Dell’Italia honored by VA for decades of research


Dell’Italia honored by VA for decades of research

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Dr. Louis J. Dell’Italia, Research Associate Chief of Staff at the Birmingham VA Health Care System, is the recipient of the 2021 John B. Barnwell Award for outstanding achievement in


clinical science research.


It is the highest honor awarded by the Clinical Science Research and Development Service of the Veterans Health Administration, America’s largest integrated health care system.


“The award recognizes Dr. Dell’Italia’s exemplary record of involvement in, and service to, the Department of Veterans Affairs and to clinical science, as well as for his significant


contributions as a scientific leader in ground-breaking contributions to clinical management of Veterans suffering cardiovascular disease,” Rachel Ramoni, DMD, Sc.D., Chief Research and


Development Officer for the Veterans Health Administration, wrote in announcing the award.


Dell’Italia came to the Birmingham VA Healthcare System in 1989 as a staff physician and director of the Cardiac Catheterization Lab with a joint appointment as an assistant professor in the


Department of Medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. His research focus was on mechanisms of remodeling of the heart in heart failure and finding other ways to improve


function in failing hearts.


Dell’Italia is best known for his translational research — investigations that start in the lab and in animal models, and then are translated into groundbreaking changes in clinical care for


Veterans. One of every five patients in the VA health care system has cardiovascular disease, says Douglas Mann, M.D., a professor of cardiovascular diseases at Washington University, St.


Louis, who has interacted closely with Dell’Italia since the 1980s.  


“I believe that Dr. Dell’Italia is the quintessential translational physician,” Mann wrote in a letter of recommendation for the award. “His work spans targeted animal studies that


investigate the cellular, biochemical and molecular mechanisms of cardiac remodeling to translational patient-oriented research that is based on hypotheses generated in his laboratory. In my


experience, it is very rare to see the efforts of one person address a research question from a preclinical animal model to studies in humans.”


An example of this translational research was Dell’Italia’s $18 million Specialized Center of Clinically Oriented Research in Cardiac Dysfunction, which was funded by the National Institutes


of Health.


Dell’Italia has been funded continuously for 25 years from the Veterans Administration Merit Review and the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, and he has been Associate Chief of Staff


for Research at the Birmingham VA Health Care System since 2010.


Dell’Italia is a professor emeritus in the UAB School of Medicine Division of Cardiovascular Disease, and he has been the recipient of the UAB Graduate Dean’s Excellence in Mentorship Award,


the Max Cooper Award for UAB Research Excellence, and the Elmer and Glenda Harris Endowed Chair in Cardiovascular Disease, among others.


With the Barnwell Award, Dell’Italia will receive $50,000 a year in research support for three years, a cash award of $5,000 and an inscribed plaque commemorating his scientific


achievements. The Birmingham VA Health Care System also will receive a plaque honoring Dell’Italia. 


A formal presentation is planned later this fall at the Birmingham VA Health Care System.