-->



Welcome, !

You’re in! See your latest actions or visit your profile and dashboard.

Messages

Saved pages

  • When you save a page, it will appear here.

Activities

    You do not have any shared pages


My profile   |  My dashboard                     

Hello!

Personalize your experience, get access to saved pages, donation receipts and more.

Already have an account? Sign in.

  
Send me the e-newsletter

Tell us your interests

Pregnancy Babies
Volunteering Professional Resources
Research Local Events
Advocacy Mission
Privacy policy            

Welcome Back!

Use your existing or March for Babies user name and password to sign in.

Forgot username/password
Privacy policy

Welcome Back!

Enter your e-mail address to receive your username and password.  

Thank you!

Thanks for choosing to be part of our community. You have subscribed to the March of Dimes e-newsletter, with the preference Pregnancy selected. You will receive a confirmation e-mail at user's e-mail address

You can now:

Welcome Back!

Your e-mail address is linked to multiple accounts. Protect your privacy, make it unique.
 

Research breakthroughs


  • We have awarded research grants from our foundation in 1938.
  • Grants help young scholars start a career in birth defects research.
  • Investments have led to important advances and 13 Nobel Prizes.
     
    Jonas Salk, MD, inoculates child with first polio vaccine; 1954 Linus Pauling, PhD, winner of Nobel Prize in Chemistry for work on the nature of the chemical bond; 1955 Albert Sabin, MD; Jonas Salk, MD; and March of Dimes President Basil O’Connor; 1961. Polio vaccines developed by Drs. Sabin and Salk under March of Dimes grants ended the polio epidemics in the United States. Robert Good, MD, discovered the role of the thymus gland in human immune response and was one of the first to treat birth defects with bone marrow transplants; 1962 Lab assistant assembles PKU early detection kits; 1963 L. Joseph Butterfield, MD, a pioneer in the regionalization of perinatal health care, served on the March of Dimes Committee on Perinatal Health that published Toward Improving the Outcome of Pregnancy; 1975 Victor McKusick, MD, initiated the renowned Bar Harbor Short Course in Medical Genetics and took the first steps toward mapping the human genome; 1960 T. Allen Merritt, MD, developed a pulmonary surfactant used to treat respiratory distress syndrome in newborns; 1987 David Smith, MD, and Kenneth Lyons Jones, MD Eric F. Weischaus, MD, with his colleague Edward B. Lewis, MD, winners of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for identifying master genes that control early structural development of the body; 1995
    share |e-mail |print

    Thank you!

    Your e-mail was sent.

    E-mail to a friend

    We will never share or sell your
    e-mail.

    Your information:




    Your recipient's information:

    You can send to a max of 5 people.
    Separate addresses with commas.

    Your message:


    Privacy Policy    

    Save to my dashboard

    Sign in or Sign up to save this page.  

    You've saved this page

    It's been added to your dashboard   

    Rate this page

    Sign in or Sign up to rate this page.  

    How helpful is this?

    Click on the stars below.

      Research Slide Show

      Immediately after it was founded in 1938, the March of Dimes established a system of committees to award research grants. The earliest grants in basic science, virology, and medicine stimulated research in the sciences and led to the development of the polio vaccines developed by Jonas Salk, MD and Albert Sabin, MD. With our mission change to birth defects prevention in 1958, the Foundation maintained its firm commitment to basic science but with a shift of focus to the clinical delineation of birth defects. Since then, the March of Dimes has supported research into the cellular and molecular basis of genetic diseases, developmental processes and abnormalities, and the epidemiology of premature birth to improve medical diagnosis and develop treatments for a wide range of birth defects and developmental disorders. March of Dimes research has led to improved prenatal diagnosis of sickle cell anemia, discovery of the genes for Marfan and Fragile X syndromes, and the development of pulmonary surfactant therapy to treat respiratory distress syndrome. Since 1973, the Basil O'Connor Starter Scholarship Research Awards have assisted promising young scientists at the beginnings of their careers in birth defects research. Our Prematurity Research Initiative has focused especially on genetics and gene-environment interactions relating to the causes of prematurity. The Foundation's investment in research has led to 13 scientists winning the Nobel Prize since 1954 whose original work was supported by March of Dimes research grants.



      September 20, 2010 / David Rose / March of Dimes Archives

      More on this topic

      NICU Family Support®

      Your gift helps provide comfort and support to families with a baby in the NICU.

      Donation amount:

      Stay informed

      Get the newsletter and find out how you're helping babies.