News Releases

Aug 2, 2006
Ladies' Home Journal Announces Winners of First-Annual Health Breakthrough Awards
Honors Six Health Professionals Whose Groundbreaking Work Has Benefited American Women and Families
PRNewswire
NEW YORK
(NYSE:MDP)

NEW YORK, Aug. 2 /PRNewswire/ -- Ladies' Home Journal today announced the winners of its first-annual Health Breakthrough Awards, which recognize leading medical professionals who are making life-saving and life-enhancing discoveries in research, diagnostics and treatment -- with results that have significantly helped women and families.

Six doctors and researchers, chosen from a candidate list of nearly 100 accomplished professionals, will be celebrated at the Health Breakthrough Awards Luncheon in New York City on August 2nd, hosted by Ladies' Home Journal Editor-in-Chief Diane Salvatore, with Special Presenters Oscar and Emmy Award- Winning Actress Sally Field, an osteoporosis advocate, Golden Globe-Nominated Actress Andie MacDowell, and Co-Anchor of Weekend Today Campbell Brown. The honorees will also be featured in the September issue of the magazine, on sale August 8th.

"Our 13.5 million readers are the health gatekeepers in their own families," says Salvatore. "That's why they are so eager to be educated about medical breakthroughs, and are so appreciative of the dedicated professionals who diagnose and cure serious illnesses."

  Ladies' Home Journal's 2006 Health Breakthrough Award recipients are:

  -- Dr. Deborah K. Armstrong, associate professor of Oncology, Gynecology
     and Obstetrics at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine - Lead investigator
     for a study that found that a rarely used treatment for advanced
     ovarian cancer could add 16 months or more of life.  Ovarian cancer is
     one of the deadliest forms of cancer and one of the hardest to detect
     in its earliest stages, since there is no reliable screening test.
     This year, an estimated 20,180 women will learn they have ovarian
     cancer and some 15,310 women will die of it.
  -- Dr. Susan Cu-Uvin, professor of Obstetrics/Gynecology and Medicine at
     Brown Medical School and Director of The Immunology Center at Miriam
     Hospital - Established the nation's first clinic specifically devoted
     to the population of menopausal women with HIV/AIDS.  HIV is spreading
     among older Americans, and thanks to effective medications, existing
     women patients are living longer.  As a result, these women are
     entering uncharted territory: Doctors know very little about how the
     virus interacts with the hormonal upheavals of menopause.
  -- Dr. Mary Ann E. Keenan, chief of the Neuro-Orthopedics Program at
     University of Pennsylvania - Pioneered surgical techniques that relieve
     musculo/skeletal deformities resulting from strokes.
  -- Dr. Etta D. Pisano, director of the Biomedical Research Imaging Center
     at University of North Carolina - Pioneered research showing that the
     newer technology of digital mammograms is as reliable as film
     mammograms and better at finding breast cancer in young women and those
     with dense breast tissue.
  -- Dr. Frank E. Speizer, Edward H. Kass professor of Medicine at Harvard
     Medical School & and Dr. Walter C. Willett, professor of Epidemiology
     and Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health - In recognition of
     the 30th anniversary of the Nurses' Health Study, the largest ongoing
     health study to focus on women.

Ladies' Home Journal Medical Adviser Dr. Marianne J. Legato will also receive an inaugural award in her name for forging a new field of medicine that focuses on the differences between women and men. Beginning next year, Dr. Legato will present the annual Marianne J. Legato Gender-Specific Medicine Award to a deserving professional.

GlaxoSmithKline is the sole sponsor of both the Health Breakthrough Awards September 2006 in-book feature and the Awards Gala.

The Health Breakthrough Awards reflect Ladies' Home Journal's long history of health-advocacy journalism dating back more than a century. The magazine helped to spur the eventual formation of the Food and Drug Administration, put an end to bogus medications and break the taboo of silence about sexually transmitted diseases. More recently, Ladies' Home Journal has worked with readers to support legislation to make imported produce safer, stop emergency rooms from being closed and improve care in nursing homes.

About Ladies' Home Journal

Founded in December 1883, Ladies' Home Journal has been inspiring, informing and entertaining women for 123 years. Published monthly by Meredith Corporation (NYSE: MDP), Ladies' Home Journal has a circulation of 4.1 million and a readership of 13.5 million. The magazine's interactive online companion, http://www.lhj.com/ , has 1.8 million unique visitors and 20 million page views each month.

Contact: Mariela Azcuy, 212-551-6955, mariela.azcuy@meredith.com

Zoe Lampel, 212-455-1077, zoe.lampel@meredith.com

SOURCE: Ladies' Home Journal

CONTACT: Mariela Azcuy, +1-212-551-6955, mariela.azcuy@meredith.com , or
Zoe Lampel, +1-212-455-1077, zoe.lampel@meredith.com , both for Ladies' Home
Journal

Web site: http://www.lhj.com/
http://www.meredith.com/