Posted
3/19/2008
Lecture honors longtime leader in battle to improve
the health of South Carolinians
A respected leader in the battle against cancer among minorities and
the medically underserved will deliver the first James A. Clyburn
Lecture at the University of South Carolina on April 25.
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Dr. Lovell A. Jones |
Dr. Lovell A. Jones, director of the Center for Research on Minority
Health at the University of Texas, will speak at 9 a.m. in the
auditorium of the Arnold School’s Public Health Research Center, 921
Assembly Street. The lecture is open to USC students, faculty, staff and the
public.
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U.S. Rep. James Clyburn
D-S.C. |
The lecture series honors U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., who has
served South Carolina's Sixth Congressional District since 1993. The
Sumter native was an active member of the 1960s civil rights movement
and was S.C. Human Affairs Commissioner from 1974-1992. He currently is
House Majority Whip for the 110th Congress.
Dr. Saundra Glover, Arnold School associate dean for health
disparities and social justice, said the lecture series is a "joint
initiative between Claflin University and the Institute for Partnerships
to Eliminate Health Disparities at the University of South Carolina. It
will bring together researchers and public health professionals in an
interactive forum to discuss ways and means to eliminate the public
health disparities that continue to plague South Carolina and the rest
of the nation."
Glover, who also is director of the Institute for Partnerships to
Eliminate Health Disparities, said the continuing series will, in turn,
touch on disparities facing South Carolina's minority residents
including cancer, stroke, obesity, HIV/AIDS and high blood pressure.
Clyburn, along with Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C., helped secure
funding to establish the
Institute for Partnerships to Eliminate Health Disparities in 2003.
"His commitment to the elimination of health disparities is
long-standing. Hence, the naming of the lecture series in honor of his
service to the health needs of the people of South Carolina, the
Southeast and the nation," said Glover.
Jones' efforts in combating cancer in minorities complements "an area
of research strength of the health sciences at USC and an area where we
have made significant efforts to join with community stakeholders to
begin to focus on solutions," Glover said.
Jones, whose research center is part of the University of Texas M. D.
Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, is the founding co-chair of the
Intercultural Cancer Council, the nation's largest multicultural health
policy group focused on minorities, the medically underserved and
cancer.
He has edited "Minorities & Cancer," one of the few comprehensive
textbooks on this subject. He is the founding chair of "Minorities, the
Medically Underserved and Cancer," the nation's largest multicultural
conference which provides a forum for exchanging the latest scientific
and treatment information.
This biennial conference brings together people from all ethnic
communities and social strata to share strategies for reducing the
incidence of cancer among these populations. Jones also has spearheaded
regional hearings on cancer and the poor for the American Cancer
Society.
In 2002, Jones, along with Dr. Armin Weinberg, the other cofounder of
the Intercultural Cancer Council, received the Humanitarian Award from
the American Cancer Society.
Between 1980 and 2007, Jones received more than $20 million in research
funding for studies in which he was the principal investigator.
A question and answer period and a reception in the lobby of the PHRC
will follow Jones' address at USC.
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