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STAT Wunderkinds

STAT set out to celebrate the unheralded heroes of science and medicine, poring over hundreds of nominations from across North America in search for the next generation of scientific superstars. We were on the hunt for the most impressive doctors and researchers on the cusp of launching their careers, but not yet fully independent.

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STAT Wunderkinds

Meet the 2022 STAT Wunderkinds

This year, as in past years, we’ve found inspiring stories and innovative research. All are blazing new trails as they attempt to answer some of the biggest questions in science and medicine.

Winners by Year:  2017  |  2018  |  2019 | 2020 | 2021

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Kiran Agarwal-Harding

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Kiran Agarwal-Harding knows the importance of orthopedic care. He wants to make it accessible worldwide.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Daniel Blair

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Daniel Blair is combining chemistry and tech to power virtual drug design.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Daniel Burkhardt

Cellarity

Machine learning researcher Daniel Burkhardt is helping shape a new set of standards to evaluate AI algorithms.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Jasmin Camacho

Stowers Institute

By studying sugar-obsessed bats, Jasmin Camacho is revealing new clues about metabolism.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Caroline Diorio

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

A childhood disease sparked Caroline Diorio’s interest in medicine. Now, she’s working to make more effective treatments for children with cancer.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Brianna Duncan-Lowey

Yale School of Medicine

Science has only scratched the surface of microbiome research. Brianna Duncan-Lowey is taking it to a microscopic level.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Ana Gonzalez-Reiche

Icahn School Of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Ana Gonzalez-Reiche got her start studying avian viruses in Guatemala. Her expertise proved valuable when the pandemic hit.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Brian Hie

Stanford University

Computer scientist Brian Hie has a love of language — whether it’s in Renaissance poetry or protein models.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Alainna Jamal

University of Toronto

Alainna Jamal is advancing what we know about one of the biggest threats to public health: antimicrobial resistance.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Julia Joung

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Playing thousands of games of Go prepared Julia Joung for life as a biological engineer.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Hirofumi Kobayashi

Chan Zuckerberg Biohub

Hirofumi Kobayashi wants to turn the microscopic beauty of cells into tools scientists can use.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Hyunwoo “Tony” Kwon

Ohio State University Medical Center

For Tony Kwon, the path to better understanding tumor biology started with stag beetles.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Hussain Lalani

Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School

As a primary care doctor, Hussain Lalani sees patients struggle to afford their medicines. He’s hoping policy research could change that.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Caleb Lareau

Stanford University

Genomics researcher Caleb Lareau is channeling the “infectious energy in Silicon Valley” in his science.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Dig Bijay Mahat

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Cancer researcher Jay Mahat made it his mission to help his home country of Nepal navigate the pandemic.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Avinash Manjula-Basavanna

Harvard Medical School

Taking a page from nature, Avinash Manjula-Basavanna is designing the next generation of biomaterials.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Chao Mao

MD Anderson Cancer Center

By studying a type of cell death, Chao Mao has discovered a potentially valuable target in cancer therapy.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Filipa Rijo-Ferreira

University of California Berkeley

Our bodies have biological clocks. Filipa Rijo-Ferreira is exploring whether parasites have their own.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Elizabeth Rossin

Mass Eye and Ear and Harvard Medical School

Peering into the eyes of patients, Elizabeth Rossin sees a slew of scientific questions.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Laura Rupprecht

Duke University

Laura Rupprecht is trying to understand how our bodies sense sugar. Intestinal cells might be the sweet spot.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Lisa Simon

Brigham and Women's Hospital

Lisa Simon trained as both a doctor and a dentist to bridge the historial divide between oral health and the rest of medicine.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Olukayode Sosina

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals

Olukayode Sosina scours genomic data to find the hidden clues that might help scientists develop new medicines.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Jennifer Tsai

Yale School Of Medicine

ERs are a last resort for people without regular access to care. Jennifer Tsai is trying to tackle the underlying disparities at play.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Alexander Tucker

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Alexander Tucker is weaving together two distinct areas of medicine: pediatric neurosurgery and wound healing research.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Lawrence Wang

University of California, San Diego

In hunting for a weapon against malaria, Lawrence Wang found an antibody that’s now being put to the test.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Yifan Wang

MD Anderson Cancer Center

Yifan Wang is arming the immune system to fight cancer, one macrophage at a time.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Sara Zaccara

Cornell University

Covid-19 vaccines catapulted mRNA into the spotlight. Sara Zaccara is breaking new ground in our understanding of it.

STAT Wunderkinds medal

Roger Zou

Johns Hopkins University

Roger Zou is working to give scientists better control of CRISPR — while he also wraps up his medical degree.

The Wunderkinds were selected solely by STAT's editorial staff. The award sponsor had no input in the decision-making process and the awardees have received no financial benefit from the sponsor.

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