Biographical Sketches - Annual Health Braintrust Summit
Transcription
Biographical Sketches - Annual Health Braintrust Summit
Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/ CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner April 20–21, 2015 Biographical Sketches Lilyana Amezcua, MD Dr. Lilyana Amezcua is an assistant professor of Neurology at the University of Southern California (USC). She attended University of California, Irvine and Jefferson Medical College, in Philadelphia, PA. She went on to train as a resident and was chief resident of neurology. She then was awarded a Multiple Sclerosis Fellowship by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. She has received various research awards including a young investigator award by Race to Erase MS and a KL2 by the Clinical Translational Science Institute. Dr. Amezcua’s current work focuses on unraveling the ethnic contributions, including genetic ancestry and non-biological factors affecting MS and MS disability. She is a council member to the NMSS Hispanic Advisory board and was involved in the development of the Wellness center at the Historic Los Angeles County General Hospital. She currently serves as the medical director of the MS Comprehensive Care Clinics. Phyllis Arthur, MBA Phyllis Arthur is Senior Director for Vaccines, Immunotherapeutics and Diagnostics Policy at the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO). In this role Ms. Arthur is responsible for working with member companies in vaccines, molecular diagnostics and bio-defense on policy, legislative and regulatory issues. Ms Arthur joined BIO in July 2009 as the Director of Healthcare Regulatory Affairs. Prior to joining BIO, she worked in numerous marketing and sales positions for Merck & Co Inc in their Vaccine Division. Over her 16 year career in vaccines Ms Arthur launched several exciting new vaccines in the United States and internationally, including the first HPV vaccine GARDASIL. During her years in Marketing she worked closely with clinical and academic thought leaders in infectious diseases, oncology and public health. In addition, Ms Arthur also led a large vaccine sales organization of over 75 representatives and managers covering 14 states. Before graduate school, Ms Arthur worked as a research assistant for two economists at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC. There she conducted economic analyses related to savings and investment policies for the OECD countries. Ms Arthur received her B.A. in 1987 in Economics and International Politics from Goucher College and her M.B.A. in 1991 from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. Ray Michael Bridgewater Mr. Bridgewater is the President and CEO of the Assembly of Petworth, a non-profit, culturally diverse and multi-ethnic community empowerment organization serving the metropolitan Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Washington area around issues concerning health disparities, technology, workforce and community development.. He has guided and directed over several major community development organizations whose work is concentrated in business development, institutional capacity building and public policy intervention strategies designed to eliminate the disadvantages of multi-generational poverty and disinvestment of inner city communities. He is involved in many diverse programs, united by a common theme of providing health, education and social services for underserved, at-risk populations of the District of Columbia including: low achieving youth, ex-offenders, welfare recipients in need of job training, mothers, fathers, infants, children, families and seniors in need of healthcare. Mr. Bridgewater plays a significant role in overseeing operations of and bringing community resources to a number of projects such as: the March of Dimes Mama and Baby Bus – a pre-natal mobile unit and the NICU project at the Children National Medical Center; Howard University Prostate Cancer and Diabetes Telehealth Mobile Unit; WUSA TV-9 Grassroot and Media Campaign around Men’s Health Initiative (prostate cancer); National Minority Organ Tissue Transplant Education Program (MOTTEP); Telehealth Hypertension and Kidney Project; National Medical Association Diabetes Education Program ;University of the District of Columbia/Emergency Management System (UDC/EMS) Academy and Cadet Program – a bilingual training and certification of EMS cadets and the Assistant Technology Project – developing a multi-media job training and career development program for the developmentally disabled, senior and veterans population. Virginia A. Caine, MD As director of the Marion County Public Health Department, Virginia A. Caine, M.D., has worked tirelessly to promote and advance public health through innovative programs and unprecedented collaborations. Dr. Caine, one of the Nations’ premier public health practitioners, is the past president of the American Public Health Association, the nation’s oldest and largest public health organization, and is an Associate Professor of Medicine for the Infectious Disease Division of the Indiana University School of Medicine. She has appeared on the CBS Evening News for her expertise regarding sexually transmitted diseases and NBC Evening News for H1N1. Dr. Caine is responsible for coordinating Marion County’s public