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School of Medicine Columbia

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Alumni Awards

Each year, in partnership with the Dean, the School of Medicine Columbia Alumni Association presents several prestigious awards to our most dedicated alumni who have demonstrated outstanding achievements in their respective fields and made significant contributions to the health needs of others.

Now Open: 2026 Award Nominations

We are currently accepting nominations for our Alumni Awards.
Click here to nominate before Friday, June 5, 2026.


2025 Award Recipients

Photo of Anna Hoppmann

 

Anna Hoppmann, MD, MPH, is an assistant professor of pediatrics in the USC School of Medicine and a pediatric oncologist at Prisma Health Children’s Hospital in the Midlands. She is a graduate of the University of South Carolina Honors College (B.A.) and the University of South Carolina School of Medicine (M.D.), and holds a master’s degree in public health from Emory University. She completed her pediatrics residency and fellowship in pediatric hematology and oncology at the University of Alabama in Birmingham. She was competitively selected for post-doctoral cancer research training through UAB’s Cancer Prevention and Control Training Program through a National Cancer Institute T32 training grant under the mentorship of Dr. Smita Bhatia. Her fellowship research on oral chemotherapy adherence among children with leukemia was awarded two national research recognitions from the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

Dr. Hoppmann returned to South Carolina to join the faculty at the USC School of Medicine in 2022. She practices pediatric hematology and oncology at Prisma Health’s Gamecocks Curing Kids Cancer Clinic. In addition, she participates in teaching and mentorship within the Pediatric Residency Program. She was the first Prisma Health physician to receive research funding from the St. Baldrick’s Foundation and Hyundai Hope on Wheels for her ongoing work to understand and mitigate health disparities in childhood cancer outcomes. She has 11 peer-reviewed publications, including two papers with novel findings on how the neighborhood/community environment impacts long-term survival among children with cancer. Dr. Hoppmann believes in applying cancer research to advocate for patients. She was the founder and chair of South Carolina’s Childhood Cancer Taskforce, a multi-disciplinary state group that created South Carolina’s inaugural report on childhood cancer trends over 25 years. This report will serve as the foundation for the childhood cancer component of the state’s Comprehensive Cancer Control Plan. She lives in Columbia, South Carolina, with her spouse and three children.

Photo of Austin Worden

 

Dr. Austin Worden wears many hats at the University of South Carolina. He’s the director of both the USC Instrumentation Resource Facility and the School of Medicine’s Applied Biotechnology Program, and he also serves as a research assistant professor in the Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy.

Austin’s path started close to home in Augusta, Georgia. He earned his B.S. in Biology from USC Aiken before heading to the USC School of Medicine Columbia, where he completed both his master’s degree (Applied Biotechnology) and his Ph.D. in biomedical science (Cellular and Molecular Biology).

After graduate school, Austin stepped into the world of industry science, working at RayBiotech Life in Georgia as part of their ELISA development team and serving as the go-to microscopy specialist. He later joined the Emory University Integrated Cellular Imaging Core, helping researchers as a widefield and confocal microscopy expert, before finding his way back to USC.

Today, Austin oversees advanced imaging services and leads biotechnology education, all while mentoring the next generation of scientists. His commitment to the School of Medicine goes back to his student days, when he founded the Biomedical Science Graduate Student Association and was the first graduate student representative on several SOMC student committees. Since then, he’s stayed active in school leadership, serving as the youngest Treasurer of the Alumni Board and now as its Secretary, in addition to serving on multiple steering committees across USC.

His passion for microscopy has also earned him a national voice. He’s an editor for Microscopy Today, a co-editor of the third edition of the Basic Confocal Microscopy textbook, author of several microscopy-based papers, and he holds leadership roles in professional societies like the Microscopy Society of America (MSA) and the Southeastern Microscopy Society (SEMS). In 2025, his hard work and early career achievements were recognized when he was named one of the inaugural Gamecock35 honorees, USC’s award for outstanding graduates under 35. He was the only honoree from the School of Medicine. Austin is also pursuing his MBA at USC Aiken, reflecting his drive to connect science, technology, and business.

