Member Awards

One of the highlights each year during the CMDA National Convention is the presentation of the Servant of Christ, Educator, Missionary and President’s Heritage Awards. You are invited to nominate CMDA colleagues for three of these four awards, while the Missionary of the Year Award is selected by a commission.

A one-page summary of the person’s achievements and why they should be considered can be submitted to CMDA's Board of Trustees, by fax to 423-844-1017 (Attn: Board of Trustees) or mailed to CMDA, Attn: Board of Trustees, P.O. Box 7500, Bristol, TN 37621.

Nomination Criteria

2025 CMDA Member Awards

Award Christensen 2025Natcon

2025 Educator of the Year Award

Dr. Sandy Christiansen

 

“I wanted to be a doctor so I could help people. What I have found is that God has indeed used all of me: my spiritual gifts, my medical knowledge and credentials to be a bulwark to protect and defend the voiceless and banner to champion the sanctity of human life from beginning to end.”

—Dr. Sandy Christiansen

 

The Educator of the Year Award is presented annually to Christian healthcare professionals who are dedicated to using healthcare education to change the world. Because of her dedication to educating and inspiring others, Christian Medical & Dental Associations is proud to present the 2025 Educator of the Year Award to Dr. Sandy Christiansen.

 

The daughter of a Latvian World War II refugee and first generation Greek, Sandy was raised in the Lutheran church and put her full trust in Jesus as her personal Savior during college. Her journey into healthcare started early in life, when she decided to become a physician in the fifth grade. It wasn’t until college, though, that she developed the first seedlings of a focus on pro-life efforts when she became convinced human life begins at conception. She graduated from University of Maryland, College Park in 1980. She spent her first year of medical school at the St. George’s School of Medicine in Grenada, West Indies, before transferring to the Medical College of Pennsylvania, where she joined a CMDA student chapter. That student chapter was an anchor that brought dear friendships and Christian community to her life. After graduating medical school in 1986, she completed residency training in obstetrics and gynecology at the Hospital of the Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1990.

 

Before entering medical school, Sandy planned on becoming a family physician, but she discovered she enjoyed surgery and found a blend of both worlds through OB/Gyn. She recognized she was entering a mine field of moral dilemmas, but she believes God called her into that field of study. Following residency, she spent 10 years in private practice as an OB/Gyn. Right after completing her training, Sandy met and married her husband Kyle. They were blessed with three sons: Peter, and twins Daniel and Matthew. When their family moved to Maryland in the late-1990s, her work with pro-life ministry accelerated as she became involved with the local pregnancy center, first as an in-center volunteer, then as a board member, interim director and then medical director.

 

For 17 years, Dr. Christiansen has been involved with Care Net national, first as a consultant and then on staff serving as the national medical director. Care Net is a pro-life non-profit organization supporting a network of more than 1,200 pregnancy centers in the U.S. The heart of Care Net is the pro-abundant life initiative, based on John 10:10, which seeks to rescue babies from abortion and restore the family unit by engaging both pregnant mothers and the fathers, sharing the transforming truth of the gospel and connecting people to the church for growth and discipleship. In Sandy’s words, “The heart of the ministry is meeting women and men who believe abortion is the answer to their unplanned pregnancy. It is both challenging and rewarding to share the truth about abortion and about the beauty of human life made in the image of God. It is literally life and death work.”

 

In addition to her work with Care Net, Dr. Christiansen is an adjunct professor at Mount St. Mary’s University, serves as the CMDA State Representative for Maryland and Delaware and is the Maryland State Director with CMDA’s American Academy of Medical Ethics. She is also an Associate Scholar for the Charlotte Lozier Institute and is a longstanding member of the American Association of Pro-life Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Dr. Christiansen is a writer and speaker on pregnancy, abortion and Hippocratic medicine, addressing a variety of forums including legislative bodies and providing commentary to national media outlets. Her involvement with CMDA’s advocacy work has led to her being interviewed by CNN, World Magazine and others, in addition to participating in gatherings at the U.S. Supreme Court. Dr. Christiansen has dedicated her professional life to educating patients, healthcare professionals, legislators and the general public on the sanctity of human life and life-affirming alternatives to abortion to the glory of God.

