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Posted
3/26/2008
$25,000 donation to support collaborations,
travel and other research expenses
Dr. Steven Blair, professor in the Arnold School’s Department of
Exercise Science, has donated $25,000 to support research on physical
inactivity as a public health problem.
Blair said he expects to donate at least another $25,000 to the Blair
Physical Activity Fund this year based on proceeds from his book
royalties, speaking fees and consultations.
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Dr. Steven Blair |
“I consider inactivity to be the greatest modifiable public health
threat of the 21st Century in the United States and other industrialized
countries,” said Blair, adding that the fund will support collaborations
with researchers on the issue.
It also can be used to support staff travel to scientific meetings,
graduate assistantships and other research expenses.
Blair is an internationally recognized authority on exercise and its
health benefits. He was among a team of University of South Carolina
researchers who reported that seniors who get a regular dose of physical
activity live longer than unfit adults, regardless of their body fat.
Those findings were reported in the Journal of the American Medical
Association. The study, conducted between 1979 and 2001, is the first to
examine the link among fitness, body fat and death in older Americans.
Blair was a PE instructor at USC in the 1960s before joining the Cooper
Institute in Dallas. He was a researcher, then president and CEO of the
nonprofit research and education center recognized as a leader in
exercise science.
During his 22-year tenure at Cooper, Blair did extensive research using
the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study that examines the impact that
diet, physical activity and other lifestyle factors have on mortality.
Blair rejoined the USC faculty last fall where he currently has joint
appointments in the Department of Exercise Science and the Department of
Epidemiology and Biostatistics.
He has published over 360 papers and chapters in the scientific
literature, and was the senior scientific editor for the U.S. Surgeon
General's Report on Physical Activity and Health.
He also is the author, editor or coeditor of several books, including
Fitness After 50, Active Living Every Day, and Physical Activity and
Health.
His recent gift is part of a record 58 per cent increase in private
giving during the first six months of fiscal year 2007–08.
The university received $50 million in gifts and pledges from slightly
more than 27,000 donors from July 1 through Dec. 31, 2007. That compares
with $31.6 million received from 14,539 donors during the same period in
2006.
The university projects it will surpass its $75 million fundraising goal
for this year.
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