AARP 2009 Inspire Award winners

PR Newswire
November 24, 2008

For Dr. David E. Hayes-Bautista, one baby’s story says it all. Selene Segura Rios, a flu-stricken 18-month-old whose working parents couldn’t afford the ER, died of dehydration — not in a Third World country but in the United States.

Selene, like many Latinos, lacked access to proper health care, a problem Hayes-Bautista has been fighting his whole career. As a grad student in the 1970s, Hayes-Bautista brought needed care to desperate Californians as a founding director of La Clinica de la Raza, a chain of low-cost medical centers that treats more than 100,000 patients a year.

An engineer by training whose compassion and love of hard data led him into the field of medical sociology, Hayes-Bautista is now director of the Center for the Study of Latino Health and Culture at UCLA, and his influence is felt nationwide. His research helps policymakers get to the heart of medical problems bedeviling the Latino community.

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