Leadership
in Obesity Shellie Y. Pfohl co-founded Be Active North Carolina, a nonprofit organization working statewide to increase physical activity among North Carolinians. In 2007, Be Active North Carolina was named the best physical activity organization in the country by the National Association for Health & Fitness.
Pfohl is also a founding director of Be Active America, a national nonprofit organization that conducts advocacy trainings in cities and towns across the country. Through this medium, health professionals and citizens of diverse backgrounds come together to learn how to have a more preventive mindset.
Pfohl served as the executive director of the North Carolina Governor's Council on Physical Fitness and Health (1990-1998) and was head of the Physical Activity and Nutrition Brand in the NC Department of Health and Human Services. She was also assistant director of the National Association of Governor's Councils on Physical Fitness and Sports for three years and organized the first International Conference on Physical Activity and Nutrition.
Pfohl was inducted into the prestigious YWCA Academy of Women for her leadership in the field of exercise and sports/fitness in 2003. Pfohl has also received the Order of the Long Leaf Pine, the highest award bestowed by the governor, for her public service to the people of North Carolina. In 2007, she was appointed to the Governor's Task Force for Healthy Carolinians by Governor Easley, and she also serves on the board of North Carolina Rail-Trails.
Pfohl received her bachelor's degree in community health education from the University of Northern Iowa and a master's degree in exercise physiology/fitness leadership from Northern Illinois University.
Leadership
in Tobacco Sally Herndon Malek has been a leader in North Carolina's efforts in tobacco prevention and control since 1991. She manages the Tobacco Prevention and Control Branch (formerly the National Cancer Institute's Project ASSIST) with funding from the Centers for Disease Control and grant resources from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the American Legacy Foundation and the NC Health and Wellness Trust Fund Commission. She worked in health promotion and disease prevention in Maine from 1980 to 1985 and in North Carolina since 1986.
She was named a Fellow by NC State's Natural Resources Leadership Institute in 1997 and by the Advocacy Institute Leadership Program in 1999. Malek was a co-facilitator at a weeklong course for the Centers for Disease Control's Tobacco Use Prevention Summer Institute from 1995 to 1999. She was also chair of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officers Tobacco Control Network from 1996 to 1997.
Malek received a master's degree in public health from UNC-Chapel Hill with a focus on policy and program planning. Malek's recent publications include articles in Popular Government and North Carolina Medical Journal.
Leadership in Health Disparities Barbara Pullen-Smith is the executive director of the NC Office of Minority Health (OMH) and the Minority Health Advisory Council (MHAC). She has led these organizations since their inception in 1993. She provides leadership and develops initiatives to respond to the specific health needs of racial and ethnic minorities. Her work focuses on capacity building and policy, program and partnership development. She works closely with the Department of Health and Human Services, local health departments, academic institutions and other public and private agencies and organizations to address minority health and health disparity issues.
Prior to her current position, she worked as a health and human services specialist for the NC General Baptist State Convention where she developed and implemented health promotion and disease prevention programs in local black churches. Pullen-Smith started her career in 1985 as the first consultant for the Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Program in the Division of Maternal Child Health at NC DHHS. In 1990, Pullen-Smith was hired as the program coordinator for local services in the Division of Adult Health (now Division of Public Health). She also served the community as a district representative for the American Cancer Society from 1984 to 1985.
Pullen-Smith received a master's degree in public health from Emory University in 1984 and a Bachelor of Science degree in public health from UNC-Chapel Hill in 1981.
Community
Catalyst A. Ray Rogers has been instrumental in the startup and sustainability of several nonprofit organizations including The Cornerstone Ministry, Inc., Wholistic Housing Ventures, Inc., L.I.F.E. of NC, Inc. and the Cornerstone Christian Child Development Center, Inc. He serves as executive director for two of these organizations and as business administrator of Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church.
Ray currently serves as a board member of Pitt County Memorial Hospital and as the building committee chairman for University Health Systems of Eastern Carolina. He also serves as personnel committee chairman for the Pitt Community College Board of Trustees. As a member of the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust Advisory Board, he represents the 30-county region of eastern North Carolina.
Prior to his role as business administrator, Rogers worked in banking for 27 years. After receiving his Bachelor of Science degree from East Carolina University in 1972, Rogers started working at Wachovia Bank, where he stayed for nearly 18 years. Rogers culminated his banking career as vice president of commercial lending at Triangle Bank. He has also completed the North Carolina School of Banking's Mid-Management and Advanced Management Programs at UNC-Chapel Hill and the Graduate School of Banking at Louisiana State University.