health response in the event of an emergency and she tapped her vast emergency preparedness to expertly coordinate the county’s H1N1 activities where nearly 118,000 school age children were immunized. Indianapolis was one of the first two cities in the U.S. to receive the nasal mist for H1N1. Along with the Indianapolis Patient Safety Coalition, she helped implement the recent Influenza Patient Restriction Visitor Policy for the Indianapolis hospitals to prevent any influenza outbreak. Her boundless energy, vision and drive to serve people, especially disadvantaged areas, have led Dr. Caine to have her fingerprints on numerous projects. She set up the first countywide HIV/AIDS integrated health care delivery system involving major hospitals, community health centers, social service agencies, and the first HIV dental clinic. Her efforts around HIV/AIDS received national recognition from the White House in 2012 as the “best of the best” for the Ryan White HIV/AIDS programs. Dr. Caine is the founding member of a collaborative effort among hospitals and other health entities that developed the nation’s best and nationally recognized Indiana Health Information Exchange. 2 Eleventh Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Dr. Caine is an innovative, inspiring leader who has dedicated her career as both physician and public servant to protecting and improving the health of her community. She has advanced the field of public health and served the residents of Indianapolis and Marion County well. Amanda D. Castel, MD, MPH Dr. Amanda Castel is an Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health and Co-Director of the Masters in Science Public Health Microbiology and Emerging Infectious Diseases program. She is a medical epidemiologist with board certifications in pediatrics and preventive medicine and completed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Epidemic Intelligence Service program. Dr. Castel’s research interests include identifying interventions to maximize adherence to preexposure prophylaxis, assessing outcomes along the HIV care continuum including routine testing expansion, and developing interventions to increase engagement in care, adherence, and viral suppression. Since 2006, Dr. Castel has provided technical and epidemiologic expertise to the DC Department of Health's HIV/AIDS Administration through a Public Health-Academic Partnership and through the Enhanced Comprehensive HIV Prevention Planning Initiative. Through these partnership activities, she often uses routinely collected testing and HIV surveillance data to measure population-based outcomes, such as community viral load. In addition to her health department activities, Dr. Castel is the Principal Investigator of several studies including the DC Cohort, a NIH-funded public health research database which aims to follow over 10,000 HIVinfected individuals receiving care in the District of Columbia, and several studies looking at barriers and facilitators to engagement in HIV care. Dr. Castel has also conducted international HIV/AIDS research, teaches courses on infectious diseases including HIV, and is a volunteer attending physician at Children's National Medical Center in the Special Immunology Clinic of the Infectious Disease Department. Magdalena Castro Lewis As the Vice President for Programs, Magdalena Castro Lewis provides oversight of the National Alliance for Hispanic Health’s (the Alliance’s) national, multi-year programs in the areas of disease prevention, health promotion, and technical assistance to community-based organizations, health care professionals and communities. In addition, she manages the Alliance’s helplines: The National Hispanic Prenatal Helpline and Su Familia: The National Hispanic Family Health Helpline that provide callers with free, reliable information and referrals to health care services in their communities. Major multi-site multi-year initiatives are Let’s Talk about Cancer; Nuestras Familias: Medicaid and CHIP for Hispanic Children; Hypertension Control is in Your Hands; and La Promesa: Medicare Diabetes Preventive Care Benefits. Another important initiative carried out under this Center was the La Promesa (The Promise): Delivering the Medicare Message to Hispanics, which was the Alliance's effort to ensure that Hispanics who have Medicare may take advantage of the new Medicare benefits. During her sixteen-year tenure at the Alliance, Ms. Castro Lewis has Directed the Vacunas para la familia: Immunization for All Ages –– Vaccines for the family––, Moving Forward: CHIP for Hispanic Children, Caring for Hispanics: Culturally Competent Systems of Care, and other initiatives on prenatal care and disabilities. Ms. Castro Lewis' professional interest has increasingly focused on efforts to improve the health and education status of the Hispanic community in the United States. She has extensive experience developing culturally and linguistically proficient health education materials for Hispanics and contributing to the development of national and community-based partnerships geared to improving the health and education of Hispanic families. 3 Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches She received a licentiate degree in Sociology from La Salle University, Bogotá, Colombia, and performed graduate work in social-educational research at the Unversidad Pedagógica de Colombia. Daniel Chaput, MM Daniel Chaput is a Public Health Policy Analyst at the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology in Washington D.C. Daniel has dual training background and experience in public health and information technology, plus having worked at the State and Local Health Departments for several years, he also brings in a unique perspective to multiple projects and initiatives at the ONC. He co-leads the Public Health Tiger Team (PHTT) focused on Structured Data Capture (SDC) and works collaboratively with CDC Electronic Health Record (EHR) Meaningful Use (MU) Team to help the State/Local Health Departments, Healthcare Providers, Vendors and Health IT developers, resolve the technical implementation challenges related to submission of MU related data to Public Health. On multiple occasions, he has shared his knowledge with the attendees from across the nation on- Joint PH Forum & CDC Nationwide Call, PH-EHR Vendor Collaboration Initiative Call, Community of Practice for leveraging Federal Funding Participation and many more. He provides technical support for public health agencies related to the CMS Meaningful Use public health objectives; project support for CDC funded pilot projects to enable inter-jurisdiction exchange of immunization data and a patient portal for immunization data; and represents public health in policy and technical offices in ONC. His background includes positions in IT management and architecture in financial institutions, manufacturing, software, and consulting companies. As a public health informatician he has addressed public health business problems utilizing an IT toolkit including statistics, system and software design, and database management in addition to his management experience. His public health assignments and projects have been at, and across jurisdictional levels including local, state, national, and international levels. Luther T. Clark, MD, FACC, FACP Dr. Luther T. Clark is the Global Director, Scientific Medical and Patient Perspective (SMPP) for Cardiovascular Diseases in the Office of the Chief Medical Officer (OCMO) at Merck & Co. In this role, he supports the needs of the CMO by (1) gathering internal and external scientific and medical information to assist with decision-making at the highest levels and (2) collaborating across Merck to help increase the voice of patients, directly and indirectly into decision-making across the enterprise. Prior to his appointment to this position on December 1, 2014, he was the Global Director for Scientific Affairs (GDSA) for Cardiovascular & Atherosclerosis at Merck. In the GDSA role, Dr. Clark led the development and execution of the Cardiovascular Scientific Leadership Strategy, led the Cardiovascular & Atherosclerosis Global Scientific Affairs Teams (GSATs) and chaired the Merck Investigator Initiated Studies Program (MISP-RC) for Cardiovascular Diseases. He is a key member of the team that champions the OCMO’s Health Care Equities Strategic Initiative (including promotion of health literacy and research diversity) and chairs the Health Literacy Investigator Initiated Studies Research Committee. Dr. Clark joined Merck in 2007. Prior to joining Merck, he was Chief of the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at SUNY Downstate Medical Center and Kings County Hospital Center, Brooklyn, New York, as well as director and principal investigator of the NIH-supported Brooklyn Health Disparities Research Center. Dr. Clark earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from Harvard College and his Medical degree from Harvard Medical School. He has authored more than 100 publications, edited and was principal contributor to the textbook, Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes (McGraw-Hill 2007). 4 Eleventh Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Dr. Clark is a Fellow of the American College of Cardiology (FACC) and the American College of Physicians (FACP), a member of the Board of Directors of the Founders Affiliate of the American Heart Association and a member of the Association of Black Cardiologists. He is also currently a member of the Clinician Workgroup of the National Quality Forum’s Measures Advisory Partnership (MAP). Marla Dalton, PE, CAE Marla Dalton is the Executive Director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID), a non-profit 501 (c)(3) organization dedicated to educating the public and healthcare professionals about the causes, treatment, and prevention of infectious diseases across the lifespan. Dalton joined NFID in 2010 as Senior Director, Education and Public Outreach, responsible for developing and implementing strategies to integrate public and professional education on infectious diseases, expanding strategic partnerships and coalitions including more than 50 partner organizations, and managing communications outreach initiatives including social media and website properties. Dalton brings her passion for improving public health along with more than 20 years of experience in business management, marketing, and public affairs including various leadership positions in the non-profit sector. Prior to joining NFID, she served as Senior Vice President of Education and Consulting Services at the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. (APIC) where she