A ‘late-blooming’ scientist
A sociologist by training, Thompson worked a variety of jobs before switching gears at the age of 40 to pursue her true passion — research.
“I was a late bloomer,” she explained. “And I was so surprised when the Hutch called me to come in for an interview.”
Now 74, this avid cyclist, grandmother, mentor, multiple award winner and social justice warrior has seen the seeds she planted at the Hutch come to fruition, whether it’s her postdocs going on to establish their own scientific careers or her research programs blossoming into something greater, such as the newly established Office of Community Outreach and Engagement, or OCOE, which grew out of the health disparities program she established in 2011.
Thompson credits her mentor, Dr. Maureen Henderson, founder of the Hutch’s long-standing Cancer Prevention Program, with shaping her early career, particularly with regard to modeling how women can succeed in science.
As for her pragmatic approach to research, she often quotes the Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu.
“My mantra has always been to go in search of people, begin with what they know and build on what they have,” she said. “If you want to change behavior of people who are underserved and oppressed, you need to work with people where they are. You can’t come in and do your typical non-Hispanic white research and hope that it’s going to make a difference.
“You have to work with communities,” she said. “Not on communities. This is very important.”
Thompson’s mantra — and her egalitarian attitude — have served her well from the very beginning of her unexpected scientific career at the Hutch, which began, as she will gleefully tell you, on April Fool’s Day in 1985.
Hired as a staff scientist to assist with a fledgling Fred Hutch project known as COMMIT (Community Intervention Trial for Smoking Cessation), Thompson began referring to herself as a “smokologist” and helped to implement an intervention far different from previous National Cancer Institute-funded cessation studies.
Instead of assigning smokers to one intervention arm or another, Thompson and her colleagues took a multiprong approach, working with schools, students, physicians, employers and religious organizations to get people to quit.
“We even went to taverns and bars because that’s where smokers are,” she said. “We tried to change norms so it became non-normative to smoke in the community.”
The success of COMMIT “made my reputation,” Thompson said. It also cemented her belief in community-based participatory research, or CBPR, a methodology that encourages scientists to treat community members as equal partners in research.
Longtime research collaborator (and nonscientist) Bridgette Hempstead, founder of the African American cancer support group Cierra Sisters, said Thompson’s heart was always “for the community.”
“Beti gets it,” she said. “Her work is life-changing. And she has an incredible amount of integrity. On the paper we wrote about our Community Empowerment Partners program, I’m the senior author and she’s the co-author. That’s a big deal. It’s an honor. And it’s a legacy she gifted to me.”