Edward Avedisian Professorships Awarded at Installation Ceremony
Five faculty members received Edward Avedisian Professorships in a March 12 ceremony in Hiebert Lounge that included online viewers both in the US and abroad. The professorships were funded out of the $25 million set aside from the transformational $100 million gift from the late Edward Avedisian and his wife Pamela in 2022, which resulted in the school being named the Aram V. Chobanian & Edward Avedisian School of Medicine.
Last April, Nancy Sullivan, ScD, director of the National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories, and Venetia (Vanna) Zachariou, PhD, chair of pharmacology, physiology & biophysics, were installed as the initial recipients of Edward Avedisian Professorships.
“We’re abidingly grateful to Ed and Pamela Avedisian for their generosity and the recognition that a great medical school is a precious renewable resource for our society and for the world,” said Boston University President Ad Interim Kenneth Freeman.
Freeman noted that the five endowed chairs did not bear the Avedisian name but rather, had been selected to honor others.
“We chose to name these professorships to honor individuals who not only achieved great success in their medical careers but have continually used that success to help others,” said Pamela Avedisian. “We want them to inspire the current and future generations of medical students.”
“In medicine, we often say that we stand on the shoulders of giants. Today you will be introduced to 10 remarkable leaders in medical sciences,” said Dean and BUMC Provost Karen Antman, MD, who emceed the installation ceremony.
Toby Chai, MD, professor and chair of urology, was named the inaugural Richard K. Babayan, MD, Professor of Urology. Babayan, professor emeritus and former chair of urology, retired in 2022 after 43 years at the school. He was honored with numerous awards and in 2005, was the first in Boston to do a robot-assisted radical prostatectomy.
“I’m humbled by this experience and very grateful,” said Babayan, who introduced Chai, the urologist-in-chief at Boston Medical Center and president of Boston Medical Center Urologists, Inc. Chai previously held the John D. Young Professorship in Urology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and was vice chair of research in urology at Yale University School of Medicine. He titled his remarks, “Gratitude with a Purpose,” noting that the professorship was about more than one person: “It really is to help our department continue our academic mission to make it the best that it can be.”
Rachel Fearns, PhD, chair of virology, immunology & microbiology, was named the Ernest Barsamian, MD, Professor.
Barsamian grew up poor in Syria, became a professor of surgery and faculty dean at Harvard Medical School, invented one of the early heart-lung machines, and was the chair of cardiac and thoracic surgery, chair of surgical services, and chief of staff at the Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center.
“From the earliest days of his medical career, our father worked tirelessly to balance leading-edge prowess in medicine, particularly surgery, with the compassion and humanity that marks the successful physician,” said his son, Peter Barsamian.
Originally from the UK, Fearns holds a PhD from the University of St. Andrews. Her research focuses on the transcription and replication of RNA viruses, like respiratory syncytial virus and emerging pathogens including the Marburg, Ebola, and Nipah viruses. Fearns frequently works with the pharmaceutical industry on small molecule polymerase inhibitors that help fight diseases by inhibiting their functionality.
“It’s such an honor to be the inaugural Barsamian chair. I’m excited to take this on,” she said. “My parents are educators and imbued in me the sense that education allows you to make choices in life.” She thanked her mentors, including Ronald Corley, PhD, recently retired as chair of virology, immunology & microbiology, who “built a wonderful department here,” and the department faculty who have helped mentor her students and elevate her science.
Hee-Young Park, PhD, professor and chair of medical sciences and education, professor of dermatology, and associate dean for faculty affairs, was named the Carolann S. Najarian, MD, Professor. Najarian (CAMED’80) spent most of her career in private practice. In response to the devastating 1988 Armenian earthquake, she established the Armenian Health Alliance, delivering medicine and medical supplies and establishing a primary care facility and a center for expectant women. She was also assistant medical director at Middlesex County Hospital and an instructor in clinical medicine at Harvard Medical School.
“We chose to name these professorships to honor individuals who not only achieved great success in their medical careers but have continually used that success to help others,”
Pamela Avedisian
“I know this chair will add significantly to the education of students here, enriching their medical education and preparing them to go out into a culturally diverse world to care for patients,” Najarian said.
Park said it took a global community to raise her and get her to where she is today. Born in Korea, she credited her father with believing that education was for all—including women. Arriving alone in Arkansas at age 15 to pursue science education, Park expressed her gratitude to the Blyholder family in Fayetteville, Arkansas, who sponsored and hosted her.
“Today would not be possible without friends, families, and colleagues,” she said.
Newly named Avedisian professors (standing, l-r) David Harris,
Andrew Taylor, Medical School Dean Karen Antman, Toby Chai,
and Rachel Fearns (missing from photo is Hee-Young Park).
Representing named professorships are (seated, l-r) Housepian
spokesperson Jean Housepian, Sarkis Kechejian, donor Pamela
Avedisian, Richard Babayan, and Carolann Najarian.
Andrew Taylor, PhD, associate dean of research and professor and vice chair of research in ophthalmology, was named the Sarkis J. Kechejian, MD, Professor. An internationally known researcher in ocular immune privilege, ocular autoimmune disease, and the role of melanocortin pathways in regulating inflammation and immunity, Taylor thanked the Avedisians, his family, students, colleagues, and research collaborators, and paid tribute to his mentors, J. Wayne Streilein, MD, and Joan Stein-Streilein, PhD.
Kechejian (CAMED’63) is the president of KClinic in Texas, CEO and chairman of Alliance Health, and president of the Kechejian Foundation. He said his mother taught him “the necessity of being involved in the community and instilled in me concern for helping others.”
He is a longtime advocate for increased scholarships for BU medical students, especially to ease the financial considerations that exacerbated a chronic shortage of primary care physicians and other nonsurgical specialties, and has received the school’s Distinguished Alumni Award. The Avedisian gift included $50 million for student scholarships. Kechejian said the scholarship fund has grown from $5 million in 1996 to $150 million today.
The Edgar Minas Housepian, MD, Professorship went to David Harris, MD, PhD, chair of biochemistry & cell biology since 2009. Harris studies molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying human neurodegenerative diseases. His work on infectious prion diseases—like mad cow disease, where brain proteins fold and can result in neurodegenerative effects—has helped research into other diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s diseases.
“What I want to highlight here is the incredible foresight to use that endowment ($25 million of the Avedisian fund is dedicated to research and teaching) to support basic research which is…always at the root of great medical discoveries,” said Harris. “I am honored to be associated with a legacy that values the pursuit of knowledge and scientific excellence.”
Housepian was a renowned neurosurgeon at New York Presbyterian Hospital and professor of neurology at Columbia University Medical School, where he taught for 44 years.
His career began in labs, then evolved to surgery, but education remained his key concern and in his retirement years, he was an advocate for international educational affiliations for medical students. “He was a very creative person with a long-range vision,” said his daughter, Jean Housepian.