Reflections on Leadership and Research: Celebrating Richard Platt

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All three past and present leaders of the Institute pose together for a photo.

Earlier this fall, friends, collaborators, colleagues, mentors, and mentees of Richard Platt – traveling from as far as Nashville, West Virginia, California, and Washington DC – gathered at the Harvard Club of Boston to celebrate his tenure as President and Chair of the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute. The event marked his 20+ year career as the second chair of the department.

Current Institute President and Chair Emily Oken, pictured above, between founding Chair Thomas Inui (left) and Rich Platt (right) opened the program with a poignant review of what she coined the central theme of Rich’s career: “What happens next?”. She documented his early beginnings as a researcher, from helping pioneer the use of electronic medical records for research (not long after a study wherein he and team mailed 19,000 physical surveys), to taking leadership of a young Department of Population Medicine entering its second decade, and then the helm of the FDA Sentinel System. Under his tenure, the department nearly doubled in size, with extramural funding increasing nine-fold. Having transitioned into the Chair role earlier this year, Emily thanked Rich for building the department into “an amazing, nurturing platform for growth and development.” The program continued with an address from Point32Health Chief Medical Officer Glenn Pomerantz, and four panels of colleagues.

Luckily for the Institute, the celebration was not a farewell party, as Rich remains as Director of the Division of Therapeutics and Infectious Disease Research (TIDE) and co-investigator of Sentinel. From electric typewriters to electronic medical records, Rich’s illustrious career has paved the way for how we approach research and work to improve the health of populations.

Known and revered for his consistency in fashion (bowties and Oxford shirts), hobbies (bicycling, crossword puzzles, and Osprey-watching, to name a few), and diet (carrots, and more carrots), Rich will continue his steadfast mantle of leadership, mentorship, and research, and we look forward to continuing to benefit from it as long as he’ll let us.

 

A Celebration of Richard Platt's Tenure as Chair of the Department of Population Medicine