Medical College of Georgia alums Curran, Thompson honored for achievement and loyalty
4/27/2017, Jennifer Scott
AUGUSTA, Ga. (May 1, 2017) – A radiation oncologist who is executive director of the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University and a family practitioner who was a longtime associate dean for student affairs at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University, are recipients of the 2017 MCG Distinguished Alumni awards.
Dr. Walter Curran, a 1982 graduate, is MCG’s Distinguished Alumnus for Professional Achievement. Curran has served as executive director at Winship, one of the nation’s top-ranked cancer centers, since 2009. He also is Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar and Chair in Cancer Research there, Lawrence W. Davis Professor and chairman of the Department of Radiation Oncology for the Emory University School of Medicine and associate vice president for cancer for Emory’s Woodruff Health Sciences Center.
After graduating from MCG, Curran completed a residency in the Department of Radiation Therapy at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, serving as chief resident from 1985-86. After residency, he became an assistant professor in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He then served as an assistant professor at the Medical College of Pennsylvania and then professor and chairman of the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University. Curran joined the Winship Cancer Institute as chief medical officer in 2008.
A national leader, he serves on the board of directors and finance committee for the American Society of Clinical Oncology, is co-chairman of the American Joint Commission on Cancer, founding chairman of the NRG Oncology Foundation and founding chairman of the board for the RTOG Foundation, the successor to the National Cancer Institute-funded Radiation Therapy Oncology Group. He also serves on committees such as the Coalition of National Cancer and Cooperative Groups, American College of Radiology, American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute.
Curran’s research has focused on the progression and development of radiation oncology and cancer treatment and revolves around the safe and effective use of radiation oncology to treat all types of cancer. His influence and passion have resulted in over 240 selected lectureships, seminar invitations and visiting professorships for groups such as the Albert Einstein Medical Center, Harvard Medical School and the American Cancer Society, He was the Keynote Speaker for the International Lung Cancer Congress in 2012.
Dr. Mason Thompson, a 1973 graduate of the state’s public medical school and the newest president of the MCG Alumni Association, is the recipient of the Distinguished Alumnus Award for Loyalty.
After graduating from MCG, Thompson completed his residency in family medicine at Spartanburg General Hospital in Spartanburg, South Carolina. He served as an instructor at the Medical University of South Carolina until 1978 when he returned to his alma mater as an assistant, and eventually, associate professor of family medicine.
He was appointed MCG’s assistant dean for student affairs in 1992 and he served as the associate dean for student affairs from 1993-2000. During his tenure, he served as the interim associate dean for minority affairs, chair of the MCG Admissions Committee and associate dean for admissions. He has been associate professor emeritus since 2007.
Thompson was a member of the Section on Medical Schools for the American Medical Association and the Group on Student Affairs for the Association of American Medical Colleges from 1992-2007. He has was a member of the National Advisory Committee to the AAMC’s American Medical College Application Service from 2004-06.
His research has focused on the progression and development of family medicine practice, particularly in the areas of smoking cessation, non-familial hypercholesterolemia and anxiety. Thompson led the group that implemented the first NBI Healthcare Foundation Humanism in Medicine Award at MCG for a graduating medical student and clinical faculty member. He has implemented research days for medical students to promote research in family medicine and was the founder and longtime coordinator of the White Coat Ceremony for first-year medical students. Thompson has been an active member of the MCG Foundation’s Board of Directors since 2006.
Augusta University is Georgia’s innovation center for education and health care, training the next generation of innovators, leaders and health care providers in classrooms and clinics on three campuses in Augusta and satellite locations across the state. Groundbreaking research at Augusta is dedicated to improving and enriching the human experience as we seek to create a healthier, more prosperous Georgia. Nearly 9,000 students choose Augusta for experiential learning that blends arts and application, humanity and the health sciences. Augusta is home to the state’s only public academic health center, where world–class clinicians are bringing the medicine of tomorrow to patient care today. augusta.edu augustahealth.org