic challenges and ever-increasing obligations in our daily
lives, it is heartening to recognize the abiding spirit of
selflessness and care that drives volunteerism, public service and
that American ideal of giving back to others. We are proud to shine
a deserving spotlight on these extraordinary Jefferson Awards
recipients.”
About Texas Children's Hospital
Texas Children's Hospital is committed to a community of healthy
children by providing the finest pediatric patient care, education
and research. Renowned worldwide for its expertise and breakthrough
developments in clinical care and research, Texas Children’s is
ranked in the top 10 best children’s hospitals by U.S. News and
World Report. Texas Children’s also operates the nation’s largest
primary pediatric care network, with over 40 offices throughout the
greater Houston community. Texas Children’s has embarked on a $1.5
billion expansion, Vision 2010, which includes a neurological
research institute, a comprehensive obstetrics facility focusing on
high risk births, and a community hospital in suburban West Houston.
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