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| Shortly before his State of the Union address, President Bush toured several cancer labs at the U.S. National Institutes of Health, including the Urologic Oncology department headed by Dr. Marston Linehan. He was briefed on the progress they have made in kidney cancer, much through the study of VHL. He visited two VHL patients in the Clinical Center. | |||
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From Dr. Linehan: "In the photo from the White House website below, I was explaining
von Hippel Lindau, the effect of this disease on the families, the discovery of the VHL gene, and our approach to molecular therapeutics for patients affected with this hereditary cancer syndrome."
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Credits: From the White House website President Bush Participates in a Roundtable on Advances in Cancer Prevention THE PRESIDENT: Thanks, Michael. I appreciate you joining us. I love coming to the NIH, it is an amazing place. It is an amazing place because it is full of decent, caring, smart people, all aiming to save lives. And I truly believe the NIH is one of America's greatest assets. And it needs to be nourished. * * * * * THE PRESIDENT: That's good. I wish that people could walk the halls here at the NIH and meet the scientists and employees of this fantastic organization. It is amazing. You talk about young and smart and bright and excited -- with all due respect, Docs -- (laughter) -- you've got a lot of really bright people here, which is another subject for another time. But we better make sure we get the right education working to make sure that our scientists are given the tools and encourage young kids to become scientists in the first place, so that these halls remain full of people. Because as Doc said -- he said, if we're not doing it, somebody is going to, and we want it done here in America. We want -- I mean, we want to welcome scientists here, too. And the other thing that struck me was that people from around the globe that are here working. So, anyway, you're doing a good job. We're spending about $28.6 billion here at the NIH, which was doubled from 15 years ago, I think it was, or something like that. Thank you. Michael. * * * * * THE PRESIDENT: John, first, before you do it -- if you don't mind -- National Cancer Institute. Tell people what it is, how it works, if you don't mind. * * * * * DR. NIEDERHUBER: It's a very exciting time in my long career -- which you were kind enough to point out to me, sir. THE PRESIDENT: Well, I wanted the taxpayers to understand we've got a man of expertise here -- (laughter) -- setting you up for success. DR. NIEDERHUBER: I've never experienced a time when science has been so exciting and been moving at such a rapid pace. This is just an unbelievable opportunity. I'm very honored to be here. THE PRESIDENT: Thanks for serving. DR. NIEDERHUBER: I'm honored to be here, sir. THE PRESIDENT: A man who doesn't like all the initials. (Laughter.) * * * * * THE PRESIDENT: Thanks for coming. I'm excited and I appreciate the work being done here in Washington, the work being done at the grassroots level. I thank you for your articulate presentation, both of you all. And this government supports what's happening in order to save lives, and we will. Thanks. END 11:54 A.M. EST Credits: text and photos from http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/01/20070117-2.html |
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