And yet, somehow, Austin still makes time for life outside of work. He loves gardening, watching and playing sports, and spending time with his wife, their daughter, and their two Australian shepherds. He credits his parents and sister for helping keep him grounded growing up, his mentors (Bill Jackson, Jay Potts, and Bob Price) for shaping his scientific journey, and his closest friends (Mary, Kaleb, Steph, and Kendell) for keeping him sane during the toughest stretches. But most of all, he thanks his wife, Meg, for her patience and constant support through career moves, late nights, and the many times he said “yes” to new opportunities.

Photo of Andrew Gunter

 

Andrew Gunter, a native of Graniteville, S.C., graduated from Clemson University in 2011 with a Bachelor of Science in Genetics and a Bachelor of Arts in Biological Sciences. He completed his Master of Science in Genetic Counseling at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, before moving to Mississippi to begin his career.

At the University of Mississippi Medical Center, Gunter worked in the state’s only medical genetics clinic and was the director for Mississippi’s multidisciplinary clinic for 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome.  He was also on faculty as an assistant professor of pediatrics, educating future physicians, physical therapists, residents, and physician fellows in the maternal-fetal medicine and neonatology training programs.

Gunter’s clinical and educational work honed his passion to advance patient access to genetics care. Driven by his natural curiosity to improve systems, he was drawn toward laboratory utilization management and the reduction of financial burdens on patients. This pulled him out of patient-facing responsibilities and into health insurance. For the next few years, he worked for Humana as a medical case reviewer and subject matter expert on genetics policy and then for UnitedHealthcare as a developer and administrator of genetic testing programs for the Medicaid and Exchange lines of business.

Gunter joined Quest Diagnostics in 2021 as a member of their market access team and feels he has come full circle in understanding the complexities underlying the use and payment of laboratory services. As team director, he guides evidence-forward strategies to reduce financial barriers to care through medical policy expansion and innovative third-party programs. The skills Gunter gained through his graduate education have enabled the development of his unique career path – as such, he enjoys giving back to the field by teaching and mentoring genetic counseling trainees at USC SOM, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Southern California University of Health Sciences, and Quest Diagnostics.

Gunter is certified through the American Board of Genetic Counseling and has coauthored multiple peer-reviewed articles in the rare disease space and a Practice Resource on clinical documentation for the National Society of Genetic Counselors. He resides in Mississippi with his wife and three sons.

Photo of Willard Sharp

 

Dr. Sharp is a native of Columbia, South Carolina. He completed his undergraduate education majoring in biology and history at Wofford College in Spartanburg. During college, he spent a summer at the USC Belle W. Baruch Marine Biology Center where he decided to pursue the biological sciences as a career. He then began his graduate studies in the University of South Carolina School of Medicine’s Biomedical Science Program investigating the effects of mechanical forces on the heart and cellular signaling in the labs of Dr. Louis and Thomas Borg. Following his PhD, Dr. Sharp went on to an NIH funded research fellowship at the University of Illinois at Chicago before returning to the University of South Carolina to study medicine. During medical school he spent a year studying medicine at the University of Oxford. He completed his residency training in emergency medicine at the University of Michigan and has been continuously employed by the University of Chicago as a faculty member since. His research on resuscitation is funded by the National Institutes of Health.

He is a former Eagle Scout and has worked for the Norwegian Geological Survey, the Belle W. Baruch Marine Biology Station, and enjoys hiking and camping with his family. His father William Edwin Sharp, PhD (geology), and stepmother, Marcia G. Synnott, PhD (history), are both retired professors from the University of South Carolina.

Photo of Greg Branham

 

Dr. Branham is an otolaryngologist/facial plastic and reconstructive surgeon, committed to the mission of academic medicine. He is professor of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at Washington University School of Medicine in Saint Louis, with a busy and diverse practice that includes both reconstructive and facial cosmetic surgery. He consistently achieves excellent patient satisfaction scores throughout his clinical practice.

At Saint Louis University (SLU), he rose to the rank of associate professor (with tenure) and served as the Otolaryngology Residency Program Director there from 1991 to 2003 and was acting chair of that department on two occasions. At SLU, he also served as the associate dean of clinical affairs from 1995-2001, leading operations of the University Medical Group Faculty Practice and overseeing contracting of faculty physician services to other health systems.

During this time, he also organized the Facial Plastic Surgery Society of Saint Louis to actively engage with the local medical community and encourage involvement in that local organization as well as the Missouri State Medical Association and the AMA. He served as a delegate to the AMA, representing facial plastic surgery to the AMA for 10 years.  

