Eight Fellows Receive Knowlton Incentive for Excellence Awards
Eight Fellows Receive Knowlton Incentive for Excellence Awards
Eight Washington University School of Medicine physicians at Barnes-Jewish Hospital were recently honored with 2020 Knowlton Incentive for Excellence Awards that recognize and support medical residents who exemplify a compassionate spirit combined with outstanding knowledge and skill.
The physicians were recognized during a virtual ceremony held on Jan. 26, 2021.
The awards program fund was established in 1984 by St. Louis real estate and business leader Charles J. Cella to honor his physician, Norman Knowlton Jr., MD, for his compassionate caregiving. Dr. Knowlton was a professor emeritus of clinical medicine in internal medicine at Washington University and Barnes-Jewish Hospital. Both men have since passed away.
The Knowlton Incentive for Excellence Fund at The Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital is stewarded by a committee chaired by Dr. Norman Knowlton, III. In the past 35 years, more than 200 awards have been given to fellows who have completed internal medicine residency programs, embody the “Knowlton spirit” of care, and are likely to practice in the St. Louis area. This year’s recipients and their fellowship areas are:
Samantha Adamson, MD, PhD, endocrinology/metabolism
Michael “Josh” Hendrix, MD, infectious diseases
Brett Herzog, MD, PhD, endocrinology/metabolism
Christian McNeely, MD, cardiology
Benjamin “Ben” Rogers, MD, MS, gastroenterology
Can Sungur, MD, PhD, rheumatology
Christine Auberle, MD, internal medicine
Jacqueline “Jackie” Pires, MD, internal medicine
About The Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital
The Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital helps donors enrich lives, save lives, and transform helath care through charitable gifts. Thanks to generous donors from around the country, the Foundation awards grants to help deliver extraordinary patient care, accelerate life-saving research, support caregiver education, and eliminate the root causes of health inequities in the community. In 2024, the Foundation awarded more than $53 million in grants.