Asian , Pacific Islander, & Desi American Heritage Month

Historical Figures and Trailblazers

Asian, Pacific Islander, & Desi American (APIDA) Heritage Month is a celebration of Asians, Southeast Asians and Pacific Islanders in the United States. Asian, Pacific Islander, & Desi American (APIDA) encompasses people from all of the Asian continent, India, and the Pacific islands of Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia.

The month of May was chosen to commemorate the immigration of the first Japanese to the United States on May 7, 1843, and to mark the anniversary of the completion of the transcontinental railroad on May 10, 1869.

This virtual display honors the pioneers and trailblazers that went on to conduct research, discover treatments, and help improve the health of millions. On the following pages, you will find helpful ebooks and online resources portraying the impact of this pioneers as well as how you may support the health of the APIDA community. 

This display is part of the Leatherby Libraries’ Diversity, Equity and Inclusion efforts in alignment with the Chapman University Strategic Plan for Diversity & Inclusion, fostering a diverse and inclusive campus climate.
 

Historical Figures and Trailblazers

Har Gobind Kohrana, PhD (1922 - 2011) - Har Gobind Khorana was an organic chemist born in British India (now Pakistan) before coming to the US in 1960. Khorana's began working at the University of Wisconsin in 1960 and complemented the work of Marshall W. Nirenberg at the National Institutes of Health. Khorana's expertise in chemical synthesis allowed him to synthesize more and larger nucleic acids, which were crucial steps in the final "cracking" of the genetic code by mid-decade, for which Nirenberg, Khorana, and Robert W. Holley shared a Nobel Prize in 1968. His work significantly advanced the general scientific conception of many biological processes.
Vigue, C. L. (2021). Har Gobind Khorana. Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia.

Marjorie K. Leimomi Mala Mau, MD, MS, MACP, FRCP - Dr. Mau is the inaugural chair of the Department of Native Hawaiian Health (DNHH), the only clinical department in an accredited US medical school dedicated to indigenous health. Dr. Mau is also a University of Hawaiʻi Native Hawaiian health professor and has become the first Native Hawaiian woman to be recognized with the title of “master” physician by the American College of Physicians. 
Nader Haghighipour, & Kirsten L.L. Oleson. (2016). Marjorie Mau first Native Hawaiian woman ranked master physician. ACI Scholarly Blog Index; May 11, 2016.

Margaret Chung, MD (1899 - 1959) - Margaret Chung was the first American-born Chinese woman physician. Born in Santa Barbara, Chung supported her migrant parents as a child and earned enough money from scholarships and odd jobs to put herself through college and medical school. In 1916, Margaret Chung graduated from the University of Southern California's College of Physicians and Surgeons. Chung became one of the founding physicians of Chinese Hospital in San Francisco's Chinatown in 1925. Chung recruited the first two hundred American aviators of the Flying Tigers. She was instrumental in lobbying for the creation of the Naval Women's Reserve (WAVES). Chung is best remembered for her efforts to support the Allied forces during World War II, but she also pioneered across both racial and gender lines and challenged widespread prejudicial attitudes regarding the abilities of women and Asian Americans.
Woodbury, M. (2021). Margaret Chung. Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia.

David Da-i Ho, MD (1952 - Present) - David Ho is a Taiwanese-American AIDS researcher, physician, and virologist. Ho was born in Taiwan in 1952 before immigrating to the United States, where he grew up in Los Angeles. His series of high-profile papers in AIDS research, specifically on viral replication and dynamics, gave the first major insights into the dynamics of HIV infection in humans. At age 37, Ho was chosen to run the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center (ADARC). Ho is perhaps best known for showing in 1996 that combining antiretroviral drugs can drive HIV down to undetectable levels. In 1996, he edged out Bill Clinton, Bill Gates and Mother Teresa to become Time 's Person of the Year.
Mandavilli, A. (2004). Profile: David Ho. Nature Medicine, 10(11), 1150.

Tetsuko Akutsu, MD, PhD (1922 - 2007) - Tetsuzo Akutsu was was a world expert in the field of artificial heart development. Born in Japan in 1922, Akutsu received his M.D. degree in 1947 from Nagoya University School of Medicine. In 1954 he was awarded the first Ph.D. in Japan in the field of extracorporeal circulation and then placed in charge of hypothermia and artificial hibernation in the Department of Surgery until 1957. Akutsu joined the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in 1957 as a research fellow and a member of Willem Kolff ’s artificial heart team at the Cleveland Clinic. The team implanted a total artificial heart in an animal that lived for 90 minutes, which was the first successful experimental implant of a total artificial heart in the United States. Akutsu was recognized as a chief collaborator on this team and his monumental contributions are well described to leading to the firs total artificial heart to be implmanets in a human being by Dr. Denton A. Cooley.  
In Memorium: Tetsuzo Akutsu, 1922-2007. (2008) Texas Heart Institute Journal, 35 (1), 4.

Min Chueh Chang, PhD (1908 - 1991) - Chang was a reproductive biologist who was born in China in 1908. Chang emigrated to England and received a degree in animal husbandry from the University of Edinburgh in 1939, and later a doctorate at Cambridge University in 1945. In 1945 he went to the United States, joining the Worcester Foundation, where he was to spend the decisive years of his career. He worked with Dr. Gregory Pincus and Dr. John Rock on the creation of an oral contraceptive for women. Chang is also credited with the discovery of in vitro fertilization through work he conducted in the 1950s, as well as a process known as the capacitation of sperm. 
Min Chueh Chang, In Context. (2016) Molecular Reproduction & Development, 83 (10), 843.

Yellapragada SubbaRow (1896 - 1948) - SubbaRow was a physician and biochemist born in British India (now Pakistan) in 1895. SubbaRow decided that the practice of medicine was a good way to serve humanity and enrolled at Harvard Medical School in 1923 to study tropical medicine, after the deaths of two of his brothers from the tropical disease sprue. He later joined Harvard's department of biochemistry where he began working with biochemist Cyrus Fiske. Their work ultimately led to the discovery of phosphocreatine and adenosine triphosphate as sources of energy for muscle. In May 1940, SubbaRow joined Lederle as associate director of research, overseeing the development of vitamins and antibacterial compounds such as penicillin. He discovered that a newly recognized vitamin, folic acid, was effective in reversing certain forms of leukemic disease. SubbaRow's discovery of phosphocreatine laid the groundwork for understanding ATP, the energy currency used by cells and muscles. SubbaRow also developed the first effective drugs for treatment of some forms of childhood leukemia. 
Okihiro, G. Y. (2013). Asian and Pacific Islander Americans. Salem Press.

Ayub Khan Ommaya (1930 - 2008) - Ommaya was a neurosurgeon and authority on brain injuries. Ommaya was born in Pakistan in 1930, before studying at Oxford University. It was Oxford where Ommaya developed an interest in the mechanism of brain injury, which led him to an opportunity at the US National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in 1966, where he developed the first comma scale and the Ommaya reservoir. Ayub Ommaya was a professor of neurosurgery at George Washington University and chief medical adviser to the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. One of his patients was the daughter of a congressman who chaired the Transportation Appropriations Subcommittee. He told him of the shortage of funds for injury research, which led to the creation of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control.
Geoff Watts. (2008). Ayub Khan Ommaya. The Lancet, 372, 1540.