He joined Washington University in 2004 as chief of facial plastic and reconstructive surgery, leading its establishment as a nationally recognized division, instituting the Facial Plastic Fellowship Program which has trained 15 fellows since 2010. He has also served executive roles within Barnes-Jewish Christian (BJC) Health System as the chief of staff of Barnes-Jewish West County Hospital (BJWCH), and more recently as the chief medical officer for BJWCH.

National leadership roles include the American Academy of Facial Plastic Surgery (AAFPRS), American Board of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (ABFPRS) and the Accreditation Council (ACPSE) that accredits Facial Plastic Surgery Fellowship Programs. He has served on the ABFPRS Board of Directors as a director and board examiner for many years. He is currently an ABFPRS senior advisor and was recently awarded the Larry Schoenrock Award for Distinguished Service in 2023. He has published numerous peer reviewed publications and book chapters, and served on the editorial boards of several journals.

Photo of Elizabeth Mack

 

Dr. Elizabeth Mack is a pediatric critical care physician and quality improvement and patient safety expert aiming to improve the quality of health care by infusing love. She is a professor of pediatrics and is the immediate past president of the SC Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics. She is employed full time by Vizient with a focus on high reliability, and part time by the Medical University of South Carolina as a pediatric critical care physician.

She completed her medical degree at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, pediatrics residency at the University of South Carolina/Palmetto Health, Pediatric Critical Care Fellowship at Cincinnati Children’s, and Masters of Science in Biostatistics/ Epidemiology at the University of Cincinnati. She is board certified in pediatrics and pediatric critical care medicine. She serves on the ABP subboard of pediatric critical care medicine, chairs the inaugural Children’s Caucus of South Carolina, and serves as a pediatric host of SCCM podcast.

She is passionate about health equity, patient and employee safety, global health, patient and family engagement, high reliability, serious illness communication, child advocacy, and injury and harm prevention.

She lives in Charleston, South Carolina, with her husband, and two furbabies Simon Valjean & Winnifred Liza (named with musical theatre in mind). She and her husband enjoy a wild-haired competitive challenge and have summited Mt. Kilimanjaro and trekked to Everest Base Camp.

Photo of Leroy Robinson

 

 Dr. Leroy Robinson was born on June 29, 1964, at Eisenhower Medical Center in Fort Gordon, Georgia, to Reverend Leroy Robinson and Reverend Dr. Gloria Robinson. Raised in Aiken County, he attended Catholic schools and graduated from St. Angela Academy in 1982. He went on to earn his Bachelor of Science in Biology, with honors, from Wofford College in 1986, followed by his medical degree from the University of South Carolina School of Medicine in 1990. He completed his residency in obstetrics and gynecology at Richland Memorial Hospital.

In 1994, Dr. Robinson began his medical career in Hartsville, South Carolina, through a DHEC scholarship commitment, first practicing at Byerly Hospital and later at Carolina Pines Regional Medical Center. Over the years, he has delivered countless babies in Darlington and Chesterfield counties while remaining deeply engaged in his community. He has served on the boards of Carolina Pines Regional Medical Center, the Byerly Foundation, and the YMCA—where he held the role of chair on two occasions—as well as Coker College’s Board of Trustees. He currently serves on the Florence-Darlington Technical College Board of Commissioners and has contributed to the South Carolina Maternal Mortality and Morbidity Committee, which works to reduce pregnancy-related deaths statewide.

In recognition of his dedication to service and leadership, Dr. Robinson will receive his 40-year service award this year as a member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. His commitment to excellence extends beyond medicine and community service, reflecting a lifelong devotion to faith, family, and fraternity.

Dr. Robinson is a devoted husband to Dr. Tammie Young Robinson and proud father of two daughters: Savannah, a registered nurse in Atlanta, and Ashley, a school counselor in Greensboro, North Carolina. He continues to serve as a staff physician in obstetrics and gynecology at Carolina Pines Medical Group, where he remains passionate about caring for women and families in his community.

Photo of Patricia Witherspoon

 

Inspired by her parents’ belief in the importance of education, Dr. Patricia Witherspoon received a bachelor’s degree in biology from Lincoln University and obtained a master’s degree from Pennsylvania State University. Initially discouraged from pursuing a degree in medicine; while working at Johns Hopkins University she rekindled her desire to attend medical school.