 

Today, Sandy and Kyle remain grateful followers of Jesus Christ. In addition to their three sons, they have welcomed three daughters-in-law into their family, along three grandchildren, with a fourth expected this summer. In recognition of her life of academic achievement and her commitment to being a passionate advocate for the sanctity of human life from conception to natural death, CMDA proudly presents the 2025 Educator of the Year Award to Dr. Sandy Christiansen.

Award Slusher NATCON25

2025 Global Servant Award

Dr. Tina Slusher

 

“And Jesus went throughout all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and
proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and healing every disease and every affliction.”

—Matthew 9:35-36, ESV

 

The CMDA Global Servant Award exists to honor outstanding missionary healthcare professionals who give countless hours to bring healing and God’s light to those who are suffering. The global servants we recognize are instruments of God who continue to inspire others to develop a heart for missions. Christian Medical & Dental Associations is honored to present the 2025 Global Servant Award to Dr. Tina Slusher.

 

Tina’s parents met at Red Bird Mission, a Christian evangelism ministry in Kentucky. Tina and her twin brother were born premature and were not expected to survive; however, the Lord had other plans for their lives. She was raised in church along with her siblings, and she accepted Jesus as her Savior at the age of nine. She grew up loving church, attending as often as she could, participating in youth group and helping in the nursery. Tina and her family lived on a farm outside of Pineville, Kentucky, but her family traveled a great deal, thus exposing her to a much broader world. Those experiences as a child helped prepare Tina for God’s calling on her life. During college at Eastern Kentucky University, she studied hard, cramming four years of school into three before going on to attend the University of Kentucky Medical School. After graduating from medical school in 1980, she headed to Oklahoma to complete residency in pediatrics. She returned to Kentucky for seven years in the late 1980s, a time when their private practice did everything, from ventilating newborns to doing exchange transfusions and more. During this time, Tina went on her first short-term mission trip to Costa Rica, followed by a trip to Nigeria two years later. God made it clear she was to leave private practice, so she left to complete a fellowship in pediatric critical care with time in the neonatal intensive care unit in Dallas, Texas.

 

Dr. Slusher began developing international collaborations in 1989 in Nigeria when she first went to a small mission hospital in rural Nigeria. Early on she faced problems, including severe neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, neonatal tetanus, neonatal nutrition, infections in the neonate and beyond, malaria and a host of respiratory problems. She learned device and protocol innovations from her colleagues in Nigeria, while she also helped educate students, resident doctors and nurses. They learned from each other, as they sought to provide excellent medical care with limited resources. Her work slowly expanded to include both mission and government hospitals and numerous countries beyond Nigeria. Over the last 36 years, she has built an extensive network of collaborators, including researchers, educators and clinicians in several low- to middle-income countries in Africa, Europe, Asia, Central America and in the U.S. and other high-income countries. These collaborations led to multiple opportunities to educate, research and provide clinical care with students, residents and healthcare professionals around the globe. Additionally, throughout her career and as part of the Global Pediatrics Program at the University of Minnesota, she has lectured in more than 15 countries and had the privilege of mentoring scores of trainees, faculty and healthcare professionals in their global health work.

 

Dr. Slusher has been involved in CMDA since she was a student at the University of Kentucky Medical School. That student chapter was active and influential during this period of time, and some of her lifelong friends came from CMDA. After beginning her missionary career in Sub-Saharan Africa, she began attending the Continuing Medical and Dental Education Conferences in Kenya in 1992 and has been attending ever since. She has served on the CMDE Commission since 2006 as the Children’s Ministry Team liaison. She began lecturing at the conference in the late 1990s and continues to lecture today. After relocating to Minnesota in 2008, she became active in a local CMDA community group and CMDA’s Women Physicians & Dentists in Christ. She’s also spoken at multiple conferences, including the annual Global Missions Health Conference in Louisville, Kentucky.

