Alvin Novick

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Dr. Alvin Novick

June 27, 1925 - April 10, 2005

Dr. Alvin Novick is the editor-in-chief of AIDS & Public Policy Journal (since 1990) and the Commentary Section editor of the Journal of Gay and Lesbian Medical Association. Taken together, he has published over 40 papers and book chapters on public policy and ethics in the HIV/AIDS realm and has consulted (or served on advisory committees) for CDC, NIH, HRSA, FDA, the Assistant Secretary's Office of DHHS, the Surgeon-General, the National AIDS Policy Office, ASTHO, and the American Blood Commission on the blood supply, testing and counseling, HIV and tuberculosis, the water supply and cryptosporidosis, hospital infection control, accidental exposures in health care, HIV-infected physicians, policy issues around mothers and children, drug development, the design of clinical trials, confidentiality, and privacy.

Dr. Novick's research since 1982 has concerned ethical, public policy, and community development aspects of HIV/AIDS.

Dr. Novick also joined the now Late Archbishop Whelan's Task Force on AIDS in 1989, but only after insisting on talking with the Late Archbishop personally to exchange views and ideas on how to elicit the religious response to HIV/AIDS.

In "Physicians Living With HIV/AIDS"  Michael Shernoff, MSW, reported that "In 1990, Alvin Novick, of Yale University's Department of Biology and a board member of the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association, (GLMA), then known as American Association of Physicians for Human Rights, feared that as a result of the Acer case there would be a backlash against physicians with HIV/AIDS. At Dr. Novick's initiative, the Medical Expertise Retention Program of the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association was born in order to provide professional support for doctors with HIV/AIDS. By November of that year enough funds had been raised to hire a part time staff person to coordinate the program. Funding for this program comes from contributions from GLMA members and from pharmaceutical companies such as Glaxo-Wellcome, Genentech, Pfizer and Sandoz. The program offers telephone crisis counseling for any health care professional who has HIV/AIDS and needs to speak about their situation safely with a guarantee of confidentiality. Though the service is available to any health care professional, over 90% of the calls have been from doctors." (1)

 

In Memoriam: Alvin Novick, Scientist, Humanitarian and AIDS Awareness Pioneer (2)

New Haven, Conn.— Alvin Novick, 79, physician, biologist, Yale University professor, and AIDS community leader, died on April 10, 2005 in New Haven. He had prostate cancer.

Professor Novick taught biology at Yale for 48 years. A Harvard–trained physician, much of his early professional career was devoted to sensory physiology. He was a world–renowned expert on bat echolocation, author of The World of Bats and the current Encyclopedia Britannica’s article on bats. His research on bat sonar navigation was used by the US military for improvements in radar technologies.

In 1982, Dr. Novick shifted the focus of his work to the ethical, public policy, and community development aspects of the AIDS crisis. In that role, he served as a leader of the gay/lesbian medical community (including as President of what is now the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association), editor of the AIDS & Public Policy Journal, and consultant to numerous federal agencies. In the New Haven community, he served as chair of the Mayor’s Task Force on AIDS, and was a founder of AIDS Project New Haven, and Leeway, Connecticut’s first and only skilled nursing home dedicated solely to the treatment of people living with AIDS.

“Dr. Novick used his leadership as a physician and a Yale professor to open doors and be the voice of those most stigmatized by the epidemic—injection drug users whose lives could be saved by needle exchange programs, people of color, or fellow physicians with HIV who were being denied the right to practice medicine. He had an extraordinary capacity to be direct with public officials about their ethical and programmatic shortcomings, always expressed in the context of sound science and good public health.” — The Honorable John DeStefano, Jr., Mayor of New Haven

“In the mid–1980s, when there was great fear of the disease and discrimination and stigmatization was rampant, Al Novick was an early, passionate and brave advocate for those infected with or at risk for HIV. At his urging, then–Mayor of New Haven, Biagio DiLieto created the Mayor’s Task Force on AIDS, and it was this Task Force, under Al’s leadership, that went on to advocate successfully for one of the most effective HIV prevention interventions for drug users known, then or now needle exchange.” — Michael Merson, Professor and Past Dean, Yale Epidemiology and Public Health

“As Governor and as Senator, I could count on frank, solid, and accurate advice from Al Novick. He helped shape my understanding of the HIV epidemic, as he did for many other officials in Connecticut and in the federal government.” — Lowell Weicker

Dr. Novick remained actively teaching at Yale until shortly before his death. He always enjoyed the challenge of opening the minds of his students to new ways of thinking. He taught a popular undergraduate course on AIDS and Society and was also a founder of Yale’s Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS.

“He was a man who was ahead of his time. When others were assimilating everything that had gone on around them, Al would have already identified and begun to address unresolved issues with razor sharp precision and compassion.” — Frederick L. Altice, Associate Professor, Yale University AIDS Program

In addition to his science and policy work, Novick was a dedicated horticulturist with special affinity to dwarf conifer and Japanese maple trees. He was a certified dog show judge by the American Kennel Club and was a lifelong breeder of Shi Zsu, Cairn Terriers and French Bulldogs.

“I think everyone who knew Al, recognized his interest and love of all living things. This was reflected in all his contributions. Not the least were his avocations as dog breeder, handler, show judge, and gardener. He did all these things, as he did others, at the professional level.” — Frank Ruddle, Emeritus Professor and Past Chair Yale Department of Biology

Novick served in the US Army during World War II, during which he was a prisoner of war in Germany. After the war, he attended Harvard College and Harvard Medical School, receiving his M.D. in 1951.

“Al was one of the most courageous, graceful and thoughtful people I have ever met in my life, He saved lives and careers—and was one of the most interesting people at Yale. Al really stood out for moral courage.” — Stephen Stearns, Professor and Chair Yale Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and former work–study student for Al Novick.

Novick was pre–deceased by his life partner Bill Sabella and his sister Rosalyn. He is survived by Dr. Fredrick L. Altice, Associate Professor of Medicine at Yale School of Medicine, many close friends, students, his beautifully tended gardens and Tara, his Cairn terrier and her four week–old puppies.

In lieu of flowers, Dr. Novick asked that donations in his honor be made to: AIDS Project New Haven, 1302 Chapel Street, New Haven 06511; AIDS Interfaith Network, 1303 Chapel Street, New Haven 06511; Hispanos Unidos, 116 Sherman Avenue, New Haven 06511. A memorial service to be held in one of his many gardens is planned for later this spring.

# # #

(1) The Journal of the International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care, Volume 2, No. 11, November, 1996

(2) YALE News Release: CONTACT: Janet Rettig Emanuel, 203-432-2157 or janet.emanuel@yale.edu

Elsie Cofield Seph Mayo Alvin Novick

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