Washington: Two Indian Americans, Padmini Pillai from Boston and Nalini Tata from New York, were appointed to Thursday's 2024-2025 class of White House Fellows. In all, 15 exceptionally talented individuals from across the United States have been named to this prestigious programme. Fellows spend a year working with senior White House staff, cabinet secretaries, and other top-ranking administration officials and leave the administration equipped to serve as better leaders in their communities.
While Tata is placed at the White House Office of Cabinet Affairs, Pillai is placed at the Social Security Administration, the White House said in a media release. Newton, Massachusetts, Pillai is an immunoengineer bridging the gap between discoveries in immunology and advances in biomaterial design to treat human disease. She has led a team at MIT developing a tumour-selective monotherapy to eliminate hard-to-treat cancers.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Pillai was featured in several media outlets, including "CNBC", "The Atlantic" and "The New York Times", to discuss vaccination, immunity and the disproportionate impact of the pandemic on vulnerable communities. Pillai received her PhD in immunobiology from Yale University and a BA in biochemistry from Regis College. Tata is a neurosurgery resident at the New York-Presbyterian Weill Cornell Medical Centre/Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre, where she helps treat the spectrum of emergency and elective neurosurgical conditions between a level-1 trauma centre and a world-renowned cancer institute.