Skip to content

Mary Lasker

The Woman Who Healed America

Judith L. Pearson
Barcode 9798887701561
Hardback

Sold out
Original price £26.25 - Original price £26.25
Original price
£26.25
£26.25 - £26.25
Current price £26.25

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 02/01/2024

Genre: Biography
Label: Mayo Foundation for Medical Education & Research,U.S.
Language: English
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd

The Woman Who Healed America. The never-before-told story of the woman who moved mountains for medical research and human health.. The never-before-told story of the woman who moved mountains for medical research and human health.

Mary Woodard Lasker had a singular goal: saving lives by increasing medical research. Together with her husband, advertising genius  Albert, they created the Lasker Foundation, bestowing the Lasker Awards. Known as the  “American Nobels,” these became the most prestigious research awards in America. The Laskers’ next step was transforming the sleepy  and ineffectual American Society for the Control of Cancer, reinventing it as the American Cancer Society in 1944. 

But the real increase in medical research funding occurred when Mary discovered a  revolutionary source: the federal government. “I’m just a catalytic agent,” she would insist, while she tirelessly lobbied Congress and presidents  alike. She played a major role in expanding  the National Institutes of Health from a single entity to the largest research facility in the world. A feminist who used her femininity wisely, Mary’s ultimate victory was bringing together two political adversaries to help launch the original cancer moonshot: the 1971 National Cancer Act. 

This deeply researched biography paints the portrait of a woman who was savvy, steely, and deliberate. Mary Lasker courageously positioned  herself at the crossroads of politics, science, and medicine. At a time when women in research laboratories and the halls of Congress were anomalies, she smashed stereotypes in the fashion of Jeannette Rankin, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Shirley Chisholm. As eloquently described in this absorbing history, the country’s march to conquer humanity’s most feared maladies was well-fueled by its fearless and feisty crusader, Mary Lasker.