Dr. Hugh Dudley Auchincloss III (born 1949)


Saved Wikipedia (August 7, 2021) - "Hugh Auchincloss (immunologist)"

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Hugh Auchincloss

Auchincloss, 2006


Education

Yale University (BA)

Harvard University (MD)

Spouse(s)

[Dr. Laurie Hollis Glimcher (born 1951)]

​

​(m. 1973, divorced)​

Children

3; including Jake Auchincloss

Scientific career


Fields

Immunology

Institutions

Harvard Medical School

Massachusetts General Hospital

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Hugh Auchincloss Jr. is an American immunologist and physician serving as the principal deputy director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 2006. He was previously a transplant surgeon and professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School and researched at Massachusetts General Hospital for 17 years.

Early life and education[edit]

Hugh Auchincloss Jr. was born to [Dr. Hugh Dudley Auchincloss II (born 1915)] (1915−1998) and [Katharine Lawrence "Laurie" (Bundy) Auchincloss (born 1923)]. His mother was the daughter of lawyer Harvey Hollister Bundy and granddaughter of banker William Lowell Putnam. Auchincloss Sr. was a longtime surgeon at Columbia University and The Valley Hospital.[1] His father is the first cousin once-removed of stockbroker [Hugh Dudley Auchincloss (born 1897)].

Auchincloss Jr. graduated from Groton School.[3] At Yale University, he completed an A.B. magna cum laude in political science and economics in 1972 and a master's degree in economics.[3][4] Auchincloss graduated with Phi Beta Kappa honors. He completed his M.D. from Harvard Medical School in 1976.[4]

Career[edit]

Auchincloss was a transplant surgeon and professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School. For more than 17 years he operated a laboratory in transplantation immunology at Massachusetts General Hospital. In 1998, he founded the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation Center for Islet Transplantation and served as its director until 2003. He subsequently served as chief operating officer of the NIAID Immune Tolerance Network.[4][5]

In 2006, he joined the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) as the principal deputy director.[5] He led the development of the Institute's strategic plan and chaired the NIAID Research Initiative Committee, an internal governance group that has designed and implemented a more efficient approach to planning, developing, and approving NIAID initiatives. Auchincloss is oversees an NIAID initiative to design and implement changes in the Institute's clinical research infrastructure, which will be flexible and available for domestic and international clinical research on HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases. Auchincloss is part of an NIAID senior leadership group responsible for reviewing all aspects of HIV/AIDS research policy, including the evaluation of “test and treat” strategies, analysis of results of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) clinical trials (including microbicide trials), and coordination of future HIV/AIDS vaccine clinical trials.[4]

In 2005, Auchincloss was elected president of the American Society of Transplantation. He has authored scientific articles and texts and serves on the editorial boards of scientific publications.[5] Auchincloss is on federal and NIH-wide committees, including the Trans-Federal Task Force on Optimizing Biocontainment Oversight, the National Security Strategy/Office of Science and Technology Policy on Optimizing Biological Select Agents and Toxins Working Group, and the National Biodefense Science Board. He was appointed as co-chair of the International Clinical Research Subcommittee of the NIH Global Health Research Working Group and as a member of the NIH Institute and Center Directors Clinical and Translational Science Awards Advisory Board. He also serves as the NIH point of contact for the Emergency Use Authorization program.[4]

Personal life[edit]

On August 26, 1973, Auchincloss married Laurie Glimcher, a fellow Harvard Medical School student, at the Memorial Church of Harvard University.[3] Before their divorce, they had 3 children including politician Jake Auchincloss.[6][7]

References[edit]

This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Institutes of Health.


1973 (Aug 27) - NYTimes: "Hugh Auchincloss Jr. Weds Laurie Glimcher"

https://www.nytimes.com/1973/08/27/archives/hugh-auchincloss-jr-weds-laurie-glimcher.html?searchResultPosition=2

1973-08-27-nytimes-hugh-auchincloss-jr-weds-laurie-glimcher.pdf

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Aug. 26—Miss Laurie Hollis Glimcher, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Melvin Glimcher of Brookline and Menemsha, was married here this afternoon to Hugh Auchincloss Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. Auchincloss of Ridgewood, N. J., and Manchester.

Rabbi David Greenberg performed the ceremony in the Memorial Church at Harvard University. The Rev. Bertrand Honea Jr., an Episcopal clergyman, assisted in the service.

About 350 guests attended The ceremony and the reception that followed at the Harvard Faculty Club. They included the bridegroom's uncles, McGeorge Bundy (president of the Ford Foundation) and William P. Bundy (former Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs) and Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Auchincloss. Mr. Auchincloss is a first cousin once removed to the bridegroom's father and Mrs. Auchincloss is the mother of Mrs. Aristotle Onassis.

Miss Susan Deborah Glimcher was maid of honor for her sister. The bridesmaids were the Misses Nancy Blair Glimcher, sister of the bride; Elizabeth Lowell Auchincloss, sister of the bridegroom, and Pamela Shaw. Laurie Victor, 6‐year‐old niece of the bridegroom, was flower girl. James W. McKinsey Jr. served as best man.

