Russ Prize

{{short description|U.S. National Academy of Engineering award since 2001}}

{{Infobox award

| name = Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize

| image = Russ Prize Medal.jpg

| imagesize = 175px

| awarded_for = Bioengineering

| alt = Gold medal with the heads of a man and a woman

| caption = A gold medal depicting Fritz and Dolores Russ

| presenter = United States National Academy of Engineering

| date = October 1999

| location = Ohio

| country = United States

| reward = US$500,000

| year = 2001

| year2 = 2019

| holder = Julio Cesar Palmaz
Leonard Pinchuk
Richard A. Schatz
John B. Simpson
Paul G. Yock

| website = {{Official website|http://www.nae.edu/Activities/Projects20676/Awards/RussPrize.aspx}}

}}

The Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize is an American national and international award established by the United States National Academy of Engineering (NAE) in October 1999 in Athens. Named after Fritz Russ, the founder of Systems Research Laboratories, and his wife Dolores Russ, it recognizes a bioengineering achievement that "has had a significant impact on society and has contributed to the advancement of the human condition through widespread use". The award was instigated at the request of Ohio University to honor Fritz Russ, one of its alumni.{{cite web|url=http://www.nae.edu/File.aspx?id=12280|publisher=NAE|title=Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize|accessdate=2010-12-28}}

The first Russ Prize was awarded in 2001 to Earl E. Bakken and Wilson Greatbatch. The prize is awarded biennially in odd years. From 2003 to 2011, there was a single winner per award. Multiple winners were recognized starting in 2013. The first non-Americans to receive the Russ Prize were three of the five co-winners honored in 2015.

Only living persons may receive the prize, and recipients of the Charles Stark Draper Prize are not also eligible for the Russ Prize.{{cite web|url=http://www.nae.edu/Activities/Projects20676/Awards/RussPrize/PrizeHistory.aspx |title=History of the Russes and the Russ Prize|publisher=NAE|accessdate=2011-01-11}} Members of the NAE and non-members worldwide are able to receive the award.{{cite web|url=http://www.nae.edu/Activities/Projects20676/Awards/RussPrize/Nominations.aspx |title=Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize Nomination Procedures|publisher=NAE|accessdate=2011-01-11}}

The winners are announced during National Engineers Week in February. They receive US$500,000, a gold medallion and a hand-scribed certificate. The Russ Prize, the Gordon Prize and the Draper Prize, all awarded by the NAE, are known collectively as the "Nobel Prizes of Engineering".

Recipients

File:090707-NCVH-EarlBakken.jpg

class="sortable wikitable" border="1" style="text-align:center;"
width=50 style="background:#FFA54F;"|Year

! width=150 style="background:#FFA54F;"|Recipient(s)

! class=unsortable width=100 style="background:#FFA54F;"| Nationality

! class=unsortable width=320 style="background:#FFA54F;"| Reason

! class=unsortable width=80 style="background:#FFA54F;"|Reference

2001

| {{sortname|Earl E.|Bakken}} and {{sortname|Wilson|Greatbatch}}

| US

| "for their independent development of the implantable cardiac pacemaker"

| {{cite web|url=http://www.nae.edu/Projects/Awards/RussPrize/RussWinners.aspx|title=Previous Recipients of the Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize|publisher=NAE|accessdate=2015-03-02}}

2003

| {{sortname|Willem Johan|Kolff}}

| US

| "for his pioneering work on artificial organs, beginning with the artificial kidney, thus launching a new field that is benefiting the lives of millions"

|

2005

| {{sortname|Leland|Clark}}

| US

| "for bioengineering membrane-based sensors in medical, food, and environmental applications"

|

2007

| {{sortname|Yuan-Cheng|Fung}}

| US

| "for the characterization and modeling of human tissue mechanics and function leading to prevention and mitigation of trauma"

|

2009

| {{sortname|Elmer L.|Gaden}}

| US

| "for pioneering the engineering and commercialization of biological systems for large-scale manufacturing of antibiotics and other drugs"

|

2011

| {{sortname|Leroy E.|Hood}}

| US

| "for automating DNA sequencing that revolutionized biomedicine and forensic science"

|

2013

| {{sortname|Samuel E.|Blum}}, {{sortname|Rangaswamy|Srinivasan}} and {{sortname|James J.|Wynne}}

| US

| "for the development of laser ablative decomposition, enabling LASIK and PRK eye surgery"

|

2015

| {{sortname|Graeme|Clark|Graeme Clark (doctor)}}, {{sortname|Erwin|Hochmair}}, {{sortname|Ingeborg|Hochmair}}, {{sortname|Michael M.|Merzenich}}, and {{sortname|Blake S.|Wilson}}

| Australia, Austria, Austria, US, US

| "for engineering cochlear implants that enable the deaf to hear"

|

2017

|James G. Fujimoto, Adolf F. Fercher, Christoph K. Hitzenberger, David Huang, and Eric A. Swanson

|US, Austria, Austria, US, US

|"for optical coherence tomography, leveraging creative engineering to invent imaging technology essential for preventing blindness and treating vascular and other diseases"

|

2019

|Julio Palmaz, Leonard Pinchuk, Richard A. Schatz, John Simpson, and Paul G. Yock

|Argentina,US

|"For innovations in medical devices that enable minimally invasive angioplasty treatment of advanced coronary artery disease"

|

2025

|Ian Shanks

|UK

|“for the invention of the electrochemical capillary fill device (eCFD), which gives diabetes patients and caregivers accurate and timely blood glucose measurements for diabetes management.”

|

{{-}}

See also

References

{{reflist|colwidth=40em|refs=

{{cite news

| url = https://www.chicagotribune.com/2003/02/19/gps-dialysis-inventors-win-top-awards/

| title = GPS, dialysis inventors win top awards

| publisher = Chicago Tribune

| date = 2003-02-19

| access-date= 2011-01-11

}}

{{cite news

| url = http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_action=doc&p_docid=0F51F73518934ABE&p_docnum=1

| title = First Russ Prize to be Awarded

| author = Laura A. Bischoff

| newspaper = Dayton Daily News

| date = 2001-01-31

| accessdate= 2011-01-11

}}

{{cite news

| url = http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/60502.php

| title = Y.C. Fung Wins Russ Prize

| author = Rex Graham

| newspaper = Medical News Today

| date = 2007-01-11

| accessdate= 2011-01-11

}}

{{cite web

| url = http://www.ohio.edu/compass/stories/10-11/1/Russ-Prize-2011-929.cfm

| title = Leroy Hood wins 2011 Russ Prize

| publisher = Ohio University

| date = 2011-01-05

| accessdate= 2011-01-11

}}

}}

Category:International science and technology awards

Category:Awards of the United States National Academy of Engineering

Category:Awards established in 1999

Category:Biological engineering

Category:Engineering awards

Category:1999 establishments in the United States