podesta-emails
O'Neill Institute Colloquium - MERS: An Emerging Threat to Global Health Security - Oct 21st from 1:20-3:20pm
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Dear Colleagues,
Please join us for the O’Neill Colloquium tomorrow (Wednesday) in the Hotung Faculty Dining room at 1:20 pm. We will host a conversation about the Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome, prominently circulating in Saudi Arabia and recently causing a major outbreak in Seoul, Korea. We will be joined by Daniel Lucey, at Georgetown University Medical Center and by Professor Victor D. Cha, director of Asian Studies in the Department of Government and School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. Please find attached a short article on the subject authored by Dr. Lucey.
With good wishes, Larry
Join us for the O'Neill Institute Colloquium Wednesdays this semester from 1:20-3:20pm
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O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law Colloquium:
MERS: An Emerging Threat to Global Health Security
Wednesday, October 21st, 2015
1:20 – 3:20 p.m.
Georgetown University Law Center
Faculty Dining Room, Hotung Room 2001
550 First Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001
This session of the Colloquium will explore the issues around Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) as an global health threat. Panelists will discuss the clinical nature of the disease, the epidemiology of its spread as well as the social and political issues which have come into play in the two major outbreak areas of Saudi Arabia and South Korea, among other topics.
Panelists will include:
Daniel R. Lucey, MD, MPH worked with infectious disease and public health colleagues in five nations in the Middle East during much of 2013 related to the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS). In June 2013 he presented a treatment protocol for MERS to the FDA, spoke with colleagues at HHS, CDC, and NIH and gave presentations at the DC Department of Health and NYC DHMH. In 2015 he traveled twice to Korea to meet with colleagues during and after the 186-person MERS outbreak there. He has written about the earliest known outbreak of MERS in Jordan in April 2012, and the outbreak in Korea in 2015.
In 2014 he provided hands-on care to patients with Ebola in Sierra Leone in August, and in Liberia with MSF October-November. Dr. Lucey teaches at Georgetown University Medical Center, Law Center, and the School of Foreign Service as an Adjunct Professor. He is a senior scholar at the O'Neill Institute.
Professor Victor D. Cha is director of Asian Studies and holds the D.S. Song Chair in the Department of Government and School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. In 2009, he was named as Senior Adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, DC. He left the White House in May 2007 after serving since 2004 as Director for Asian Affairs at the National Security Council. At the White House, he was responsible primarily for Japan, the Korean peninsula, Australia/New Zealand and Pacific Island nation affairs. Dr. Cha was also the Deputy Head of Delegation for the United States at the Six Party Talks in Beijing, and received two Outstanding Service commendations during his tenure at the NSC.
He is the author of five books: 1) Alignment Despite Antagonism: The United States-Korea-Japan Security Triangle (Stanford University Press) (winner of the 2000 Ohira Book Prize), 2) Nuclear North Korea: A Debate on Engagement Strategies (Columbia University Press, 2004 with Dave Kang), 3) Beyond the Final Score: The Politics of Sport in Asia (Columbia, 2009); 4) The Impossible State: North Korea, Past and Future (HarperCollins, 2012); and 5) Powerplay: Origins of the American Alliance System in Asia (Princeton University Press, forthcoming). He has written articles on international relations and East Asia in journals including Foreign Affairs, International Security, Political Science Quarterly, Survival, International Studies Quarterly, and Asian Survey. Professor Cha is a former John M. Olin National Security Fellow at Harvard University, two-time Fulbright Scholar, and Hoover National Fellow, CISAC Fellow, and William J. Perry Fellow at Stanford University. He holds Georgetown’s Dean’s Award for teaching in 2010 and the Distinguished Research Award for 2011.
Dr. Lawrence D. Kerr is the Director for Medical Preparedness Policy in the Resilience Directorate at the White House National Security Council Staff. Dr. Kerr serves as the principal staff member responsible for coordinating policy regarding public health and medical resilience for biological events, whether the results of naturally emerging disease or deliberate release.
He previously served as the Senior Bio Advisor to the Director of the National Counterproliferation Center (NCPC) within the ODNI. Dr. Kerr advised the senior leadership on strategic plans to prevent and counter the spread of biological weapons of mass destruction in support of the National Intelligence Strategy. Before joining NCPC in April 2006, he was Director for Biodefense Policy with the White House Homeland Security Council in the Executive Office of the President (EOP). He served as Assistant Director for Homeland Security for the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and as Director of Bioterrorism, Research and Development for the Office of Homeland Security in the EOP. Dr. Kerr joined the Life Sciences division of OSTP in January 2001 where he came from his position as Chief of Transplantation, Transplantation and Immunology Branch at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Michael A. Stoto, PhD, is a Professor of Health Systems Administration and Population Health at Georgetown University. Prof. Stoto also teaches at Georgetown’s Law and Medical Schools, and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. A statistician, epidemiologist, and health services researcher, Dr. Stoto’s research includes methodological topics in epidemiology and statistics including research synthesis/meta-analysis and other analytical methods for comparative effectiveness research, population health assessment, evaluation methods, and performance measurement. His substantive research interests include public health assessment, especially the implementation of Community Health Needs Assessments (CHNAs) and public health practice, especially with regard to emergency preparedness; drug and vaccine safety; infectious disease policy; and ethical issues in research and public health practice.
He previously served as a Senior Statistician at the RAND Corporation and as the director of the Institute of Medicine’s (IOM), Board on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. Dr. Stoto has worked extensively with AcademyHealth on methods for analyzing existing electronic health data for comparative effectiveness research and quality improvement, including serving as a consultant to the Electronic Data Methods Forum, as a member of AcademyHealth’s Methods Council, and as a senior editor of the on-line journal eGEMs (Generating Evidence & Methods to improve patient outcomes).
2015 O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law Colloquium
The purpose of the Colloquium is to engage leading experts, Georgetown Law students and faculty, and interested members of the public in an enriching dialogue surrounding current and pressing issues in global health law, policy and governance. The 2015 Colloquium will address two themes. First, at a time of increasing inequality, economic uncertainty, and evolving health and other threats, how can health law and public health be used to foster security—personal, community, national, and ultimately global security that leads to healthier populations the world over? And, second, what are the roles of different stakeholders in effecting policy change and how can lawyers and others advance change through different roles, whether as government policymakers, community advocates, researchers, or litigators?
The O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University is the premier center for health law, scholarship, and policy. Its mission is to contribute to a more powerful and deeper understanding of the multiple ways in which law can be used to improve the public’s health, using objective evidence as a measure. The O’Neill Institute seeks to advance scholarship, science, research, and teaching that will encourage key decision-makers in the public, private, and civil society to employ the law as a positive tool for enabling more people in the United States and throughout the world to lead healthier lives.
The O’Neill Institute Colloquium is open to all students, faculty, staff, and interested members of the public.
The hashtag for this event is #oneillcolloquium.
For more information on O’Neill Institute events, please visit http://www.law.georgetown.edu/ oneillinstitute/.
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