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ADOLFO
CORREA, MD, MPH, PhD, is an epidemiologist at the
National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. He is also and adjunct
Associate Professor at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at
Johns Hopkins University and an adjunct Professor at the Rollins
School of Public Health at Emory University.
BACKGROUND:
Dr. Correa received a B.S. degree in chemistry from San Diego State
University, an M.S. in chemistry and an M.D. from the University
of California San Diego, and an MPH and a PhD from the Johns Hopkins
University School of Hygiene and Public Health. He also trained
in Pediatrics at the University of California San Francisco and
San Francisco General Hospital, CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence
Service, and General Preventive Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Hygiene and Public Health. Before joining the Centers
for Disease Control in 1998, he was on the faculty of the Department
of Epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene
and Public Health. Adolfo’s research interests have included
parental occupational and environmental exposures and birth defects
and other pregnancy outcomes. He is currently engaged in several
studies of birth defects, including surveillance, risk and prevention
factors, and mortality. Adolfo was a senior advisor to the President’s
Task Force on Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks to Children,
a chair of the Population Sciences work group of the Task Force
on The Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease in Children of the National
Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, NIH, and a member of the Department
of Veterans Affairs Advisory Committee on Former Prisoners of War.
He is a member of the Interagency Coordinating Committee of the
National Children’s Study.
H. IRENE HALL, PHD, MPH,
is a Senior Epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention, Division
of HIV/AIDS Prevention, and Associate Editor of the Annals of Epidemiology.
BACKGROUND:
Dr. Hall has served on the ACE Publications Committee since
2000, served as Chair of the abstract review committee in 2002 and
2003, and serves as Chair of the poster committee in 2004.
Dr. Hall received
her B.S. from Boston University and earned her master’s and
doctoral degrees in epidemiology from the Yale University School
of Public Health. She joined the Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry in 1991, where she conducted studies related to
hazardous substances released into the environment and surveillance
on the health effects related to acute hazardous substance releases.
In 1995, Dr. Hall joined CDC’s Division of Cancer Prevention
and Control in the Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion and was appointed Chief of the Surveillance Research Section
in the Cancer Surveillance Branch in 1998. Her research focused
on methods used by children and adults to protect from sun exposure,
self-reported cancer screening and the validity of recall of screening,
the burden of cancer in special populations, patterns of cancer
care, and the quality of surveillance data. She is an expert in
surveillance methods and administered CDC’s research program
for the National Program of Cancer Registries. In 2002, she was
invited to join CDC’s HIV Incidence and Case Surveillance
Branch, where she introduced new statistical methods to describe
the HIV epidemic. Her current research interests include the social
determinants of HIV infection.
Dr. Hall has
served on various advisory committees for the DOT, NCI, FDA, American
Cancer Society, and North American Association of Central Cancer
Registries, as well as review committees for the NCI, VA, and Health
Canada. She has also served as consultant to WHO for polio radication.
ROBERT
MCKEOWN, PhD, is Professor of Epidemiology, Associate
Chair and Graduate Director for Epidemiology in the Department of
Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Arnold School of Public Health, University
of South Carolina. BACKGROUND:
Dr. McKeown has been a member of the ACE Ethics and Standards of
Practice Committee since 1997 and chair since 2001. He is leading
the consultation team for the first ethics consultation by ACE.
In addition to an undergraduate degree in chemistry, he holds the
PhD in philosophical theology from Duke University and PhD in epidemiology
from the University of South Carolina. Dr. McKeown is immediate
past-chair of the Epidemiology Section of the American Public Health
Association, has chaired at various times that Section’s Program,
Awards, and Nominations Committees, and has served on the Governing
Council. He is currently on the Program Committee for the upcoming
Second North American Congress of Epidemiology in 2006. He is also
a member of the Society for Epidemiologic Research. Dr. McKeown’s
research interests are psychiatric epidemiology, with a focus on
children and adolescents, perinatal epidemiology, women’s
health, and public health ethics. Current projects include NIH-funded
research on depression and diabetes in youth, a CDC-funded project
on ADHD in young children, a Duke Endowment-funded intervention
to enhance well-being in multi-ethnic groups of older adult in faith
communities, an emerging coalition to develop interventions to prevent
recurrent preterm births, and several public health ethics projects.
