Charles H. Hennekens, M.D., Dr.PH

Sir Richard Doll Professor Florida Atlantic University

  • Boca Raton FL

Charles Hennekens is the first Sir Richard Doll Professor and senior academic advisor.

Contact

Florida Atlantic University

View more experts managed by Florida Atlantic University

Multimedia

Social

Biography

Charles H. Hennekens is the first Sir Richard Doll Professor and Senior Academic Advisor. He was first John Snow and first Eugene Braunwald Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and first Chief of Preventive Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. His 173 H-index ranks him #14 Top Scientist in World. He was 3rd most widely cited medical researcher in world and 5 of top 20 were former trainees. He is #81 in world history for saving 1.1 million lives. He is a Fellow of the American College of Preventive Medicine (FACPM) and the American College of Cardiology (FACC).

Areas of Expertise

Cardiovascular Disease
Strengths and Limitations of Descriptive and Analytic Studies
Prevention and Treatment of Chronic and Acute Diseases
Preventive and Internal Medicine
Epidemiology
Study Design
Research

Accomplishments

14 Top Scientists in the World

2015: based on H index of 173

Alton Ochsner Award Relating Smoking and Disease

2014: American College of Chest Physicians

Fries Prize for Improving Health

2013: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Show All +

Education

Queens College, The City University of New York

D.Sc.

1997

Honoris causa

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

D.Sc.

1996

Honoris causa

Harvard School of Public Health

Dr.P.H.

Epidemiology

1975

Show All +

Affiliations

  • Florida Medical License (ME 84539)
  • Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine : Member, Advisory Board
  • Queens College Athletics Hall of Fame : Honorary Chair, Selection Committee
  • Data Monitoring Committee, AMG 785 Phase 3 trials : Chair

Selected Media Appearances

Even Before Uvalde, Gun-Related Deaths to Texas Schoolchildren Were Rising

U.S. News & World Report  online

2022-10-13

“The increasing rates from firearm deaths in the U.S. among school-age children are not unique to Texas. These rapidly increasing rates have been noted across the entire country,” said senior study author Dr. Charles Hennekens, a professor of medicine at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton.

View More

How ultra-processed foods can make us depressed

The Citizen  online

2022-08-31

“Data from this study add important and relevant information to a growing body of evidence concerning the adverse effects of ultra-processed consumption on mental health symptoms,” said Dr Charles H. Hennekens, study co-author in a press release.

View More

The Worst Drinking Habit for Fatal Liver Disease, New Study Finds

Eat This, Not That  online

2022-07-02

"The hypothesis is that people are drinking more and starting earlier in life," said lead researcher Dr. Charles Hennekens, via Merck Manual. Hennekens explained that, combined with other unhealthy habits, this "leads to fatty liver."

View More

Show All +

Selected Articles

Regular physical activity: Forgotten benefits

The American Journal of Medicine

Steven F. Lewis, Charles H. Hennekens

2015

Both men and women who engage in regular physical activity experience statistically significant and clinically important reductions in the risk of dying from coronary heart disease, the leading cause of death in the United States.1 Physical activity also reduces the risks of developing diabetes, hypertension, and colon cancer; enhances mental health; improves muscle, bone, and joint health, and helps maintain function and preserve independence in older adults.1 In fact, regular physical activity may ameliorate many of the emerging and increasingly prevalent clinical, public health, and fiscal challenges that accompany the “Graying of America.” For example, today, 24% of the US population is 50 years of age and over, and 17 million are aged between 75 and 85 years, a number estimated to grow to 30 million during the next 30 years.

View more

High frequencies of negative pretreatment results following presumptive antibiotic treatment for chlamydia and gonorrhea.

Southern Medical Journal

Andric B, Drowos J, Trepka MJ, Suciu G, Alonso A, Hennekens CH

2013

The purpose of this study was to determine the frequencies of negative test results among all patients aged 18 years and older receiving presumptive antibiotic treatment for chlamydia and/or gonorrhea at the Sexually Transmitted Disease Clinic of the Palm Beach County Health Department. The treatment algorithms were based on guidelines of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. METHODS: Clinic logs were retrospectively reviewed for a consecutive case series of all 1209 patients treated from November 1, 2007 to October 31, 2008. Urogenital specimens were collected and analyzed. Laboratory results were obtained from the Health Management System of the Palm Beach County Health Department. RESULTS: Of the 1209 patients, 556 (46%) were treated for chlamydia, 30 (2.5%) for gonorrhea, and 623 (51.5%) for both. The frequencies of negative results were 68% for chlamydia or gonorrhea, 70.9% for chlamydia, 86.6% for gonorrhea, and 65.2% for chlamydia + gonorrhea. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that implementation of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines by the Sexually Transmitted Disease Clinic of the Palm Beach County Health Department results in presumptive treatment of more than two-thirds of patients with negative nucleic acid amplification test results for chlamydia, gonorrhea, or both. They also suggest the potential value of developing treatment algorithms to maximize treatment of patients with positive test results and minimize treatment of those with negative test results. One possible strategy to explore is the future utility of new testing and treatment methodologies in development.

View more

United States Counties with Low Black Male Mortality Rates

The American Journal of Medicine

Levine RS, Rust G, Kilbourne B, Aliyu M, Pisu M, Zoorob R, Goldzweig P, Juarez B, Husaini B, Hennekens CH

2013

In the United States, young and middle-aged black men have significantly higher total mortality than any other racial or ethnic group. We describe the characteristics of US counties with low non–Hispanic Black or African American male mortality (ages 25-64 years, 1999-2007).

View more