Mrs. Auchincloss and her husband are second‐year students at the Harvard Medical School. The bride was graduated from the Winsor School and magna cum laude with the class of ‘72 from Radcliffe College.

Her father is the Harriet M. Peabody Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at the Harvard Medical School and orthopedic surgeon in chief at the Children's Hospital Medical Center in Boston.

The bridegroom, a graduate of the Groton School, received an A.B. degree magna cum laude from Yale in 1972 and an M.A. degree in economics. His father is associate clinical professor of surgery at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and attending surgeon at the Valley Hospital in Ridgewood.

Mr. Auchincloss is a grandson of Mrs. Harvey H. Bundy of Manchester and the late Mr. Bundy and of the late Dr. and Mrs. Hugh Auchincloss of New York. His paternal grandfather was a surgeon. His maternal grandfather, a lawyer, served as Assistant Secretary of State under President Herbert Hoover and as special assistant to Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson.

2001 (June 26) - US Congressional hearings on Diabetes Research Funding /JDRF / Auchincloss (full 2hr 20 min video)

Source : CSPAN : June 26 2001

Diabetes / JDRF

https://www.c-span.org/video/?164914-1/diabetes-research-funding

2001-06-26-cspan-usa-congress-video-diabetes-research-funding-1080p-compressed.mp4

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1U5tutbO_bJU4mqRUh7tEG4lxUaINsLF1/view?usp=sharing

hm002c

2001-06-26-cspan-usa-congress-video-diabetes-research-funding-img-1.jpg

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1OIRMxCGkwTU6VjuO7vI6o5g05LIRl-cp/view?usp=sharing

2001-06-26-cspan-usa-congress-video-diabetes-research-funding-1080p-img-cover

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1-gXGCwK9dofYKuYJDmuUgqGRz9HcUxfW/view?usp=sharing



article : https://www.newspapers.com/image/566058219/?terms=diabetes%20research%20mary%20moore&match=1

https://www.newspapers.com/image/195650194/?terms=diabetes%20research%20mary%20moore&match=1

JUNE 26, 2001

Diabetes Research Funding

The Subcommittee on Investigations heard testimony about diabetes research funding and victims' experiences with juvenile diabetes, including a panel of children.

March 23-24, 2020 : "NIH-AACR Cancer, Autoimmunity, and Immunology Conference March 23-24, 2020"

https://www.aacr.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/CAI2020-Digital-Program.pdf

2020-03-usa-nih-cancer-autoimmunity-and-immunology-conference-digital-program.pdf

NIH-AACR Cancer, Autoimmunity, and Immunology Conference

Hugh Auchincloss, MD, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Hugh Auchincloss, MD, serves as NIAID Principal Deputy Director. In this capacity, Dr. Auchincloss is responsible for the following:

o Providing leadership for all NIAID research planning and implementation activities, including helping to prepare and support a strategic vision for NIAID;

o Overseeing an extensive portfolio of basic, clinical, and applied research, as well as product development for biodefense, HIV/AIDS, infectious diseases, and immune-mediated disorders.

His recent leadership activities include spearheading the development of the Institute’s strategic plan

and chairing the NIAID Research Initiative Committee, an internal governance group that has designed and implemented a more efficient approach to planning, developing, and approving NIAID initiatives. Currently, Dr. Auchincloss is leading an NIAID initiative to design and implement changes in the Institute’s clinical research infrastructure, which will be flexible and available for domestic and international clinical research on HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases. Additionally, Dr. Auchincloss is part of an NIAID senior leadership group responsible for reviewing all aspects of HIV/AIDS research policy, including the evaluation of “test and treat” strategies, analysis of results of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) clinical trials (including microbicide trials), and coordination of future HIV/AIDS vaccine clinical trials.

Dr. Auchincloss is active on many federal and NIH-wide committees, including the Trans-Federal Task Force on Optimizing Biocontainment Oversight, the National Security Strategy/Office of Science and Technology Policy on Optimizing Biological Select Agents and Toxins Working Group, and the National Biodefense Science Board. He recently was appointed as co- chair of the International Clinical Research Subcommittee of the NIH Global Health Research Working Group and as a member of the NIH Institute and Center Directors Clinical and Translational Science Awards Advisory Board. He also serves as the NIH point of contact for the Emergency Use Authorization program.

Dr. Auchincloss earned bachelor’s degrees in political science and economics and a master’s degree in economics from Yale University. He received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School in 1976.

Prior to his 2006 appointment at NIAID, Dr. Auchincloss was a transplant surgeon and professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School. For more than 17 years he operated a laboratory in transplantation immunology at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. In 1998, he founded the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation Center for Islet Transplantation and served as its director until 2003. He subsequently served as Chief Operating Officer of the NIAID Immune Tolerance Network.

In 2005, Dr. Auchincloss was elected president of the American Society of Transplantation. He has authored numerous scientific articles and texts and serves on the editorial boards of several major scientific publications.