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For Immediate Release
Contact: Media Relations, (202) 777-2509
media.relations@apha.org

Hayes is Winner of Rodriguez-Trias Award

Washington , D.C. , November 4, 2007 Maxine Hayes, MD, MPH, FAAP, state health officer for the Washington State Department of Health, was honored with the 2007 Helen Rodriguez-Trias Award for Social Justice at the American Public Health Association (APHA) 135th Annual Meeting & Exposition.

 

Hayes has worked to help the medically underserved and the nation’s most vulnerable populations. Over the past three decades, she has given voice to such issues as hunger, pediatric AIDS, health care for the homeless, smoking bans, child labor and pregnancy planning, continually working to improve the health of women, children and families.

 

Hayes has served as assistant secretary for community and family health as well as parent-child health services for the state health department. She previously was medical director of the Odessa Brown Children’s Clinic and project and medical director of the Hinds-Rankin Urban Health Innovations Project. She has forged many alliances and partnerships to influence policy at all levels of government, particularly policies impacting the maternal child health population.

 

Hayes has served as president of the Association of Maternal and Child Health Programs, chair of APHA’s Maternal and Child Health Section and national program director for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Child Health Initiative. She was appointed to the Institute of Medicine’s Board of Children, Youth and Families and has served as the associate editor of the Maternal & Child Health Journal since 1997. She has frequently been consulted by the U.S. Maternal Child Health Bureau on policy issues.

 

“Maxine Hayes is absolutely tireless,” APHA member Holly Grason, MA, of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health wrote in a letter nominating Hayes for the Rodriguez-Trias award. “She is an outstanding colleague and mentor to MCH professionals and advocates throughout the country.”

 

Among her many publications, Hayes has written articles on health disparities, social justice, advocacy and the special health concerns of minority populations. She has been honored with many awards for her work in maternal and child health, including the American Medical Association’s 2002 Dr. Nathan Davis Award and the 2003 Heroes in Health Care Lifetime Achievement Award through the Washington Health Foundation. She was elected to the Institute of Medicine in 200 and is a fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

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Founded in 1872, the APHA is the oldest, largest and most diverse organization of public health professionals in the world. The association aims to protect all Americans and their communities from preventable, serious health threats and strives to assure community-based health promotion and disease prevention activities and preventive health services are universally accessible in the United States. APHA represents a broad array of health providers, educators, environmentalists, policy-makers and health officials at all levels working both within and outside governmental organizations and educational institutions. More information is available at www.apha.org.