 

In her own words, “I have truly enjoyed teaching. I continue to do a combination of research, teaching and clinical care in Sub-Saharan Africa. I love my African family and feel especially grateful to them for all they have taught me.” In recognition of her devotion to cross-cultural service and her service as a healthcare missionary, CMDA proudly presents the 2025 Global Servant Award to Dr. Tina Slusher.

Award Rasanen NATCON25

2025 President's Heritage Award

Dr. Päivi Räsänen

 

“Remember those earlier days after you had received the light, when you endured in a great conflict full of suffering. Sometimes you were publicly exposed to insult and persecution; at other times you stood side by side with those who were so treated…So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded.”

—Hebrews 10:32-36, NIV

 

The President’s Heritage Award is given to individuals whose lives and work support the mission of Christian Medical & Dental Associations. This year, CMDA is honored to present the 2025 President’s Heritage Award to Dr. Päivi Räsänen.

 

Päivi Räsänen grew up in Eastern Finland, right next to the Soviet border. She studied the Bible as a young girl; yet, just behind the well-closed borders of the Soviet Union, the Bible was a forbidden book. Päivi recalled how Christians who lived behind the Iron Curtain shared how significant it was that Finnish Christians smuggled Bibles across the border and supported Soviet Christians in countless ways during that time of persecution. It’s a significant introduction to her life’s story, which includes her own time of persecution in her home country.

 

Päivi started her journey in healthcare in 1978 when she began studying medicine at the University of Helsinki, which is the oldest and largest university in Finland. After graduating in 1984, she worked in internal medicine and occupational health. In the early 1990s, her career took a different turn when she ran for parliament in Finland. Since then, Dr. Räsänen has had a long and diverse career in Finnish politics. Currently, she is serving her eighth term in the Finnish Parliament, where she serves on the Social Affairs and Health Committee. Previously, she served as Chairperson of the Christian Democrats and as Minister of the Interior from 2011 to 2015. In her time serving in politics, she has also published several books, where she reflects deeply on major questions of life and society. Dr. Räsänen has written about abortion, euthanasia and marriage, discussing them from the viewpoint of Christian ethics and faith. Päivi’s family is an important source of support for her. She is married to Dr. Niilo Räsänen, a Doctor of Theology who works as a high school principal. They have five children and 12 grandchildren. The balance of family life, work and public duties, along with her strong convictions, shaped Dr. Räsänen into a courageous leader who stands by her values, even when they provoke intense debate.

 

In 2019, Dr. Räsänen posted a tweet questioning the leadership of her church regarding its decision to sponsor an LGBT “Pride” event. The tweet included an image of Bible text. As a result, Dr. Räsänen found herself in a Finnish Supreme Court, accused of having violated Finnish hate speech laws for voicing her opinion on marriage and human sexuality in the tweet, as well as in a pamphlet she wrote for her church in 2004 entitled Male and Female He Created Them. For the last six years, Päivi has found herself on trial, going through a host of judicial twists and turns, all to protect her religious rights. She has been quoted as saying, “I will stand for what I believe and what I have written about these things, because they are a matter of conviction. Not only an opinion.”

 

Dr. Räsänen is represented by Alliance Defending Freedom International in this case. Of her so-called “Bible Trial,” Alliance for Defending Freedom International Executive Director Paul Coleman warned, “This is a watershed case in the story of Europe’s creeping censorship. In a democratic Western nation in 2024, nobody should be on trial for their faith—yet…we have seen something akin to a ‘heresy’ trial, where Christians are dragged through court for holding beliefs that differ from the approved orthodoxy of the day.”

 

Dr. Räsänen stands ready to defend her rights on behalf of the millions of people in her country. In her own words, she said, “In my case the investigation has lasted almost six years and has involved untrue accusations, several long police interrogations totaling more than 13 hours, preparations for court hearings, the District Court hearing and a hearing in the Court of Appeal. This was not just about my opinions, but about everyone’s freedom of expression. I hope that with the ruling of the Supreme Court, others would not have to undergo the same ordeal. I have considered it a privilege and an honor to defend freedom of expression, which is a fundamental right in a democratic state.” In recognition of her extraordinary determination and courage in the face of extreme adversity, CMDA is pleased to present the 2025 President’s Heritage Award to Dr. Päivi Räsänen.