Witherspoon received her medical degree from Pennsylvania State University. She relocated to Columbia for her family medicine residency at Palmetto Health Richland, where she also served as chief resident. In 1995 she was employed at Richland Primary Health Care, and she signed up to be a community preceptor for the USC School of Medicine. It was during this experience that she entertained the idea of academic medicine. She joined the faculty of the Department of Family Medicine in 1998.

As a School of Medicine faculty member, she served as a contributing lecturer for the Introduction to Clinical Medicine lectures, was interim ICM Coordinator and a member of a numerous SOM and main campus committees.

She was equally involved within the medical community in a variety of volunteer roles. She served on several statewide and local committees of varied emphasis (rural health research, cardiovascular disease, women’s health, diabetes, health disparities, sickle cell disease and maternal and infant health). Her original lure to return to the department was the opportunity to create a month-long experience for each family medicine intern; Community Medicine 29203. As the month-long experience evolved the highlights were the intern-community tour and participation in the Doctor of the Day at the Statehouse. 

The professional organizations she is affiliated with are South Carolina Academy of Family Physicians and South Carolina Medical Association. She has been a volunteer physician at the Columbia Free Clinic for over 30 years.  She serves as a board member at the SC Office of Rural Health and the Diabetes Initiatives of South Carolina. She currently holds the position of medical director at the Center for Rural and Primary Healthcare and a medical consultant for SCDHHS.

Witherspoon has been recognized for her life’s work by several organizations: 2024-Physician of the Year by SCMA and received Dr. Timothy Llewelyn from Constellation Quality Health. In 2023-The James E. Clyburn Health Equity Leadership award, the Advancement of Women in Science and Medicine from USC-SOM. In 2021- Luminary Leaders in Medicine and Science, USC-SOM. She was the past recipient of both the SC- DHEC Diabetes Physician Champion and USC-SOM Kay McFarland Women’s Health Award (2X). The Social Justice Award, given by USC, and the Gold Humanism Honor Society inductee. 

Witherspoon considers it her responsibility to not only to be the best physician but to serve as a mentor to all her learners.  


