Clark revolutionized the field of anthropology by being one of the first to emphasize the importance of social and cultural background in health and medicine. She used this innovative socio-cultural analysis to create what now is the Department of Anthropology, History and Social Medicine at
UCSF. Clark also co-founded the Medical Anthropology Training Program as part of a joint program between
UCSF and
UC Berkeley in 1975 and established the UCSF Multidisciplinary Training Program in Applied Gerontology in 1976. In 1980, she was the first woman and first social scientist to be named as a Faculty Research Lecturer by UCSF. She also received the Distinguished Membership Award of the
Gerontological Society of America in 1989 and the Malinowski Award of the
Society for Applied Anthropology in 1992. The Association of Anthropology, Gerontology and the Life Course created the annual “Margaret Clark Award” in 1994 to honor her commitment to mentoring younger colleagues. The award is given to the best graduate and undergraduate papers relating to anthropology and gerontology. The UCSF Department of Anthropology, History & Social Medicine created the M. Margaret Clark Memorial Fund in her honor at the time of her death in 2003, with the goal of inspiring and training future generations of medical anthropologists. UCSF began expanding the fund in 2014 to integrate new aspects, such as the annual M. Margaret Clark Memorial Lecture, in order to promote her quest for a cultural understanding of the development and practices of health and medicine. ==References==