The Glorney-Raisbeck Award is presented annually to a clinician or basic scientist in recognition of outstanding contributions to the understanding and treatment of cardiovascular diseases. The first Glorney-Raisbeck Award was presented posthumously in 1988 to Milton J. Raisbeck, MD, an exceptional cardiologist involved in the advancement of medical education and research. Since then this level of achievement has been reflected in an outstanding series of Glorney-Raisbeck awardees.
Recipients
2016
Andrew R. Marks, MD
Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons
Wrestling With the Mysteries and Miseries of Heart Failure and Cardiac Arrhythmias
2010
Bertram Pitt, MD
University of Michigan School of Medicine
The Role of Aldosterone Blockade in Cardiovascular Disease
2009
Christine Seidman, MD
Brigham Women’s Hospital
The Impact of Genetics on Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
2008
Arthur J. Moss, MD
University of Rochester Medical Center
Long QT Syndrome: A Paradigm for Understanding the Genetics of Cardiac Arrhythmias
2007
Helen H. Hobbs, MD
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Going to Extremes to Find Genes for Cardiovascular Disease
2006
Michael A. Gimbrone, Jr., MD
Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Vascular Endothelium: Nature's Container for Blood - New Insights into its Pathobiology
2005
Michael E. DeBakey, MD
Baylor College of Medicine
The Development of Cardiovascular Surgery: An Overview
2004
Michael S. Brown, MD and Joseph L. Goldstein, MD
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
The Metabolic Syndrome: A Vicious Cycle
2003
Roman DeSanctis, MD
Harvard Medical School
Then, Now, and Beyond: The Amazing Advancements in Cardiology Over the Last Fifty Years
2002
Ketty Schwartz, PhD
French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM) and Ministry of Research and New Technologies The Cardiac Myocyte: From Gene Defects to Cellular Therapy
2001
Aldo R. Castaneda, MD, PhD
Childrens’s Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School
Congenital Heart Disease: Lessons from a Historical Prespective
2000
Victor A. McKusick, MD
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Cardiovascular Medicine in the Post Genomic Era
1999
Eugene Braunwald, MD
Partners HealthCare System, Brigham and Women’s and Massachusetts General Hospitals
Congestive Heart Failure: 1950 ? 2000
1998
Aaron Marcus, MD
New York Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Thromboregulation ? A Novel Approach to Prevention of Cardiovascular Diseases
1997
Robert J. Lefkowitz, MD
Duke University Medical Center
Genetic Manipulation of Myocardial Beta-adrenergic Receptors and Receptor Kinases: New Approaches to Improving Cardiac Performance
1996
Jan L. Breslow, MD
Rockefeller University
1995
Russell Ross, PhD
University of Washington School of Medicine
Cellular and Molecular Events in Atherogenesis: Diagnostic and Therapeutic Implications
1994
Richard Gorlin, MD
Mount Sinai Medical Center
Hydraulics as the Key to Understanding Valvular Heart Disease
1993
Judah Folkman, MD
Children’s Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School
1992
John Kirklin, MD
University of Alabama
1991
William Ganz, MD
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and UCLA School of Medicine
1990
Anthony Damato, MD
Staten Island Public Health Service Hospital
1988
Milton Raisbeck, MD
Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospitals Posthumous recipient of the first Glorney-Raisbeck Award