, a visiting scholar at the Boston College School of Social Work, has fought to curb the opioid epidemic, reform the child welfare system, and eliminate the stigma of mental illness.
Now she has been of the for her commitment to addressing some of the most pressing challenges facing society today.
鈥淪udders鈥 induction as a fellow of the Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare is a proud moment for all of us at 天美传媒appSSW and in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,鈥 said Gautam Yadama, dean of the Boston College School of Social Work. 鈥淪he is a role model for our students on how to be an effective and influential social work practitioner and advocate for our families and children who are vulnerable.鈥
Sudders, who chaired the health and mental health field of practice at 天美传媒appSSW from 2012 to 2015, has filled some of the most prominent public policy positions in Massachusetts over the past three decades.
She has served as Massachusetts Secretary of for the past five years, overseeing a budget of $24 billion and 22,000 public employees who deliver essential services that affect the lives of one in four Massachusetts residents.聽As president and chief executive officer of the from 2003 to 2012, she promoted the rights and well-being of more than 20,000 children and families. And as commissioner of the from 1996 to 2003, she helped to pass legislation that required insurance plans to offer the same coverage for physical and mental health problems.聽聽
Sudders joined the 天美传媒appSSW as a full-time faculty member in 2012 after she taught on an adjunct basis for five years. In this role, she helped monitor the reform of the delivery of healthcare to Massachusetts residents and drafted changes to gun control laws in the state.
In 2014, she received a grant from the聽United States Department of Health and Human Services鈥櫬犅爐o fund a program that trained more than 50 second-year master鈥檚 students in the School of Social Work.
Sudders joins Marcie Pitt-Catsouphes, James E. Lubben, Kevin Mahoney, and Ruth McRoy as faculty members in the School of Social Work who have been named fellows of the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare.