Research to Real World
The Breast Cancer, Endocrine Disruptors, & Early
Puberty symposium at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine
was an inspiring and educational event. Attendees heard
from medical experts and activists about the chemicals
and toxins in our everyday environments that are linked
to health problems like breast cancer. Karen Joy Miller
was one of four speakers at the symposium and had a wonderful
opportunity to represent the Huntington Breast Cancer
Action Coalition, Inc. The event was mentioned in the
New York Times in op-ed columnist Nicholas Kristof’s
article “Cancer From the Kitchen?”
Click on the link below to read the eye-opening article!
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/06/opinion/06kristof.html
Congratulations to our colleague and friend Dr. Philip
Landrigan who lead the riveting symposium. He recently
was honored with a lifetime achievement award for public
health!
Below is a summary of his work published by the Mount
Sinai School of Medicine:
Philip J. Landrigan, MD, MSc, DIH, whose
research and recommendations have shaped environmental
health policies worldwide, was awarded the 2009 Stephen
Smith Medal for Lifetime Achievement in Public Health by
the New York Academy of Medicine (NYAM).
Dr. Landrigan, the Ethel H. Wise Professor
and Chair of the Department of Preventive Medicine, Professor
of Pediatrics, and Director of Mount Sinai’s Children’s
Environmental Health Center, leads the National Children’s
Study (NCS), which is the largest study of children’s
health and the environment ever launched in the United
States.
Click
here for lecture details (pdf)