Tired of wondering why conference speaker panels are not more diverse, Christina Termini, PhD, MM, decided to do something about it.
Termini, one of a handful of Hispanic female faculty members at Fred Hutch Cancer Center, created the Atlas of Inspiring Hispanic/Latinx Scientists, an online compendium of nearly 400 Hispanic and Latinx scientists that is now part of Fred Hutch’s website.
"It’s important to give back to my community by showcasing that we are here and bringing awareness to the amazing people that are part of our community,” said Termini, an assistant professor in the Translational Science and Therapeutics and Human Biology Divisions at Fred Hutch.
Her lab examines the role that various sugars play in supporting normal blood and blood cancer cells.
Termini’s challenge: if you need a speaker for a conference, stop assuming exceptional scientists from diverse backgrounds don’t exist. “Go to the atlas and you’ll find hundreds of exceptional scientists right now, and that list is only going to expand,” she said. “The atlas moves the onus of responsibility to the organizers of seminars or search committees to use these resources to find those scientists that you claim are not there.”
For Termini, creating an inclusive and supportive community that nurtures diverse scientists is key to researchers’ scientific and career development. Meanwhile, for rising generations of scientists from disadvantaged backgrounds, the atlas offers a forum of role models.
“As I was considering where to go for a faculty position, I looked around to see who is there, who will identify with me on more levels than just science,” she said. “This atlas has the potential to reinforce the identity of Hispanic and Latinx scientists and show that it is possible to achieve careers in all these different fields.”
Christopher Li, MD, PhD, associate director of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion at Fred Hutch, said that providing a home for this atlas is an important way that Fred Hutch is acknowledging its institutional commitment to DEI.