Katie Couric to Headline This Year’s Event

Newswise — Registration for this year’s A Woman’s Journey (AWJ) symposium in Baltimore, featuring Katie Couric, will start at 8:30 a.m., on Monday, July 1. To register for the event, you can visit http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/awomansjourney/baltimore/ or call 410-955-8660.

Award-winning journalist, best-selling author, well-known cancer advocate and talk-show host Katie Couric will be the keynote speaker at Johns Hopkins Medicine’s 19th annual AWJ symposium Saturday, Nov. 16, in Baltimore. She also will receive the Johns Hopkins Medicine Distinguished Service Award for her commitment to building public awareness about colorectal cancer screening, co-founding Stand Up To Cancer and raising funds for research to find better treatments for all cancers.

Couric will speak about how cancer changed her life and led to a personal commitment to advocate for colon cancer screening and to raise badly needed funds for cancer research. Former co-anchor of the Today Show and now host of the syndicated daytime talk show Katie, she co-founded the National Colorectal Cancer Research Alliance (NCCRA) with the Entertainment Industry Foundation (EIF) in 2000, and also helped establish the Jay Monahan Center for Gastrointestinal Health, named for her late husband, at Weill Medical College of Cornell University/ New York Presbyterian Hospital. In 2008, Katie was one of nine co-founders of Stand Up To Cancer, an EIF initiative uniting Hollywood and the public in the effort to raise money for accelerated cancer research.

The New York Times best-selling author of The Best Advice I Ever Got: Lessons from Extraordinary Lives, she joined the Disney/ABC Television Group in summer 2011 and serves as special correspondent for ABC News, contributing to ABC World News with Diane Sawyer, Nightline, 20/20, Good Morning America, This Week and primetime news specials.

AWJ is the creation of two women from Baltimore, Harriet Legum and Mollye Block, who together realized the need to provide women with a forum to gain knowledge about their health concerns. Since its founding in 1995, AWJ annually has offered 32 seminars—all taught by Hopkins physicians and scientists. Women hear firsthand about advances in medicine from researchers in an array of medical specialties. The program is designed to attract mothers, daughters, grandmothers, sisters and friends who come to learn from Johns Hopkins experts and from each other. Nearly 1,000 women attend the Baltimore conference each year, from more than a dozen states.

Presentations will cover new treatments and information on topics such as preserving memory, antioxidants, and strategies to prevent heart disease and cancer.

The AWJ 2013 conference will be held from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Hilton Baltimore, located at 401 West Pratt St.

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JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICINEJohns Hopkins Medicine (JHM), headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland, is a $6.7 billion integrated global health enterprise and one of the leading health care systems in the United States. JHM unites physicians and scientists of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine with the organizations, health professionals and facilities of The Johns Hopkins Hospital and Health System. JHM's mission is to improve the health of the community and the world by setting the standard of excellence in medical education, research and clinical care. Diverse and inclusive, JHM educates medical students, scientists, health care professionals and the public; conducts biomedical research; and provides patient-centered medicine to prevent, diagnose and treat human illness. JHM operates six academic and community hospitals, four suburban health care and surgery centers, more than 38 primary health care outpatient sites and other businesses that care for national and international patients and activities. The Johns Hopkins Hospital, opened in 1889, was ranked number one in the nation for 21 years by U.S. News & World Report.