In 1945 Albert Lasker and Mary Woodard Lasker created the Lasker Awards . Every year since then the award has been given to the living person considered to have made the greatest contribution to medical science or who has demonstrated public service on behalf of medicine. They are administered by the Lasker Foundation. The Lasker is sometimes referred to as "America's Nobels".
3-549: The Lasker–Bloomberg Public Service Award , known until 2009 as the Mary Woodard Lasker Public Service Award , is awarded by the Lasker Foundation to honor an individual or organization whose public service has profoundly enlarged the possibilities for medical research and the health sciences and their impact on the health of the public. The award, worth $ 250,000, is presented in odd-numbered years to
6-656: A reputation for identifying future winners of the Nobel Prize . Eighty-six Lasker laureates have received the Nobel Prize, including 32 in the last two decades. Claire Pomeroy is the current president of the Lasker Foundation. The award is given in four branches of medical science: The awards carry an honorarium of $ 250,000 for each category. A collection of papers from the Albert and Mary Lasker Foundation were donated to
9-667: A winner selected from among policy makers, journalists, philanthropists, advocates, scientists, and public health professionals. It is named after the philanthropists Albert Lasker and Michael R. Bloomberg . Initially known as the Albert Lasker Public Service Award, it was known from 2000 to 2009 as the Mary Woodard Lasker Public Service Award in honour of his wife. Source: "The Lasker Foundation - Awards" . - Official Site Lasker Foundation The Lasker Awards have gained
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