The statement of U.S. Senator Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) follows:

ย โ€œI join the nation and the world in mourning U.S. Senator Edward M. Kennedy. He was truly gallant, both in public and in private. He was a magnificent example of grace, courage and valor. He cared about others and was modest about himself. He was a dedicated colleague, a loyal friend, and a loving father, husband, son and uncle. He kept faith with the American people. He was my friend.

ย โ€œWe were first brought together by the War on Poverty in the 1960s. Medicare had just passed and I was a young social worker in Baltimore organizing seniors to troubadour the new programs. I was invited to testify before the Senate Subcommittee on Aging, which was chaired by Senator Kennedy.ย 

ย โ€œLittle did I know then that a decade later I would be elected to the House of Representatives and have the honor of serving as a national co-chair for his 1980 Presidential campaign or introducing him at the convention.

ย โ€œTwenty years after I first met him, I was elected as a U.S. Senator from Maryland. I was just one of two women Senators and the first Democratic woman elected to the Senate in her own right. Though I was all by myself, I was never alone. Marylandโ€™s senior Senator Paul Sarbanes and Senator Kennedy were what I call my โ€˜Sir Galahads.โ€™

ย โ€œWhen I arrived, Senator Kennedy was on the Democratic Steering Committee. He wanted me to join him on the health committee and served as my precinct captain for committee assignments. He knew how to operationalize good intentions. He understood the legislative framework. We called it doing good by doing well.

ย โ€œSo by January 1987, I was on the HELP Committee, but also on Appropriations Committee because Senator Kennedy knew you can take the best ideas to create real opportunities in an authorizing bill, but it doesnโ€™t mean much unless there is money in the federal checkbook.

ย โ€œSenator Kennedy was a fierce and determined advocate for women and for equality. I absolutely know that millions of women are alive today because of what we did together in establishing an Office of Womenโ€™s Health at the NIH.

ย โ€œWe knew there was big a problem. Study after study showed women were being systematically excluded from clinical research at NIH. The famous study about aspirin and heart disease was conducted on 22,000 men, but not one woman. A study on heart disease risk factors examined 13,000 men, but not one woman. We heard about a study on the normal process of aging that didnโ€™t include women. Yet the results of these studies were being applied to both men and women.ย 

ย โ€œAfter years of getting nowhere under Republican administrations, in 1990 I said to Senator Kennedy, letโ€™s establish an Office of Womenโ€™s Health at NIH. So we took the whole legislative framework to Senator Tom Harkin who chaired the Appropriations Subcommittee that funds NIH. He put it into the NIH appropriations bill and, as the authorizer, Senator Kennedy allowed it to move forward.

ย โ€œThe impact has been profound. The Office of Womenโ€™s Health successfully lead the large scale โ€˜Womenโ€™s Health Initiativeโ€™ clinical trial in 2002. It found that the use of hormone treatment in women for symptoms of menopause lead to slightly higher breast cancer rates. After the release of the study findings, breast cancer rates dropped by 15 percent. We found definite gender differences in heart-di