Past Award Recipients

  • 2024 – Major Donald R. Fredericks Jr. (DJ), MD, '15
  • 2023 – Jade Cohen, MD, '18/Psychiatry
  • 2023 – Jodi Dingle, MD, '13/Pediatrics
  • 2022 – Andrew D. Vaughan, MD, '15/Family Medicine 
  • 2022 – David C. Giovannini, MD, FACP, '14/Internal Medicine
  • 2021 – Christopher E. Gainey, MD, FACEP, FAEMS, '12/Emergency Medicine
  • 2020 – LaNita Jefferson, MRC, LPC, '17
  • 2019 – Garrison Morgan, MD, FACC, '10/Cardiology
  • 2018 –  John Baker, MD, ‘07/Neurology
  • 2017 – Ken Iverson, MD, ‘07/Otolaryngology
  • 2016 – William Palmer, MD, ‘10/Internal Medicine
  • 2015 – William E. Bynum, MD, ’10/Family Medicine
  • 2014 – James Blakeley Long, MD, ‘05/Internal Medicine
  • 2013 – William R. Jennings, MD, '03/Emergency Medicine
  • 2012 – Elizabeth H. Mack, MD '03/Pediatrics
  • 2011 – Caroline Keller Powell, MD, '01/Internal Medicine
  • 2010 – Natasha M. Ruth, MD, '00/Pediatric Rheumatology
  • 2009 – B. James McCallum, MD, '01/Internal Medicine
  • 2008 – Charles J. Carter Jr., MD, '99/Family and Preventive Medicine
  • 2007 – Nioaka N. Campbell, MD, '00/Psychiatry
  • 2006 – Noel A. Brownlee, MD, '02/Anatomic & Clinical Pathology
  • 2005 – John P. Batson III, MD, '99/Pediatrics, Sports Medicine
  • 2004 – M. Todd Crump, MD, '98/Emergency Medicine
  • 2003 – John Markowitz, MD, '95/Pediatric Gastroenterology
  • 2001 – C. Todd Walter, MD, '93/Family Medicine
  • 2024 – Sheena Campbell Morris, DNAP, MNA, CRNA, '09
  • 2023 – Troy Hall, MRC, CRC, '20 
  • 2022 – Marc R. Bentz, DNAP, CRNA, '13
  • 2021 – Jeffrey S. Boswell, DNAP, MNA, CRNA, '04/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2020 – Ashley Waddington, MRC, LPC, CRC, '16/Rehabilitation Counseling
  • 2019 – Catherine B. Rhea, MBS, CRNA, '00/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2018 – Will Chapman, CRNA, '12/Nurse Anesthesia 
  • 2017 – Richard Kordus, MBS, '10/Biomedical Sciences
  • 2016 – W. Michael Donovan, CRN, MNA, ‘07/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2015 – Catherine G. Gutshall, CRNA, DNAP, ‘11/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2014 – Heather Houston Eidson, CRNA, MNA, '06/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2013 – James P. Watson, MBS, '03/Biomedical Sciences
  • 2012 – Kevin J. LeBlanc, CRNA, MNA, '05/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2011 – Gregory L. Dahl, MRC, '04/Rehabilitation Counseling
  • 2010 – Richard P. Wilson, - CRNA, MNA, '06/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2009 – Kenneth Hergenrather, PhD, CRC, '97/Rehabilitation Counseling
  • 2008 – William M. Luce, CRNA, '98/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2007 – Ralph Russell Britain, RNA, '02/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2006 – Edward Middleton, MRC, '99/Rehabilitation Counseling
  • 2005 – Herbert O. Poole, MNA, '97/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2004 – Kimberly Heriot Newell, MNA, '96/Nurse Anesthesia
  • 2003 – Jill Marie Fischer, MS, CGC, '93/Genetic Counseling
  • 2001 – Campbell K. Brasington, MS, CGC, '88/Genetic Counseling
  • 2024 – Robin Fletcher, MS, CGC, '91
  • 2023 – Allison Bellomo, MS, CGC, '09
  • 2022 – Andrea A. Sellers, MS, CGC, ’05
  • 2021 – Ginger Hocutt, MS, CGC, '13
  • 2020 – Kate Wilson, MS, CGC, '07
  • 2019 – Holly H. Zimmerman, MS, CGC, '07
  • 2018 – Debera Zvejnieks, MS, CGC, '92
  • 2017 – Emily E. Hardisty, MS, CGC,  ’01
  • 2016 – Elizabeth H. Malphrus, MS, CGC, '01
  • 2015 – Margaret M. Walker, MS, CGC, ‘08
  • 2014 – Kathryn Laine Berrier, MGC, ’09
  • 2013 – Campbell K. Brasington, MS, CGC, '88
  • 2012 – Kerensa (Kerry) Crandall, MS, CGC, '88
  • 2011 – MaryAnn Whalen Campion, MS, CGC, '00
  • 2010 – Jennifer Anne Sullivan-Saarela, MS, CGC, '96
  • 2009 – Melissa K. Bennett, MS, CGC, '97
