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Don Yousey (right) received the Levine Award for Local Innovation in Public Health from Dr. Devlin.
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The Legacy Award for Public Health is given in two categories:
1. Legacy Award for Public Health – Statewide Impact
The person honored with the Legacy Award for Public Health – Statewide Impact, will have a distinguished record of achievement in one or more of the following areas:
- Expanding the scope and impact of public health services and programs;
- Significantly improving public health systems, capacity or infrastructure;
- Enhancing public health capacity through policy development or collaboration with the private sector;
- Improving the public’s health through the creation of sustained partnerships; and/or
- Fostering public health improvement through sound science and research.
In order to be considered for the Statewide Impact Award, the selected individual’s contribution in one or more of these areas must have been sustained and significant.
Criteria for Selection
To be eligible for the Legacy Award for Public Health – Statewide Impact,
the selected individual must have been:
- Active in the practice of public health for a period of not less than 10 years; or,
- In a position to directly influence or guide public health systems change with regard to the body of public health work under consideration;
or,
- Successful in making an enduring contribution to North Carolina’s state and local public health system.
Selections are not limited to state and local public health staff.
2. Legacy Award for Public Health – Local Innovation
The person honored with the Legacy Award for Public Health – Local Innovation, will have a distinguished record of achievement in one or more of the following areas:
- Expanding the scope and impact of local public health services and programs;
- Significantly improving local public health systems, capacity or infrastructure;
- Enhancing local public health capacity through policy development or collaboration with the private sector;
- Improving local public’s health through the creation of sustained partnerships; and/or
- Fostering local public health improvement through sound science and research.
In order to be considered for the Local Innovation Award, the selected individual’s contribution in one or more of these areas must have been sustained and significant.
Criteria for Selection
To be eligible for the Legacy Award for Public Health – Local Innovation, the selected individual must have been:
- Active in the practice of local public health for a period of not less than 10 years; or,
- In a position to directly influence or guide local public health systems change with regard to the body of local public health work under consideration;
or,
- Successful in making an enduring contribution to North Carolina’s local public health system.
Selections are limited to local public health staff.
The Legacy Award for Public Health winners are selected solely by the NC State Health Director. At the discretion of the State Health Director, a nominations committee may be established to; design a nomination process, receive nominations, select at least three individuals who best meet the stated criteria for each award category, and make recommendations to the State Health Director. The State Health Director will then make the final decision for each award.
Award Announcement and Past Recipients
Recipients of the Ronald H. Levine Legacy Awards for Public Health are announced during an awards luncheon at the state health director’s conference. Award recipients are honored with a special commemorative gift, and the winner’s name is entered upon a permanent plaque displayed within the Office of the State Health Director. Legacy Award winners are also given lifetime complimentary registration to the annual state health director’s conference.
| PAST RECIPIENTS |
| 2008 |
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| 2007 |
- 2007 Ron Levine Award Page
- Carmen Hooker-Odom, former Secretary of the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services
- Sen. William R. Purcell
- Rep. Edd Nye
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| 2006 |
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| 2005 |
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| 2004 |
- Dr. J.N. "Newt" MacCormack
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Brunswick County Health Director Don Yousey and Dean Smith, retired long-time basketball coach at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, have each been awarded the 2009 Ronald H. Levine Legacy Award for Public Health in recognition of their outstanding contributions to public health in North Carolina. The awards were announced by State Health Director Leah Devlin at the 2009 State Health Directors Conference in Raleigh on Jan. 24.
Named for former North Carolina State Health Director Dr. Ron Levine, the annual awards honor individuals whose life work on behalf of the public’s health has resulted in significant, sustainable and positive improvements in North Carolina’s public health system.
The 2009 Levine Award for Local Innovation in Public Health was presented to Don Yousey, who has been health director of Brunswick County for more than 10 years. Yousey was honored for a long list of accomplishments, including securing grant money for a new outreach medical unit, establishing a regional office to administer case management services for Medicaid clients, and starting a clinic for seniors with no medical home. Yousey also led a focused effort by the health department and Minority Infant Mortality Task Force that resulted in two consecutive years of a zero infant mortality rate in the county. Among his many other successful projects was the establishment of an umbrella organization to enable area local health departments to provide low-cost diabetes self-management education that is reimbursable by Medicaid, Medicare, and private health insurance. The pilot project was one of five in the state to get American Diabetes Association approval in 2008.
A native of Rome, N.Y., Yousey received his master’s degree in Public Health from the University of Texas at Houston in 1984. He retired to North Carolina from the U.S. Air Force as a lieutenant colonel in 1993. He served as health director of Bladen County for almost four years before transferring to Brunswick County. Yousey is past president of the North Carolina Association of Local Health Directors and was the recipient of the 2003 Health Director of the Year Award and the 2005 Ham Stevens Award.
The Levine Award for Statewide Impact in Public Health went to Dean Smith. Dean Smith spent 39 years of his life coaching at UNC – the first three years as an assistant and the final 36 as the head coach. At the time he retired, he was the winning-est and most respected coach in the history of Division I collegiate basketball. Recognized as one of the great minds of the game, Smith is widely known and respected for his intelligence, his innovation, and his love for his players.
In the world of Public Health, Dean Smith is also known and appreciated for his ongoing efforts to encourage North Carolinians to get their annual flu shots. Over the last nine years, Dean Smith has acted as North Carolina's spokesperson for adult immunizations, particularly advocating an annual flu shot for senior adults. His constant support of North Carolina's adult immunization program has been a valuable resource in spreading the importance of flu and pneumonia shots. Coach Smith has rolled up his sleeve every year to show how easy and painless it is to be vaccinated against the flu, even going as far as tossing the coin at a senior adult basketball game to highlight the importance of annual flu shots. His punchline? “Get your flu shot – it’s the best shot you’ll ever take.”
At the conclusion of the award ceremony, Dr. Ron Levine made a surprise presentation of a 2009 Legacy Award for Public Health to Dr. Devlin herself. Devlin is retiring on Jan. 31 after 30 years in public health, serving on local, state and national levels. She has been State Health Director and director of the N.C. Division of Public Health since 2001.
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