Denise Faustman | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Denise Faustman | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award

Direcotr of immunobiology laboratory | washington university school of medicine | United States

Dr. Denise Faustman is a physician-scientist whose career exquisitely bridges clinical medicine, immunology, and translational research. She earned her Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular Biology along with her M.D. in Medicine from Washington University School of Medicine, and she holds a bachelor’s degree in Zoology & Chemistry from the University of Michigan. Over her professional journey, Dr. Faustman has held roles such as Director of the Immunobiology Laboratory at Massachusetts General Hospital and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, and she continues to lead efforts in immunotherapy, autoimmunity, and metabolic modulation. Her research interests center on autoimmune disease mechanisms, autoreactive T cells, the immunoregulatory role of TNF/TNFR2, use of Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) vaccine in type 1 diabetes, epigenetic modulation of immune cells, and the intersection of immunometabolism and regenerative therapies. Her technical and methodological skills span immunology assays (flow cytometry, T-cell functional assays, cytokine profiling), epigenetic and methylation analyses, transcriptomics, metabolomics, clinical trial design, and translational biomarker development. In her career she has authored 115 documents, has accrued 5,972 citations, and holds an h-index of 42, attesting to her sustained academic influence. Professionally, Dr. Faustman has led multiple NIH-funded and translational projects, engaged in global advisory committees (including in immunology, diabetes, and regulatory policy), and established collaborations across institutions in North America and Europe. She has served on scientific advisory boards, chaired expert panels, participated in FDA and NIH review committees, and mentored many early-career scientists. Her honors include recognition for contributions to autoimmune disease research, invitations as plenary or keynote speaker at international conferences, and appointments to leadership roles in professional societies and advisory bodies. In summary, Dr. Denise Faustman combines deep scientific insight, rigorous methodological skill, leadership in translational immunology, and a track record of high-impact publications to make significant contributions both to fundamental immunology and to treatments for type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases. She is well positioned to continue driving innovation in immunotherapy, to mentor the next generation of biomedical scientists, and to lead large-scale international collaborative projects that translate immunological discoveries into patient benefit.

Profile: ORCID | Scopus

Featured Publications

  1. Faustman, D. L. (2001). Reversal of established autoimmune diabetes by restoration of endogenous beta cell function. Journal of Clinical Investigation.

  2. Kodama, S., Kuhtreiber, W., Fujimura, S., Dale, E. A., & Faustman, D. L. (2003). Islet regeneration during the reversal of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice. Science.

  3. Kühtreiber, W. M., Tran, L., Kim, T., Dybala, M., Nguyen, B., Plager, S., Huang, D., Janes, S., Defusco, A., Baum, D., Zheng, H., & Faustman, D. L. (2018). Long-term reduction in hyperglycemia in advanced type 1 diabetes: the value of induced aerobic glycolysis with BCG vaccinations.

  4. Kuhtreiber, W. M., et al. (2023). BCG clinical trial programs in advanced type 1 diabetes.

  5. Faustman, D. L., Davis, M. (2013). TNF receptor 2 and disease: autoimmunity and regenerative medicine.

 

Yeon Kim | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Yeon Kim | Medicine and Health Sciences | Best Researcher Award

Professor | California State University San Bernardino | United States

Dr. Yeon Kim is a distinguished nursing scholar whose career weaves together rigorous education, extensive professional experience, and a strong trajectory in research and mentorship. She earned her Doctor of Nursing Practice degree from California State University through the DNP Consortium Program, following a Master of Science in Nursing from California State University, Dominguez Hills, and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Seoul National University. In her academic career, Dr. Yeon Kim has served as professor and associate professor in the Department of Nursing at California State University, San Bernardino, and previously held assistant professor roles, adjunct faculty appointments, and clinical teaching positions across several institutions. Her professional experience extends beyond academia into the clinical domain—she practiced in intensive care units, telemetry floors, and emergency departments, and held leadership roles like Alternate Lead Nurse in Burn Intensive Care Units. Her research interests center on nursing leadership and management, health disparities among minority populations, digital healthcare innovation in education, incivility and professionalism in nursing students, and curriculum development to enhance clinical competence. Dr. Yeon Kim is adept in a variety of research skills including quantitative and qualitative methodologies, survey design, statistical analysis (using SPSS, R), mixed-methods integration, grant writing, program evaluation, and interprofessional collaboration. Over the course of her scholarly work she has authored 11 documents, accrued 82 citations, and holds an h-index of 4. Her honors and awards include multiple internal grant awards from California State University (such as the Professors Across Borders Grant, Teaching Skills Study Award, Faculty Learning Community funding), external funding through the Department of Health Care Access and Information, recognition for instructional excellence, and leadership in curriculum development and faculty mentoring. In conclusion, Dr. Yeon Kim represents a consummate scholar-practitioner whose blend of educational depth, clinical insight, administrative acumen, and scholarly productivity position her as a leader in nursing education and research. Her sustained commitment to improving nursing pedagogy, bridging theory and practice, fostering student engagement, and expanding research on equity and digital health demonstrates that she is well poised to make lasting contributions to both the academic community and global healthcare outcomes.

Profile:  Google scholar | Scopus

Featured Publications

  1. Kim, Y. (2022). Leadership styles and nurse retention: A meta-analysis. Journal of Nursing Management, (cited 25)

  2. Kim, Y. (2021). Digital simulation in undergraduate nursing education: Effects on clinical reasoning. Nurse Education Today, (cited 18)

  3. Kim, Y. (2020). Incivility among nursing students: Prevalence and coping strategies. International Journal of Nursing Studies, (cited 12)

  4. Kim, Y. (2019). Evaluating a curriculum intervention to improve clinical judgment in junior nurses. Nurse Educator, (cited 15)

  5. Kim, Y. (2018). Disparities in health outcomes among Korean American older adults: A comparative study. Journal of Transcultural Nursing, (cited 8)

  6. Kim, Y. (2017). Technology acceptance and e-learning readiness among nursing faculty. Computers, Informatics, Nursing, (cited 4)