Former Graduate School dean dies after fight with breast cancer

Jo Rae Wright, former dean of the Graduate School and professor of cell biology, medicine and pediatrics, passed away Wednesday after a long fight against breast cancer.

Wright stepped down from her position as Graduate School dean and vice provost for graduate education in October after her battle with breast cancer worsened and her treatments became less predictable. David Bell, then senior associate dean of the Graduate School, succeeded Wright and currently serves as interim dean.

"I don't feel that I can continue to make commitments to travel as a dean must," Wright wrote in an Oct. 19 email to The Chronicle.

After she stepped down, Wright continued to teach full time as a professor in the department of cell biology and run her lab.

Wright studied at West Virginia University, where she earned a Ph. D. in physiology. She then did a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of California at San Francisco and worked in the UCSF's Cardiovascular Research Institute.

She began her Duke career in 1993 as an associate professor, and was awarded Duke's Excellence in Basic Science Teaching Award twice. She was appointed associate dean for graduate programs in 2000 and then vice dean of the basic sciences in the Duke University Medical School in 2002. In 2006, she became dean of the Graduate School.

During her time as Graduate School dean, Wright started a Graduate School Board of Visitors, transformed the school's budgetary process and oversaw the expansion of multiple master's programs, Provost Peter Lange said.

Wright also made significant strides as a cell biologist—her research about the protective role of lung surfactants made a significant impact in understanding lung failure, Lange added. The American Physiological Society awarded Wright with a Walter B. Cannon Award for lifetime achievement for her work in 2005. Wright became president of the American Thoracic Society in 2008.

In December, the University established the Jo Rae Wright Fellowship for Outstanding Women in Science to honor Wright. The fellowship will recognize one female Ph. D. student in the biomedical sciences and one in the natural sciences who display creativity and promise in their research.

Funeral arrangements for Wright are not yet finalized. She was 56-years-old.

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