Published: November 20, 2009
Sabrina Cohen Foundation for Stem Cell Research Founder Recognized as a WebMD 2009 Health Hero
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Sabrina Cohen, founder of The Sabrina Cohen Foundation for Stem Cell
Research (SCF), was just recognized as a WebMD
2009 Health Hero. She will receive national media attention with a full-page
article about her personal story of triumph and courage, and shares
the spotlight with celebrity movie-star, Scarlett
Johansson and other Health Heroes in the November/December issue.
Being a WebMD Health Hero means being faced with difficult, sometimes
seemingly impossible challenges. A Health Hero not only surmounts them
but also uses them as motivation to help others. And that's exactly what
Sabrina Cohen is doing with her 501 c3 nonprofit, The
Sabrina Cohen Foundation for Stem Cell Research, an advocacy
organization that's dedicated to fighting diseases by funding advanced
stem cell research in the United States since 2006. But why stem cell
research? It has the potential to impact and treat a host of 70 diseases
including lupus, Alzheimer's, spinal cord injuries, deafness, leukemia,
diabetes and more.
"As a patient advocate fighting for medical breakthroughs, this $2,500
donation from WebMD means so much more than just a dollar figure. This
recognition means hope, possibility and belief in the science of stem
cell research. The money will be earmarked towards further education and
direct funding of the leading research in the U.S.," said Cohen
The Sabrina Cohen Foundation for Stem Cell Research recently bestowed
its first
grant of $25,000 to University of California, Irvine, researcher
Hans Keirstead who has studied restoring mobility in paralyzed rats and
whose current research on spinal cord injuries yielded the world's
first-ever embryonic stem cell treatment to be tested in humans.
Cohen's not new to advocacy. After being in a car accident in 1992, she
became a quadriplegic at the young age of 14 years old. "I didn't want
to be known as the girl in the wheelchair," she recalls. But she did
what she had to do. She graduated from high school, went on to college
and eventually opened her own advertising agency recruiting South
Florida clients. In 2004, her life would change course forever. After
hearing a presentation on stem cell research, she joined forces with the
Genetics Policy Institute, which eventually led her to founding her own
nonprofit organization.
The business community is also taking notice of Cohen. She just received
the "Amethyst Arts & Culture Non Profit Award" from The Diamond Palm
Award for Excellence in Business and Business Leader Media just named
her a "2009 Mover & Shaker," an award that honors up-and-coming local
business leaders.
Sabrina Cohen Foundation for Stem Cell Research
Dr. Andrew Akerman,
917-837-1875
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