His teaching has focused on epidemiologic methods, ethics, and psychiatric
epidemiology. He is the recipient of the Excellence in Teaching
Award, Faculty Service Award, and Distinguished Alumnus Award for
the School of Public Health.
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ROBERTA
B. NESS, MD, MPH, is Chair, Department of Epidemiology,
and Professor of Epidemiology, Medicine, and Obstetrics and Gynecology,
University of Pittsburgh. She is a member of the ACE Policy Committee
and will Chair the Policy Committee starting in 2005.
BACKGROUND:
Dr. Ness is an expert in women’s health and longstanding Director
of the Women’s Health Program, University of Pittsburgh. Her
research has focused on the etiology of adverse reproductive outcomes
and the relationship between reproductive events and later chronic
disease. Some of the over twenty federally funded projects she has
directed include studies of the relationship between reproductive
and gynecologic experiences and cancer outcomes; the role pre-pregnancy
cardiovascular risk plays in causing preeclampsia, and the consequences
of sexually transmitted diseases. Dr. Ness edited one of the first
epidemiologic texts devoted to women’s health, Health and
Disease among Women and was a section editor for the award-winning
text, Women and Health. She received her MD from Cornell University
and her MPH from Columbia, and is board-certified in internal medicine.
Her contributions to science have been recognized by elected membership
in the prestigious American Society for Clinical Investigation and
American Epidemiologic Society. She serves as a standing member
of the NIH review group ECD-1 and an editor of Sexually Transmitted
Disease Reviews for the World Health Organization. She has served
on advisory committees for NICHD, NIAID, Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality, Centers for Disease Control, and Department of Defense.
EDWARD
TRAPIDO, SC.D. is Associate Director of the Epidemiology
and Genetics Research Program, in the Division of Cancer Control
and Population Sciences, at the National Cancer Institute.
BACKGROUND:
Dr. Trapido earned an M.S.P.H. in parasitology from UNC Chapel Hill(1974),
and holds Sc.M. and Sc.D. degrees from Harvard (1981).
Dr. Trapido
formerly was Professor and Vice Chair of the Department of Epidemiology
and Public Health, University of Miami School of Medicine and directed
the M.P.H. and Ph.D. programs. He also was Associate Director for
Cancer Prevention and Control at the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer
Center. As a PI, he directed several major cancer control research
and education programs at the University of Miami, including the
Cancer Information Service covering Florida, Puerto Rico, and the
USVI, the Florida Cancer Data System, the Florida Comprehensive
Cancer Control Initiative, the Early Breast Cancer Detection Program,
and Redes En Acción, which focuses on Hispanic cancer prevention
and control. He also was Director of the Tobacco Research and Evaluation
Coordinating Center and was a consultant to the Florida and Minnesota
Tobacco Programs, which have received nationwide acclaim for reducing
teenage smoking. Apart from cancer, Dr. Trapido has also worked
in research and interventions on HIV, substance abuse, and aging.
Dr. Trapido’s
program at the NCI manages a comprehensive program of grant-supported,
population-based research intended to increase the understanding
of cancer etiology and prevention. 400 research grants and cooperative
agreements (totaling $200 million) are supported. His program oversees
research in gene discovery, gene-gene and gene-environment interactions,
environmental epidemiology, including tobacco, occupational exposures,
energy balance, hormones and medications, infectious diseases; and
clinical epidemiology, including health disparities, and survivorship.
He also is a member of the DCCPS Health Disparities Research Committee,
the Trans-NIH Tobacco Research Group, the U.S.-Japanese Cancer Consortium,
and the World Trade Center Late Emergent Diseases Working Group.
For the past
two years, Dr. Trapido has been involved with the planning of the
ACE annual meeting, and has further committed his Program to provide
ongoing financial support.
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