was responsible for the development and management of APIC’s educational programs (live and online) and products as well as APIC Consulting Services, Inc., a wholly-owned, for-profit subsidiary. Prior to joining APIC, Dalton was Executive Vice President of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) Industry Leaders Council and Executive Director of The Infrastructure Security Partnership. Dalton is a certified association executive (CAE), a member of the American Society of Association Executives, and a registered professional engineer in the Commonwealth of Virginia. She earned a bachelor of science in civil and environmental engineering from Cornell University College of Engineering and a certificate in non-profit organization management from the US Chamber of Commerce Institute for Organization Management. Nina DeLorenzo Nina DeLorenzo, vice president of Government Affairs Strategy and Public Policy for AbbVie, is a communications and public affairs professional with more than 20 years of private sector, political, and government experience. In her current role, she leads a team that develops AbbVie’s public stances on critical public policy issues and creates strategies that shape a more favorable public policy environment for AbbVie’s business interests globally. Her prior pharmaceutical experience includes roles in public affairs at Pfizer Inc, international public affairs at Schering-Plough Corp. (now Merck), and at the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), where she appeared on television, radio, and in print as a spokeswoman for the trade association in Washington, DC. Ms. DeLorenzo served in the administration of President George W. Bush, working in the White House Coalition Information Center at the outset of the war on terror, and in the Bureau of International Information Programs at the U.S. Department of State. Prior to this service, Ms. DeLorenzo held political and communications roles in Republican politics, including positions on the U.S. Senate campaigns of former U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham. She also worked for Abraham in the U.S. Senate. 5 Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Ms. DeLorenzo holds a BA in Government and International Relations from the University of Notre Dame and an MA in International Relations from the University of Chicago. A Michigan native, she now resides in Lake Forest, Illinois. Chris Draft When the game is over and the stadium lights are turned off, Chris Draft, former NFL linebacker, suits up to play the positions of community activist and founder of the Chris Draft Family Foundation (CDFF). Chris’s mission in life is focused on striving to make a positive difference in the lives of youth and in the community as he leads by example both on and off the field. In 2006, Chris established his Atlanta-based foundation with the vision of empowering families to live healthy lifestyles. The Chris Draft Family Foundation’s seven initiatives are Asthma Team™, Character Team™, Draft Picks™, Get Checked and Get Fit™, Literacy Leaders™, Community Improvement, and Military Appreciation. Through the foundation’s seven pillars, thousands of youth, adults, parents, and families are impacted annually. The Chris Draft Family Foundation later established the Team Draft initiative. Created by Chris and his late wife Keasha during her year-long struggle with lung cancer, Team Draft hopes that her valiant fight to live, love, laugh, and smile will give hope and comfort to people around the world. Team Draft is working to save lives by changing the face of lung cancer. Chris defines his life’s work as both a privilege and a responsibility that has enabled him to serve as a leading role model nationwide. His unwavering passion and dedication for making a difference began with strong values and ethics he and his brother learned from their parents Rose and Tony Draft. Those characteristics have been instrumental on his road to success at Stanford University, where he earned a Bachelor of Science in Economics. Not only did Chris excel in the classroom, he also excelled on the field, becoming a four-year letter winner on the Stanford football team and a two year member of the baseball team. Chris, who suffers from asthma, is the National Spokesman for the National Lieutenant Governor’s Association’s “Winning with Asthma” program and is involved in national campaigns with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the American Lung Association and the NFL Players Association. He also serves as the National Ambassador for the Parent Teacher Association (PTA), an official champion of the Alliance for a Healthier Generation, and the regional spokesman of the Midwest Dairy Association. Draft has also served on the Board of Advisors for the Atlanta NFL Youth Education Town (NFL/YET) Boys and Girls Club for three years and remains involved as an active member of the Friends of the NFL/YET. The 13-year NFL veteran has received a number of awards and honors for his tireless work in the community, including his selection as Man of the Year by both the St. Louis Rams and the Carolina Panthers and two time finalist for the prestigious Byron “Whizzer” White Award, which recognizes outstanding community service. In addition to his numerous accolades, Do You Want to Play Catch?, aims to inspire