The American Heart Association will present the 2025 Eugene Braunwald Academic Mentorship Award to Dr. Emelia J. Benjamin, professor of medicine at Boston University, during the Scientific Sessions 2025 in November. This award honors individuals demonstrating sustained excellence in teaching and mentoring the next generation of faculty researchers, educators, and healthcare professionals, recognizing recipients for their lasting impact on cardiovascular care through extensive mentoring of residents and fellows. Dr. Benjamin holds the Jay and Louise Coffman Professor in Vascular Medicine position at the BU Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine and serves as professor of epidemiology at the BU School of Public Health.
Dr. Benjamin has developed and led ongoing faculty development programs supporting early- and mid-career clinicians and researchers from diverse backgrounds. Her mentoring extends to directing multi-institutional research fellowships supported by the Heart Association and National Institutes of Health, including an international atrial fibrillation genetics fellowship and the NIH K12 program, Boston University Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women's Health. The legacy of her career is reflected in the success of her trainees, many of whom received NIH Career Development Awards and launched numerous careers in cardiovascular research.
In her roles for the Heart Association, Dr. Benjamin has been a strong advocate for early-career scientists, including serving as former chair of the Council on Functional Genomics and Translational Biology to develop a strong Early Career Committee and participating on many Early Career Panels while mentoring individual members. Dr. Stacey E. Rosen, the American Heart Association's 2025-2026 volunteer president, stated that Dr. Benjamin is a distinguished scientist and powerful advocate for the next generation of cardiovascular researchers. Her commitment to training diverse and talented early career professionals continues to shape the future of cardiovascular science and medicine.
Among her many honors are several of the Heart Association's highest awards, including a Distinguished Scientist Award, Gold Heart Award, Population Research Prize, Paul Dudley White Award, and multiple mentoring awards. Dr. Benjamin has also been recognized with the Louis B. Russell Jr. Memorial Award for her work supporting women and people from diverse backgrounds in cardiovascular science and advancing equitable health in under-resourced communities. An elected member of the Association of American Physicians, she received the Dr. Daniel D. Savage Memorial Science Award from the Association of Black Cardiologists for her impactful research in atrial fibrillation epidemiology and the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine's Diversity and Inclusion Award for her advocacy and leadership in equity and inclusion.
Dr. Benjamin has informally guided hundreds of colleagues and formally mentored more than 60 faculty members and trainees, many of whom have secured independent research funding and faculty positions worldwide. In addition to serving as a leading investigator with the Framingham Heart Study, she has authored more than 800 peer-reviewed publications focusing on the genetics, epidemiology, clinical outcomes and prognosis of cardiovascular diseases. Her leadership roles include co-chairing the 2008 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Atrial Fibrillation Prevention Workshop and contributing to the 2023 ACC/AHA/ACCP/HRS Guideline for the Diagnosis and Management of Atrial Fibrillation. This award underscores the vital role mentorship plays in cultivating scientific talent, fostering diversity, and driving innovation in cardiovascular research and patient care for future generations.

