Draft:William A. Banks


William A. Banks (2016)

William A. Banks, also known as Bill Banks, is Professor of Medicine at the University of Washington and the Associate Chief of Staff for Research and Development at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle, WA.[1] He was born in 1954 in Bloomfield, Missouri, receiving his B.A. from University of Missouri- St. Louis in 1975 before receiving his M.D. in 1979 from University of Missouri- Columbia. He completed an endocrinology fellowship in 1982 at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in New Orleans, Louisiana, with Dr. Abba Kastin, studying the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Together, they published nearly 150 manuscripts, driving the field of regulatory peptide BBB transport.

In 1984, he became an Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine at Tulane University, School of Medicine. He advanced through the faculty ranks to Professor until 1998. In 1998, he moved to St. Louis University Department of Internal Medicine and joined the GRECC faculty at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center St. Louis. In 2010, he moved to his present location at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System and University of Washington in Seattle, WA.

Dr. Banks' interest for more than 40 years has focused on brain-body communication as mediated by the handling of peptides, regulatory proteins, and other informational molecules by the BBB. He has applied this approach to studies of obesity/body weight regulation, Alzheimer's disease/neurodegenerative diseases, neuroimmunology/neuroinflammation, CNS manifestations of diabetes mellitus, drug delivery to the CNS, and AIDS. He has also published on animal assisted therapy in nursing homes, robotics in geriatric medicine, sleep physiology, traumatic brain injury, and was first author on the paper first describing primary adrenal hyperplasia.

In 2014, he received the Norman Cousins award, the highest honor given by the Psychoneuroimmunology Research Society (PNIRS), to an individual for outstanding contributions to research in psychoneuroimmunology.[2] In 2018, he received the Middleton Award from the VA, the highest honor awarded annually by the Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development Service (BLR&D) to senior VA biomedical research scientists in recognition of their outstanding scientific contributions and achievements in the areas of biomedical and bio-behavioral research relevant to the healthcare of Veterans.[3] In 2022, he received the Viktor Mutt Lectureship Award from the International Society of Bioactive Peptides. Dr. Banks has been invited to give over 200 lectures all over the world. He has been ranked as a top-rated expert in the BBB and as a highly cited researcher, in the top 0.1% of researchers.[4] He has published over 600 peer reviewed manuscripts and currently has an H index of 133.[5]

Dr. Banks has been a member of multiple national and internationally known research societies, serving as President for some of them, including the Society for Neuroscience- New Orleans Chapter and PNIRS. He is also a founding or charter member of the American Peptide Society, International Behavioral Neuroscience Society, and International Neuropeptide Society.

Dr. Banks has advised over 26 graduate students, serving as a Mentor and on thesis and dissertation committees. He has also advised numerous other post-doctoral fellows, medical trainees, visiting scientists, and undergraduate assistants.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Banks | Gerontology & Geriatric Medicine". geriatrics.uw.edu.
  2. ^ Gorham, Meg. "Awards & Lectures". www.pnirs.org.
  3. ^ "William S. Middleton Award". www.research.va.gov. January 2, 2024.
  4. ^ "Blood-Brain Barrier: Worldwide - Expertscape.com". expertscape.com.
  5. ^ "William A. Banks". scholar.google.com.