Alfred
E. Mann
Chairman of the Board
Alfred E. Mann serves
as Chairman of the Board and CEO of MannKind Corporation, a diversified
biopharmaceutical company focused on the development of novel
therapeutics and drug delivery technologies for treatment of diabetes,
cancer, autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. MannKind’s lead
product mimics the insulin kinetics of a normal pancreas, creating a
new therapy paradigm for diabetes. Mr. Mann also founded in 1993
and serves as Chairman and co-CEO of Advanced Bionics Corporation
(“Bionics”), now a Boston Scientific Company. Bionics is a
developer, manufacturer and distributor of cochlear implants for the
restoration of hearing to the deaf and a broad range of
neurostimulation systems for various neural deficits such as chronic
pain, migraines, urge incontinence, Parkinson’s, angina, etc.
Additionally Mr. Mann founded and served as the Chairman of the Board
and Chief Executive Officer of MiniMed Inc. from its founding in 1993
until August 2001 when it was acquired by Medtronic, Inc. MiniMed
and its Medical Research Group, Inc. affiliate develop, manufacture and
distribute microinfusion systems and continuous glucose monitoring
systems that have revolutionized the treatment of Type 1
diabetes. Mr. Mann also founded and was Chairman of the Board and
CEO of Pacesetter Systems, Inc., which developed, manufactured and
distributed cardiac pacemakers, from 1972 until 1985 when it was
acquired by Siemens, AG. From 1985 to September 1992, Mr. Mann
continued to serve as Chairman and CEO of the successor company,
Siemens-Pacesetter, Inc., Pacesetter is now the Cardiac Rhythm
Management unit of St. Jude Medical. Prior to 1972, he was
President of Spectrolab, an electro-optical and aerospace systems
company, and Heliotek, a semiconductor and electro-optical components
manufacturer. Mr. Mann founded these companies in 1956 and 1960,
respectively, sold them to Textron Inc. in 1960 and continued to lead
them until 1972, when he left for Pacesetter. They are now part
of the Boeing Company.
Mr. Mann also founded and is non-executive Chairman of (i) Second
Sight, which is developing a visual prosthesis to restore sight to the
blind; (ii) Implantable Acoustics, which is developing implantable
hearing aids; (iii) NeuroSystec, which is exploring drug therapies to
treat tinnitus and other audiologic problems; (iv) Bioness, which is
pursuing in prosthetics for electrostimulation to address functional
neural deficits; (v) Quallion, which develops, manufactures and markets
advanced batteries for medical, aerospace and military applications,
and (vi) Stellar Microelectronics, which produces micro-circuit
assemblies.
Mr. Mann is currently Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Alfred
Mann Foundation and of the Alfred Mann Institute at the University of
Southern California, medical research foundations founded and endowed
principally by Mr. Mann. He also serves as a Trustee for the
University of Southern California, as a member of the Board of
Overseers of the Keck USC School of Medicine, and as the Chairman of
the Southern California Biomedical Council, a nonprofit association
dedicated to the fostering of the bio-medical industry in the Los
Angeles Metropolitan area. Mr. Mann holds B.A. and M.S. degrees
in physics from the University of California, Los Angeles and honorary
doctorate degrees from the University of Southern California, The Johns
Hopkins University, Western University and the Technion Institute
(Israel). Mr. Mann is a member of the National Academy of
Engineering and has received dozens of honors including the following:
Group Achievement Award (NASA; 1981)
Exceptional Public Service Award (NASA 1984)
Pioneer in Cardiac Pacing (Cardiostim, 1988)
Master Entrepreneur of the Year (Los Angeles, 1996)
Arthur Anderson Award for Fostering Innovation (Southern California,
1996)
Citation Award; Engineer of the Year (UCLA, 1997)
APEX Award for Outstanding Product Design of the Year (for MiniMed
Insulin Pump) (The Management Roundtable, 1997)
Father of the Year (Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, 1998)
Lifetime Achievement Award (Independent Living Center of So.
California, 1998)
Eleanor Roosevelt Humanitarian Award (League for the Hard of Hearing,
1998)
Pioneer in Cardiac Pacing (50th Anniversary of Cardiostim, 1998)
Man of the Year (San Fernando Valley Economic Alliance, 1998)
Appreciation Award from The Children of PADRE (PADRE Foundation, 1998)
School of Engineering Award (USC, 1999)
Spirit of Edison Award for Community Service (Thomas Edison State
College, 1999)
Man of the Year (WISE Senior Services, 1999)
Vision of the Future Award (RP International, 1999)
Humanitarian of the Year (House Ear Institute, 1999)
Named “One of the 10 Most Influential People on the Tech Coast (Los
Angeles Times, 1999)
Reynolds Society Achievement Award (Harvard University, 1999)
Golden Platter Honoree (American Academy of Achievement, 2000)
Fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering
(2000)
Heart of a Child Award (Cardiac Arrhythmia Research and Education
Foundation, 2000)
Elie Wiesel Humanism in Healing Award (Western University) 2002
Business Person of the Year Award (Los Angeles Business Journal, 2003)
Albert Schweitzer Leadership Award (Hugh O’Brian’s Youth Organization,
2003)
Ernest Borgnine Spirit Award (American Veterans Assoc., 2003)
Business Leader and Humanitarian of the Year Award (Jewish Vocational
Service, 2004)
Albert Einstein Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Life Sciences
(Life Sciences, 2004)
Phoenix 2004 Innovator Award (Phoenix Medical Device and Diagnostic
Conference, 2004)
Diabetes Innovator Award (Diabetes Technology Conference, Philadelphia,
2004)
Honoree of the Year, UCLA Health Services Alumni Assoc., May 2005
Lifetime Achievement Award in Medical Devices Industry (Frost &
Sullivan, 2005)
Spirit of Life Award, Larry King Cardiac Foundation (November, 2006)
New Freedom Award, 9th Intl. Congress on Community Services (December,
2006)
Case Western Reserve University, Deioma Lecture Series (Engineering for
Success, 2004)
University of California San Francisco, Robert A. Schindler, M.D.
Endowed Lecturer, 2004
Leader of Today Honoree, UCLA Health Services Alumni Association (UCLA,
2005)
Research Professor (University of Southern California, 2002)
Adjunct Professor, Dept. of Bioengineering (Univ. of California Los
Angeles, 2005)
Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree (University of Southern
California, 2001)
Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree (The Johns Hopkins University,
2001)
Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree (Western University, 2002)
Honorary Doctor degree (Technion Institute, Israel, 2005)
Member, National Academy of Engineering (2000)
Member, Board of Directors of United Cerebral Palsy Research and
Educational Foundation (2005)
Member, Board of Directors of Nevada Cancer Institute (2005)
Keynote speeches:
2005 Neel Distinguished Research Lecturer (AAO Annual Meeting)
CIBC Conference, New York (April 2005)
National Academy of Engineers (October 2005)
CalTech MIT Enterprise Forum (October 2005)
International Conference on Aging, Florida (February 2006)
American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering,
Washington DC (March 2006)
National Institutes of Health (March 2006)
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