InnovatorFirstCarolinaCare Insurance Company, Inc. serves 12,000 people in rural North Carolina with the goal of reducing the number of the uninsured in our community. FirstCarolinaCare was formed in 1999 by FirstHealth of the Carolinas. It was originally licensed to operate exclusively as a health maintenance organization but received licensure to operate as a health insurer in 2007.
FirstCarolinaCare primarily works with small businesses to make health coverage as accessible as possible. Its innovative group health plan, FirstPlan, offers a premium subsidy feature for lower wage workers to help them offset the amount of their contribution to their own health insurance.
Also unique to FirstCarolinaCare is its practice of offering several customized services that are not typically available to small businesses, such as work-site health screenings, wellness incentive programs and chronic care management. These programs are provided by FirstCarolinaCare on a personalized basis at no extra cost.
FirstCarolinaCare has been recognized for excellence in its operations. In 2006, a national physician practice management organization included FirstCarolinaCare at the top of its list of best payers in the industry. FirstCarolinaCare also received the 2006 Honor Roll for Coverage Award from the Healthcare Leadership Council for "exemplary community programs that have distinguished themselves as leaders in providing access to health insurance for uninsured Americans."
Advocacy and Public Policy Gina Upchurch is the founding director of Senior PHARMAssist, a nonprofit pharmaceutical care clinic that helps Durham seniors obtain and manage medications. In 2001, Upchurch was named a Robert Wood Johnson Community Health Leader. In 2002 and 2006 respectively, she received the Bowl of Hygeia award for her community service work and the Don Blanton Award for her outstanding contributions to pharmacy from the NC Association of Pharmacists. In 2005, she earned the Eunice N. Tyler Award for Excellence in Public Health Education from the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Public Health, Department of Health Behavior and Health Education. Also, she received the Elna B. Spaulding Founder's Award for making a significant difference in the Durham community in 2006.
Upchurch has appointments as adjunct assistant professor at the UNC School of Pharmacy and as adjunct instructor at the UNC School of Public Health. She is a member of the NC Division of Medical Assistance Drug Utilization Review Board, the NC Medicare Partners Committee and is on the steering committee of the Advocates for a North Carolina Prescription Drug Assistance Program. In Durham, Upchurch chairs the Access to Healthcare subcommittee of the Partnership for a Healthy Durham.
Upchurch received her pharmacy degree and master's degree in public health from UNC-Chapel Hill, where she also completed a pharmacy practice residency in geriatrics.
Advocacy and Public Policy AwardTom Vitaglione has spent his career shaping a host of programs that have had a tremendous impact on the health and well-being of North Carolina’s children and youth.
For three decades, he served in the NC Division of Public Health—providing essential services to the children of North Carolina. Since his retirement from state government, Vitaglione has been a senior fellow at Action for Children North Carolina — where he has played an instrumental role in a variety of initiatives, including passage of the booster seat law, the bicycle helmet law, the ATV safety law, the recent law requiring all passengers to wear seat belts and the ban on cell phone usage among teenagers driving under the graduated driver’s license provision.
Vitaglione, who received his master’s in public health from Columbia University, is also one of the leaders whose vision created the NC Child Fatality Task Force. He continues to play a strong role in his appointed position as the organization’s co-chair. In this role, he has brought public, media and legislative attention to a number of child mortality issues. Additionally, Vitaglione and his wife, Eve, founded and developed the Malawi Children’s Village, a multifaceted program serving more than 3,500 AIDS orphans in 36 villages in the southern region of a small country in East Africa. Tom Vitaglione has spent his career shaping a host of programs that have had a tremendous impact on the health and well-being of North Carolina’s children and youth.
For three decades, he served in the NC Division of Public Health—providing essential services to the children of North Carolina. Since his retirement from state government, Vitaglione has been a senior fellow at Action for Children North Carolina — where he has played an instrumental role in a variety of initiatives, including passage of the booster seat law, the bicycle helmet law, the ATV safety law, the recent law requiring all passengers to wear seat belts and the ban on cell phone usage among teenagers driving under the graduated driver’s license provision.
Vitaglione, who received his master’s in public health from Columbia University, is also one of the leaders whose vision created the NC Child Fatality Task Force. He continues to play a strong role in his appointed position as the organization’s co-chair. In this role, he has brought public, media and legislative attention to a number of child mortality issues. Additionally, Vitaglione and his wife, Eve, founded and developed the Malawi Children’s Village, a multifaceted program serving more than 3,500 AIDS orphans in 36 villages in the southern region of a small country in East Africa.
