Inaugural Paul B. Hammond Award Goes To NIEHS Director
In a ceremony held Jan. 14, 2003, Kenneth Olden, PhD, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and the National Toxicology Program (NTP), received the inaugural Paul B. Hammond award. Dr. Paul B. Hammond served on the faculty of the UC Department of Environmental Health from 1972 until his death in 1998. His work in lead toxicity led to discoveries of the devastating effects that low levels of environmental lead has on children.
The first Paul B. Hammond award was presented to Dr. Olden in recognition of his efforts to improve childrens health in the United States. Under his leadership, the NIEHS is funding $4.2 million of research this year into childrens environmental health in Cincinnati. For the last 27 years, the NIEHS has provided annual funding of at least $1 million in Cincinnati for childhood lead poisoning research. The NIEHS has also funded one of twelve national Childrens Environmental Health Centers at Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center, under the direction of Bruce Lanphear, MD.
Dr. Olden was named the third director of the NIEHS and second director of the NTP in 1991. He is the first African-American to become director of one of the 18 institutes of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the over 100 year history of the agency.
Tags
Related Stories
Powerful AI can help diagnose substance use disorder
February 5, 2026
A new study by the University of Cincinnati uses a novel artificial intelligence to predict substance use disorder-defining behaviors with up to 83% accuracy.
'Time is brain' again, now for control of intracerebral hemorrhage
February 5, 2026
MedPage Today highlighted research led by the University of Cincinnati's Joseph Broderick that found administering a synthetic protein can reduce bleeding and improve outcomes for certain patients at the highest risk of continued bleeding following a type of stroke called an intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH).
Children exposed to gambling mechanics before they understand money
February 4, 2026
Gambling-style mechanics are becoming a routine part of children’s digital lives, appearing in online games, mobile apps and even sports betting advertisements that surround popular media. University of Cincinnati experts warned in a recent WKRC-TV Local 12 report that long before children understand the value of money, they are learning the emotional highs and lows associated with risk. Online games, such as Roblox and Fortnite, offer fast-paced rewards that can keep children glued to screens.