  • 2008 – Courtney Rowell Tate, MS, CGC, '00 
  • 2007 – Holly Landrum Peay, MS, CGC, '97
  • 2006 – Sonja R. Eubanks, MS, CGC, '95
  • 2005 – Victoria A. Vincent, MS, CGC, '87
  • 2004 – Christine E. Miller, MS, CGC, '89 
  • 2024 – Krishna Yekkala, BVSc, PhD, DACVP, DABT, '07
  • 2023 – Carolyn E. Bannister, PhD, '09
  • 2021 – Sadiye Amcaoglu Rieder, PhD, '11
  • 2020 – Lawrence S. Lamb, Jr., PhD, '91
  • 2019 – Guang Peng, M.D., PhD, '05
  • 2018 – Courtney R. Pinard, PhD, '09
  • 2017 – Leah Reznikov, PhD, ’08
  • 2016 – Sloka Iyengar, PhD, '10
  • 2015 – Xingzhi Xu, PhD, ‘00
  • 2014 – Brian B. Gowen, PhD, ’00
  • 2013 – Misty D. Smith, PhD, '01
  • 2012 – KV Chalam, M.D., PhD, '04
  • 2011 – Heather Evans-Anderson, PhD, '04
  • 2010 – Darrell R. Borger, PhD, '01
  • 2009 – Naveed K. Shams, MD, PhD, '89
  • 2008 – Amy Baldwin, PhD, '03
  • 2006 – Jian M. Ding, MD, PhD, '92
  • 2005 – Richard A. Rabin, PhD, '79
  • 2004 – Aniruddha Choudhury PhD, '94
  • 2003 – Randolph M. Johnson, PhD, '84
  • 2000 – Alvin F. Wells, MD, PhD, '88
  • 2024 – Bill Phillips, MD, FACC, FSCAI, '95
  • 2023 – Patricia Bouknight, MD, '94/Family Medicine
  • 2022 – L. Brannon Traxler, MD, MPH, '08/General Surgery
  • 2022 – John D. Patrick, MD, ’87/Pathology
  • 2021 - Mary Beth Poston, MD, MSCR, FACP, '99/Internal Medicine
  • 2020 – Lilly S. Filler, MD, '88/OBGYN
  • 2019 – Joseph C. Perkinson, MD, '92/Pediatrics
  • 2018 – Richard Frierson, MD, ‘88/Forensic Psychiatry
  • 2017 – J.W. Randolph Bolton, MD, PhD, ‘84/Cardiothoracic Surgery
  • 2016 – Anna-Kathryn Rye, MD, ‘02/Pediatrics
  • 2015 – Barbara H. Amaker, MD, ‘90/Neuropathology
  • 2014 – Steven W. Corso, MD, ‘88/Hematology and Oncology
  • 2013 – Kenneth M. Rogers, MD, '90/Child Psychiatry
  • 2012 – David E. Koon Jr., MD, '92/Orthopaedic Surgery
  • 2011 – Bonnie J. Ramsey, MD, '81/Child and Adult Psychiatry
  • 2010 – Robert C. Holleman Jr., MD, '90/Pediatric Nephrology
  • 2009 – R. Ian McCaslin, MD, MPH, '83/Pediatric Emergency Medicine
  • 2008 – D. Jeffrey Newport, MD, MS, MDiv, '95/ Psychiatry
  • 2007 – Judith T. Burgis, MD, '89/OBGYN
  • 2006 – Elizabeth G. Baxley, MD, '84/Family Medicine
  • 2005 – William M. Moore, Jr. MD,'83/Vascular Surgery
  • 2005 – Franklin O. Smith III, MD, '84/Pediatric Hematology and Oncology
  • 2004 – R. Caughman Taylor, MD, '83/Pediatrics
  • 2004 – Virginia A. Eddy, MD, '84/Surgery
  • 2003 – Dexter L. Cook Jr., MD, '83/Pediatrics
  • 2003 – Patrick McBride MD, '84/Family Medicine
  • 2001 – Raymond P. Bynoe, MD, Residency Class of 1984/Surgery
  • 2000 – Jim C. Chow, MD, '85/Dermatology
  • 2024 – Rohit Talwani, MD, '95
  • 2023 – Fozia Saleem-Rasheed, MD, '99/Pediatrics
  • 2022 – Moeen A. Saleem, MD, '95/Cardiology
  • 2020 – Christopher Goodman, MD, '10/Internal Medicine
  • 2019 – James R. Morrow, MD, '82/Family Medicine
  • 2018 – T. Jefferson Crane, MD, FACP, 86/Internal Medicine
  • 2017 – Gabe Simpson, MD, ‘00/Emergency Medicine
  • 2016 – John C. Ropp, III, MD, ‘01/Family Medicine
  • 2015 – R. Thomas Reach, MD, ‘86/Family Medicine
  • 2014 – Timothy A. Fitzgibbon, MD, ‘87/Family Medicine
  • 2013 – M. Todd Crump, MD, '98/Emergency Medicine
  • 2012 – March E. Seabrook, MD, '86/Gastroenterology
  • 2011 – Victoria Giles Andes, MD,  '90/Family Medicine
  • 2011 – Luke (Buddy) K. Baxley, MD, '82/Family Medicine (Posthumously)
  • 2010 – Kerry K. Sease, MD, '98/Pediatrics
  • 2009 – George H. Helmrich, MD, '90/OBGYN
  • 2007 – Cassandra D. Youmans, MD, MPH, MS-HCM, FAAP, '87/Internal Medicine/Pediatrics
  • 2006 – James F. Riddle, MD, '86/Psychiatry
  • 2005 – G. Grattan (Grat) Correll, MD, '94/Family Medicine
  • 2004 – Katherine A. Close, MD, '88/Family Medicine
  • 2003 – Miriam R. Wheeler, MD, '85/Family Medicine
  • 2001 – Elizabeth Harvey Baker, MD, '86/Pediatrics