Community Catalyst AwardFounder and Executive Director of NC Prevention Partners, Dr. Meg Molloy has built a career that includes 25 years of service in prevention, health behavior change and health policy. Her primary focus has been on nutrition, physical activity and tobacco prevention/cessation. Malloy has worked in non-profit leadership, media, policy development, consulting, state and local public health and nutrition practice. Additionally, she has taught and conducted research at the UNC School of Public Health, Duke University Medical Center and the Duke University School of Medicine.
Molloy earned her doctorate in Public Health (DrPH) in the Department of Health Policy and administration (with a minor in epidemiology) from the School of Public Health at UNC-Chapel Hill where she was a Public Health Leadership Fellow. She also received a master’s degree in Public Health in nutrition from UNC-Chapel Hill and her bachelor’s degree in biology from the University of Louisville. Molloy is happiest when spending time with her family, gardening, reading a book, and hiking or biking.
Innovator Award David H. Murdock is Chairman, CEO and sole owner of the Fortune 500 company Dole Food Company, Inc., and Castle & Cooke, Inc., — both of which were listed on the New York Stock Exchange before being privatized by Murdock. He is an advocate of eating healthy to live a longer, more vital life. He organized the collaborative efforts of medical and nutrition experts at the Mayo Clinic, UCLA and the Dole Food Company, Inc. to write The Encyclopedia of Food: A Guide to Healthy Nutrition. Murdock also established the Dole Nutrition Institute to “Feed the World with Knowledge.” The Institute focuses on education and research regarding the potential of a plant-based diet to promote health and prevent disease.
Murdock is active in civic affairs and very supportive of educational, medical and cultural programs — particularly of those within the communities where he lives and works. He has served as a Regent’s Professor of Creativity in Business at UCLA’s Andersen Graduate School of Management, is the recipient of an honorary Doctorate of Law degree from Pepperdine University and honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters degrees from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Hawaii Loa College. Murdock lives in California, but also has residences in New York, Kannapolis and Lanai, HI. He has a son who is also active in the family business.
Leadership in Tobacco AwardCurrently serving as President and CEO of the American Lung Association (ALA) of NC, Deborah C. Bryan has worked with this organization for the past 24 years. During her tenure, Bryan has advanced a variety of key issues for the ALA, including raising the state tobacco excise tax, creating the NC Health and Wellness Trust Fund from tobacco settlement monies, restricting youth access to tobacco products, limiting smoking in public places, enabling employers to require employees to be non-smokers if it relates to their work and allowing asthmatic students to carry their inhalers at school.
Bryan received her undergraduate degree from UNC-Chapel Hill and her master’s degree in Administration and Supervision from East Carolina University. Additionally, she is certified in Non-Profit Management through Duke University. Bryan is active in numerous organizations, including the NC Center for Non-Profits and the NC Public Health Association. She also serves as secretary of the statutory NC Substance Abuse Professional Practice Board and as an Ethics Committee member for the organization.
Leadership in Obesity AwardDr. Barbara Ann Hughes’ diverse professional career includes clinical, community, consulting, educational and management experience in dietetic, nutrition and health services. She has served as an adjunct assistant professor at the UNC School of Public Health and as an instructor at Case Western University and the University of Tennessee. Additionally, she held the position of Director of Public Health Nutrition for the State of North Carolina — where she implemented the Women’s, Infants and Children’s Program (WIC) — and established B.A. Hughes & Associates in 1981 to provide full-service private practice medical nutrition therapy to individuals in Wake and surrounding counties. She is currently serving as the Director of Adult Nutrition at the Institute of Lifestyle and Weight Management in Raleigh.
Dr. Hughes earned her Ph.D. from Walden University, an M.S. from Ohio State University (where she also completed a dietetic internship), her MA from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, her MPH from the UNC School of Public Health, and a B.S. with honors from Carson-Newman College. Additionally, she has been recognized with a wide variety of honors throughout her career (including NCDA Member of the Year, Wake County Woman of the Year and the ADA Medallion) and has held a host of leadership positions with various agencies and organizations.
Leadership in Health Disparities AwardHaving served as the Director of Urban Ministries (UM) of Wake County Open Door Clinic for four years, Olivia Fleming now works part-time as the organization’s Clinic Community Affairs Coordinator. She is also an active volunteer at UM, which was the first free medical clinic in North Carolina.
A North Carolina native, Fleming graduated from Meredith College and was a Ford Foundation fellow at Tulane University in New Orleans — where she earned a master’s degree in Latin American Studies. She also completed a graduate program in health care administration at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Fleming is married to George Fleming, and they have two grown children — Christianna and Alex.