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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 22, 2003
Corinna Kaarlela, News Director
Source: Cara Peracchi Douglas,
Director Public Affairs and Communications, UCSF-Fresno
E-mail: carapd@ucsfresno.edu
Web: www.ucsfresno.edu
ASSEMBLYMEMBER SARAH REYES HONORS UCSF FRESNO PHYSICIAN
WITH OUTSTANDING LEADERSHIP AWARD
FRESNO - In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month,
Assemblymember Sarah Reyes (D-Fresno) honored Katherine A. Flores,
MD, director of the UCSF Fresno Latino Center for Medical Education
and Research, with an award for outstanding leadership in the area
of medicine.
"It is an honor to be in the company of
such exceptional people," said Flores. "It is a special
thrill to be recognized for doing something that I believe in and
enjoy."
Flores was nominated for co-founding the Doctor's
Academy and Junior Doctor's Academy in Fresno. These programs seek
to increase the number of educationally disadvantaged students who
consider pursuing a career in the health science professions.
The Doctor's Academy at Sunnyside High School
graduated its first class of 38 students in May. More than one-third
of the students, many of them the first in their family to attend
college, were admitted to University of California campuses; and
all are attending college this fall.
Flores received the award at a ceremony September
16 at Arte Américas in downtown Fresno.
Born into a family of migrant farm workers and
raised by her grandparents, Flores graduated from Roosevelt High
School in Fresno. She earned degrees from Stanford University and
the UC Davis School of Medicine and returned to the Valley to practice.
Since college, she has worked with numerous organizations
to increase the number of Latinos entering the medical field. Flores
also is a faculty member of the UCSF Fresno Medical Education Program
and practices family medicine in a group office with four other
bilingual female physicians.
Outstanding Leadership Awards are given by Assemblymember
Reyes to recognize exceptional Hispanics in the Valley who have
dedicated their time and effort to improving the community. Individuals
are recognized in several categories including non-profit employee,
public safety, small business owner, medicine, legal and justice,
and community volunteer. This is the fifth year Reyes has hosted
the event. Local organizations and community leaders throughout
the 31st Assembly District submitted nominations for the distinguished
awards.
"It is a privilege to recognize outstanding
leaders in our community," said Reyes. "These exceptional
individuals have defined what it means to be a leader not only in
the Hispanic community, but to our Valley."
This marks the third year that UCSF Fresno-affiliated physicians
have received the Outstanding Leadership Award in medicine. Past
recipients include Edward Moreno, MD, assistant clinical professor
of pediatrics for UCSF Fresno, and Adriana Padilla, MD, director
of UCSF Fresno's Undergraduate Medical Education Program.
"We are especially proud of all of our faculty
and staff," said Joan Voris, MD, associate dean of UCSF Fresno.
"We are grateful to Assemblymember Reyes for recognizing UCSF
Fresno's numerous and varied contributions to advancing health care
in the San Joaquin Valley."
UCSF Fresno educates one in every three Central
Valley physicians currently practicing in the seven specialty programs
offered. UCSF Fresno offers specialty training in family practice,
internal medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics, psychiatry, surgery
and obstetrics/gynecology. In addition, UCSF Fresno educates about
400 medical students annually.
NOTE: Photos of Katherine A. Flores, MD, are
available upon request and interviews with Dr. Flores can be arranged
by calling Cara Peracchi Douglas at 559.243.3606.
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