Awards

The Applied Public Health Statistics Section presents the Mortimer Spiegelman Award annually to honor a statistician below the age of 40 in the calendar year of the award who has made outstanding contributions to health statistics, especially public health statistics.

 

About the Award

The award was established in 1970 and is presented at the APHA Annual Meeting and Expo. The award serves the following three purposes:

  • To honor the outstanding achievements of both the recipient and Spiegelman
  • To encourage further involvement in public health by the finest young statisticians
  • To increase awareness of APHA and the Applied Public Health Statistics Section in the academic statistical community

 

Eligibility

The Spiegelman Award recipient must be a health statistician who has made outstanding contributions to statistical methodology and its applications in public health (broadly defined).

The award is open to early career investigators regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation, nationality or citizenship. Specifically, candidates must meet at least one of the following criteria:

  • Candidate must be under age 40 throughout the award calendar year; or
  • Candidate must have obtained a terminal degree in statistics or a statistics-related field in the last 10 years.

For those receiving a terminal degree after considerable professional experience, or with extenuating life circumstances such as the birth of a child, the committee will make exceptions to the eligibility requirements. If extenuating circumstances impact the eligibility of your nominee, please include a description in your nominating letter.

 

Nominations

Nominations are due by May 1 of the award calendar year.

A nomination should include the following items:

  1. A nominating letter that states the candidate’s date of birth, and that describes contributions to statistics for public health
  2. Up to three letters of support
  3. The candidate’s detailed CV

Submit your nomination to [email protected].

 

About Mortimer Spiegelman

Mortimer Spiegelman (1901-1969) was an actuary, biostatistician, and demographer who made exceptional contributions to public health. His contributions have continued posthumously through the APHA’s Statistics Section’s Mortimer Spiegelman Award. Mr. Spiegelman was a native of Brooklyn, New York. He received a Master’s of Engineering from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn in 1923 and a Master’s of Business Administration from Harvard University in1925. He spent 40 years on the staff of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company where he published many articles and volumes that attained national and international recognition. He coauthored with Dublin and Lotka The Money Value of Man and Length of Life, both of which have been standard reference volumes. Although his employment was in an organization that was concerned primarily with actuarial science, his interests were much broader. He published two editions of Introduction to Demography, which has been a standard text in demography. The second edition, in particular, is oriented toward the general demographer and students of public health statistics rather than toward the actuary. He did extensive work on life tables including what he referred to as “segmented generation” mortality. This approach allows one to follow the mortality experience of a given age group over successive 10-year periods as an alternative to analyzing trends in the current mortality.

His major contribution in the fields of public health and epidemiology came toward the end of his career when he conceived of, coordinated, edited, and carried to a successful conclusion the publication of a series of monographs sponsored by the APHA and published by the Harvard University Press. Each monograph pertained to a specific set of diseases, and the 1960 Census was used in a standard way as the denominator for rates of disease. In his role as editor of this series, he used his considerable powers of persuasion with the authors of the monographs to ensure comparability among them and to make certain that the work on each was completed. Sixteen monographs resulted from his efforts, covering a wide range of topics as evidenced by the following titles: Accidents and Homicides, Infectious Diseases, Trends and Variations in Fertility in the U.S., Infant, Perinatal, Maternal, and Childhood Mortality, The Epidemiology of Oral Health, Tuberculosis, Syphilis and Other Venereal Diseases, Cardiovascular Disease in the U.S., The Frequency of Rheumatic Diseases, Digestive Disease, Mental Disorders and Suicide, Cancer in the U.S., The Epidemiology of Neurological and Sense Organ Diseases, Mortality and Morbidity in the U.S., and Differential Mortality in the U.S. Mr. Spiegelman’s development of the APHA monograph series further illustrates the breadth of his interests.

Mr. Spiegelman was a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries, a Fellow of the American Statistical Association, and a Fellow of the American Public Health Association. The Spiegelman Award was established in 1970 by his sisters, Anna and Julia Spiegelman, following his death.

 

Past Winners

1970 — Edward Perrin

1971 — P. A. Lachenbruch

1972 — Manning Feinleib

1973 — Joseph L Fleiss

1974 — Gary G. Koch

1975 — Jane Menken

1976 — A. A. Afifi

1977 — David Hoel

1978 — Ross Prentice

1979 — Mitchell H. Gail

1980 — Norman Breslow

1981 — Robert F. Woolson

1982 — Joel Kleinman

1983 — J. Richard Landis

1984 — Stephen Lagakos

1985 — John Crowley

1986 — Anastasios Tsiatis

1987 — L. J. Wei

1988 — Thomas Fleming

1989 — Colin B. Begg

1990 — Kung-Yee Liang

1991 — Scott L. Zeger

1992 — Ronald S. Brookmeyer

1993 — Martin Abba Tanner

1994 — Louise M. Ryan

1995 — Christopher J. Portier

1996 — Jeremy M. G. Taylor

1997 — Margaret S Pepe

1998 — Peter Bacchetti

1999 — Danyu Lin

2000 — Bradley P. Carlin

2001 — Daniel E. Weeks

2002 — Xihong Lin

2003 — Michael Newton

2004 — Mark van der Laan

2005 — Rebecca Betensky

2006 — Francesca Dominici

2007 — David Dunson

2008 — Hongyu Zhao

2009 — Rafael Irizarry

2010 — Nilanjan Chatterjee

2011 — Sudipto Banerjee

2012 — Amy Herring

2013 — Debashis Ghosh

2014 — Tyler VanderWeele

2015 — John D. Storey

2016 — Roger Peng

2017 — Limin Peng

2018 — Raphael Gottardo

2019 — Daniela Witten

2020 — Jeffrey Leek

2021 — Sherri Rose

2022 — Ryan Tibshirani

2023 — Russell Shinohara

2024 — Edward Kennedy

 

Please visit www.spiegelmanaward.org for more info.

Submit your nomination to [email protected].