children and their families to spend time together while living healthy, active lives. Traci Thompson Ferguson, MD Dr. Ferguson is the vice president of clinical services management and is responsible for implementation and adherence of enterprise medical policy, medical expense initiatives within the department, and oversight and mentorship of the utilization management medical directors, who make utilization management determinations and support full compliance with regulatory and contracted government customers. Traci joined WellCare in 2010 as the Corporate Medical Director. Since then, she has held several clinical leadership roles of increasing responsibility with the company, serving as the 6 Eleventh Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Senior Market Medical Director of Georgia, Lead Corporate Medical Director and Senior Corporate Medical Director of Utilization Management prior to accepting her current position in February 2014. Traci came to WellCare from her position as the Locum Tenens Hospitalist at Weatherby Healthcare where her experience included adhering to evidence-based clinical guidelines in the management of complex medical and surgical situations. Her previous roles include Hospital Medicine Medical Director at Team Health Inc., and Program Medical Director, Lead Hospitalist Physician and Team Hospitalist Physician at Cogent Healthcare of Pensacola and Fort Myers. Traci earned a bachelor’s degree from Georgetown University, and a doctor of medicine degree from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. She served as both a faculty member and clinical instructor at the University of Maryland Medical Center and at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. As a board certified internal medicine physician, she actively worked in hospitals on various quality initiatives and process improvement projects before transitioning to medical management in 2010. Traci is board certified in internal medicine through the American Board of Internal Medicine. She has active medical licenses in California, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Kentucky, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, South Carolina and Texas. Joel Freedman Joel Freedman is President of Paladin Healthcare Capital LLC, makes private equity, structured debt, and real estate investments in the healthcare sector. He previously served as President and co-founder of Avanti Hospitals LLC, which acquired, turned around, and continues to own and operate four highly successful community hospitals in South and East Los Angeles. In 2004, he co-founded CompWest Insurance Company, an innovative California-based workers compensation insurance company that was sold in 2007 to Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Michigan. During his career, Joel has completed more than 175 transactions totaling more than $3 billion, including more than $800 million of healthcare transactions. Joel is a founding member of the Healthcare Policy Advisory Council for Harvard Medical School and a National Council CoChair for American Enterprise Institute. He also serves on the Boards of Children’s Bureau and the Foundation for AltaMed Health Services. Laura Lee Hall, PhD Laura Lee joined the American College of Physicians (ACP) in 2011 in the Medical Practice Division. She has over 20 years of experience leading health education, research, and advocacy efforts for government, for-profit, and nonprofit setting. At ACP, Laura Lee has launched the Office of Grants and Center for Quality, overseeing grant funding from commercial, foundation, and government sources. She also has developed the ACP Quality Connect network with programs in 18 states focused on adult immunization, diabetes, and chronic pain to date. After receiving a PhD at the Naval Medical School (USUHS) and completing post-doctoral fellowships at the NIH and Bloomberg School of Public Health at John Hopkins University, Laura Lee worked as a senior analyst at the congressional Office of Technology Assessment. She then became the deputy director of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, leading advocacy, education, communications, and research efforts on behalf of individuals with serious mental illness. After serving as an advisor to the director of the National Institute of Mental Health and as the scientific director at INNOVIA Education, Laura Lee led the development and implementation of major quality improvement and educational programs at the American College of Cardiology, including the development and launch of credo--Coalition to Reduce Ethnic and Racial Disparities in Cardiovascular Disease Outcomes. 