Dr. Jacqueline Pettersen wins second international research prize

Dr. Jacqueline Pettersen, Associate Professor at the Northern Medical Program at the University of Northern British Columbia, has been awarded the Dr. Wolfgang Hevert Prize 2018 for a proposed study on vitamins D and K2 in relation to cognition.

Dr. Pettersen, also Associate Professor in the Division of Neurology in UBC’s Department of Medicine, is the first researcher from North America to receive the prize since its inception in 2006.

It is the second international award this year for Dr. Pettersen who received the Fritz Wörwag research prize in Berlin this past May. She received the Dr. Wolfgang Hevert Prize in Baden-Baden, Germany on November 3 at the medical congress Medizinische Woche (Medicine Week).

Dr. Jacqueline Pettersen, Associate Professor at the Northern Medical Program at the University of Northern British Columbia and Associate Professor in the Division of Neurology in UBC’s Department of Medicine

The prize, which includes an endowment of 10,000 Euros, is awarded to a planned scientific study which seeks to clarify questions in the field of natural medicine and associated therapies. It is provided through the Hevert Foundation, in conjunction with Hevert-Arzneimittel, a German company specializing in natural remedies. Recipients are selected by an independent panel of scientific experts.

“This will be the first study to directly assess the effects of vitamin K2 supplementation in conjunction with vitamin D on cognition,” said Dr. Pettersen, a cognitive/behavioural neurologist. “This project will build upon my previous research on vitamin D and cognition. It is certainly validating that internationally recognized experts in the field feel that the study is very worthwhile.”

Dr. Pettersen’s proposed trial will look at evaluating the effects on cognition of vitamin D alone, and vitamin D combined with vitamin K2, as compared to a placebo control, in normal healthy adults.

“Vitamin D and Vitamin K2 are known to work in a complementary fashion in terms of bone mineralization and prevention of arterial calcification and related atherosclerosis,” explained Dr. Pettersen. “There is some suggestion that K2 may also have beneficial effects in the brain and on cognition and these effects may possibly be increased by vitamin D.”

The prize is awarded every two years and is dedicated to the work of the late Dr. Wolfgang Hevert, who was a doctor for naturopathy and a pharmacist.