Award Wilder NATCON25

2025 Servant of Christ Award

Dr. Mary Wilder

 

 

“The greatest among you shall be your servant. Whoever exalts himself
will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.”

—Matthew 23:11-12, ESV

 

Established in 1972, the Servant of Christ Award honors those whose careers exemplify commitment to healthcare excellence along with a stalwart faith in Jesus Christ. This year, CMDA is honored to present the 2025 Servant of Christ Award to Dr. Mary Wilder.

 

Born in Los Angeles, California, Mary grew up in the Imperial Valley. Before her junior year of high school, her family moved to the Portland, Oregon area, where she would later lay the foundation for an exceptional medical career. After attending Portland State University, she became one of only two women accepted into the University of Oregon Medical School each year. Despite her brilliance, she constantly faced sexism. She endured daily reminders from students and professors that she was “taking a man’s seat.” The school stopped posting grades once Mary started school, because she consistently ranked in the top of her class. However, her academic excellence did not shield her from discrimination. After her third year, the registrar informed her she had flunked out after the chairman of the department had unilaterally expelled her. Determined, Mary appealed to a special committee aimed to reduce student attrition. She had to reapply to medical school, retake all entrance exams and repeat her junior year. Despite these hurdles, Mary’s second entrance into medical school went smoother after she met her new attending, Dr. Leonard Ritzmann, who served as President of CMDA in the late 1970s and also as a campus advisor at Oregon Health & Science University for 45 years. Under his guidance, Mary flourished. She often referred to his mentorship as “a gracious gift from God.”

 

Initially hoping to specialize in obstetrics and gynecology to serve as a “baby doctor” in Africa, Dr. Wilder instead matched in a neurosurgery program. Her five years of general surgical training equipped her with advanced surgical skills. Mary often quipped, “Anyone can deliver babies. I’m a neurosurgeon.” This training proved invaluable when she later performed thousands of vesicovaginal fistula surgeries, changing the lives of countless women. After completing her training, she applied for a missionary position with CB International, now World Venture. However, they informed her there was no need for a neurosurgeon anywhere on the African continent. Instead, they invited her to Pakistan to serve at Shikarpur Christian Hospital, a hospital for just women, founded in 1957. In her characteristic humor, Dr. Wilder asked the CB board, “What part of Africa is Pakistan in?” In her memoir of her time in Pakistan entitled Dust and Devotion, Mary credited the real ministry to two women from Punjab who daily shared the gospel with patients and their families. These women prayed fervently, led many to Christ and ministered tirelessly to hospital staff and the surrounding community. “Only God knows how many of those women will be in heaven with us as a result of their faithful ministry,” Mary wrote.

 

Over the last 30 years, Mary has often spoken at various CMDA meetings and churches, summoning young healthcare professionals to consider serving Jesus in healthcare here and abroad. She is loved by those who hear her story for her unfading quick wit and love for Jesus. On more than one occasion, CMDA staff have seen her participate on mission panels where, at the end of the meeting, an entire room of college and medical students ignore everyone else on the panel only to surround Dr. Mary to hear more of her wit and witness. Until recently, Mary attended the CMDA West Coast Winter Conference annually, talking with students and telling mission stories. She was truly a favorite of all the students and other attendees.

 

After 20 years of a varied surgical and medical career in Pakistan, Mary returned to the U.S. to care for her ailing mother following her father’s death. She joined the faculty at Western Seminary, where she taught in the Intercultural Studies Department for 35 years, influencing hundreds of students. Today, Dr. Mary Wilder resides in an adult care center, her small bedroom bustling with visitors. Her enduring influence and sharp mind are matched only by her humility and faith. Her favorite line is, “Faith is trusting God with the consequences of your obedience.” She often points to a sign on her wall that reads, “God is still in charge,” a testament to the unwavering trust that has guided her life. In recognition of a life focused on serving God no matter where His call leads, CMDA proudly presents the 2025 Servant of Christ Award to Dr. Mary Wilder.