News Release

Michael J. Fox to be made honorary doctor at Karolinska Institutet

Grant and Award Announcement

Karolinska Institutet

Since 2000, the foundation has awarded over 175 million dollars to Parkinson's drug development research around the world, including at Karolinska Institutet. Michael J. Fox is to receive his honorary doctorate on 5 March from Associate Professor and Dean Clara H. Gumpert representing the Board of Research, which selects the honorary doctors at Karolinska Institutet. The ceremony will take place at the private residence of Mr David E. R. Dangoor Sweden's Honorary Consul-General in New York. Participating in the ceremony are also Professor Jan Andersson, vice-president of Karolinska Institutet and Professor Johan Ericson representing the research field.

"In its short history, the Michael J. Fox Foundation has gained the admiration and respect of the worldwide research community for its rigorous scientific standards and its commitment to quickly and aggressively funding high-impact therapeutic development," says Clara H. Gumpert, Dean. "Strongly influenced by Michael's personal philosophy, his foundation operates with rare dynamism and a constant focus on speeding breakthrough treatments to the world's five million Parkinson's patients."

Michael J. Fox was born in Canada in 1961. He is an award-winning television and film actor and the author of two best-selling memoirs with a third book to be published in April 2010. Fox was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1991 and shared this news with the public in 1998. Since then he has become known for promoting research and awareness of the disease and the need for improved treatments and a cure. In 2000 he founded MJFF, today the world's largest private funder of Parkinson's research. For more information about the foundation, visit michaeljfox.org/.

Fox has also been a powerful advocate for research freedom and the pursuit of embryonic stem cell-based therapeutic strategies in U.S. laboratories.

Honorary doctorates at Karolinska Institutet are awarded to academics who have made a significant contribution, scientific or otherwise, to research at the university, and to people who have not earned a PhD through formal academic achievements, but who have nonetheless benefited research and development through other means.

"I'm grateful to the Board of Research for this tremendous honour," says Michael J. Fox. "It's especially meaningful because our Foundation and Karolinska Institutet share a belief in the power of scientific endeavour to create a future that is better for everyone, and a commitment to act strategically — even unconventionally — to help bring that future closer."

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This year Karolinska Institutet is celebrating its bicentennial jubilee. Information about the university's important history, including medical discoveries that have changed the lives of people around the world, can be found on ki.se/200.

Download press photographs: ki.se/pressroom

For further information, contact:
Holly Barkhymer, associate director, communications, MJFF
Tel. (212) 509-0995 x242
Email: hbarkhymer@michaeljfox.org

Sabina Bossi, press officer
Tel: +46 (0)8-524 860 66 or +46 (0)070-614 60 66
Email: sabina.bossi@ki.se

Karolinska Institutet (KI) is one of the world's leading medical universities. Its mission is to contribute to the improvement of human health through research and education. KI accounts for over 40 per cent of medical academic research conducted in Sweden and offers the country's broadest range of medical education programmes. The Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet selects the Nobel laureates in Physiology or Medicine. For more information, visit ki.se


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