  • 2000 – Paul V. DeMarco, MD, '89/Internal Medicine
  • 2024 – Robert D. Hubbird, MD
  • 2023 – Les Hall, MD - USC School of Medicine Columbia, Dean (2015-2023)
  • 2022 – Susan C. Butler - USC School of Medicine Columbia, Administrative Coordinator, Finance/University Foundations
  • 2021 – Tan J. Platt, MD - USC School of Medicine Columbia, Clinical Director of the Department of Family and Preventative Medicine (Posthumously)
  • 2020 – Ruth Riley, MS - USC School of Medicine, Director of Library Services, Assistant Dean for Executive Affairs
  • 2019 – Joshua T. Thornhill, IV, MD - USC School of Medicine, Associate Dean for Medical Education and Academic Affairs
  • 2018 – Debbie T. Truluck – USC School of Medicine (1996-2017), Director of Alumni Relations 
  • 2017 – Ms. DyAnne Dunham – USC School of Medicine (1979-2005), Senior Director of Development (1994-2005)
  • 2016 – Carol Smith – 1976-003 USC School of Medicine and Editor Emerita, SC Medicine Magazine
  • 2015 – Nancy A. Richeson, MD – 1983-2015 USC School of Medicine Educator and Administrator
  • 2014 – James R. Augustine, PhD - 1976-2014 USC School of Medicine Scholar, Researcher and Educator
  • 2013 – Carol L. McMahon, MD – 1994 -2013 USC School of Medicine Educator and Administrator
  • 2012 – Richard A. Hoppmann, MD – 2009-2013 Dean; 1997 – 2012 USC School of Medicine Educator and Administrator
  • 2011 – Stanley D. Fowler, PhD – 1982-2011 USC School of Medicine Educator and Administrator
  • 2010 – David L. Keisler, MD – 1993-2003 USC School of Medicine Educator and Administrator
  • 2009 – G. Paul Eleazer, MD, FACP, AGSF – Director, Division of Geriatrics
  • 2008 – C. Warren Derrick, MD – 1977-2006 USCSOM Educator and Administrator; Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Pediatrics
  • 2007 – Larry R. Faulkner, MD – 1994-2006 Vice President for Medical Affairs and Dean
  • 2006 – James R. Stallworth, MD – Associate Professor, Pediatrics
  • 2005 – O’Neill Barrett, Jr. MD – Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Internal Medicine
  • 2004 – Donald E. Saunders, Jr. MD – Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Department of Internal Medicine, Cardiology
  • 2003 – Paul V. Catalana, MD, MPH – GHS Director of Student Services and Associate Professor of Pediatrics
  • 2003 – James A. Hightower, PhD – Professor Emeritus, Cell Biology and Neuroscience
  • 2001 – Roderick Macdonald, Jr. MD – Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Department of Ophthalmology and Dean Emeritus
  • 2001 – J. O’Neal Humphries, MD – Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Department of Internal Medicine and Dean Emeritus
  • 2000 – Robert F. Sabalis, PhD – Associate Dean for Medical Education and Academic Affairs 
  • 2013 – William R. Jennings, MD, '03/Emergency Medicine
  • 2008 – Nioaka N. Campbell, MD, '00/Psychiatry
  • 2006 – Noel Brownlee, MD, '02/Anatomic and Clinical Pathology 
  • 2015 – Kenneth M. Rogers, MD, '90/Child Psychiatry
  • 2007 – Cassandra D. Youmans, MD, ' 87/Internal Medicine
  • 2013 – M. Todd Crump, MD, '98/Emergency Medicine
  • 2010 – Jim C. Chow, MD, '85/Dermatologic and Mohs Micrographic Surgery
  • 2006 – Katherine A. Close, MD, '88/Family Medicine 
  • 2004 – Larry R. Faulkner, MD – Vice President for Medical Affairs and Dean of the USC School of Medicine
  • 2004 – Donald E. Saunders, Jr. MD  '51; Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Dept. of Internal Medicine, Cardiology
  • 2003 – Roderick Macdonald, Jr. MD - Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Department of Ophthalmology and Dean Emeritus
  • 1991 – J. O’Neal Humphries, MD - Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Department of Internal Medicine and Dean Emeritus 

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