7 Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Stefanie Brown James Stefanie Brown James is the CEO and Founding Partner of Vestige Strategies, LLC – a Washington, DC based community engagement firm that specializes in grassroots community and civic engagement strategies. Through her role at Vestige, Stefanie works with domestic and international clients to help build and sustain strategic relationships while empowering the community in the process. In 2012, Stefanie served as the National African American Vote Director for the Obama for America Campaign. In this position, Stefanie organized the African Americans for Obama program and managed the national strategy to engage African American leaders and voters to register and re-elect President Barack Obama. Formerly the National Field Director and National Director of the NAACP Youth & College Division for the NAACP, Stefanie developed and administered the national field organizing strategy for the NAACP’s 2,200 adult branches and youth units in 48 states and the District of Columbia. A 2003 graduate of Howard University, Stefanie is the founder and Executive Director of Brown Girls Lead, Inc.; a leadership development organization focused on cultivating positive social change on college campuses and in communities across the country. Stefanie has received numerous awards and recognitions including being named as one of Campaign and Elections Magazine’s 2014 “50 Influential People” changing the way we think about campaigns; The Grio 100, 2013 honoree and TheRoot 100, 2012 honoree. William B. Lawson, MD, PhD, DLFAPA Dr. Lawson is currently Professor and Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Howard University Health Sciences, Washington, DC. He is also a professor in the graduate faculties of psychology and pharmacology. He is President of the DC chapter of Mental Health America, Past President of the Washington Psychiatric Society, a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and a member of the American College of Psychiatrists. He is past Chair of the Section of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences of the National Medical Association, and past president of the Black Psychiatrists of America. He received the American Psychiatric Foundation Award for Advancing Minority Mental Health, and was given the 2014 Solomon Carter Fuller Award by the American Psychiatric Association, which honors a Black citizen who has pioneered in an area which has significantly benefited the quality of life for Black people. He was inducted in Sigma XI the scientific honor society and Alpha Omega Alpha, the medical honor society. National Alliance for the Mentally Ill Exemplary Psychiatrist Award and the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, Outstanding Psychologist Award. He was twice named one of “America’s Leading Black Doctors” by Black Enterprise Magazine, A “Super Doctor” by the Washington Post many times, and Top Doctor by US news and World Report multiple times. He was the Andrea Delgado Honoree and Lecturer for the Black Psychiatrists of America, received the Jeanne Spurlock Award from the American Psychiatric Association, received the E.Y. Williams Clinical Scholar of Distinction Award from the Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Section of the National Medical Association, a Multicultural Workplace Award from the Veterans Administration for his outstanding contributions to the advancement of diversity and multicultural understanding. He received the Howard University College of Medicine Research Award, the Faculty Senate Creativity and Research Award, and Profiles in Courage Award. He has over 180 publications and has received federal, industry, and foundation funding to study and treat severe mental illness, substance abuse, and AIDs. 8 Eleventh Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Naomi Lowy, MD Naomi Lowy, M.D. is a Medical Officer on the Professional Affairs and Stakeholder Engagement (PASE) staff within the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) in FDA. Dr. Lowy leads CDER’s team on the Drug Trials Snapshots initiative. She has been with the FDA for 7 years, most of that time in the Division of Metabolism and Endocrinology Drug Products. Dr. Lowy graduated from New York Medical College and then completed an Internal Medicine residency at Montefiore Medical Center and a fellowship in Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism at New York University. Her work at the FDA has focused on medical and regulatory issues of thyroid, pituitary, and growth hormone products, including drugs for the treatment of rare endocrine diseases. Paul Lucas II, MS Paul Lucas, II graduated from the University of Illinois, College of Applied Health Sciences, Department of Kinesiology and Community Health. He received both his B.S. and M.S. in Community Health, Health Planning and Administration. Paul has been with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) over six years. Paul’s work at the CDC during the course of his career has ranged from immunizations to emergency preparedness to health disparities. Currently, Paul is assigned to the Indiana State Department of Health, Immunization Division, where he provides technical assistance and consultation on various immunization policies and procedures and oversees the adult immunization program. During his time with the Illinois Department of Public Health, Paul collaborated with a variety of state partner organizations to increase immunization coverage levels and reduce vaccine preventable disease incidence within Illinois. Prior to joining the CDC, Paul served as an Outcomes Analyst on a Medicare Coordinated Care Demonstration funded by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. He also instructed various public health courses at both the community college and university level. Robert David Martinez, MD Dr. Robert David Martinez,M.D. is an Internal Medicine physician with over 13 years of private practice experience including Inpatient/Ambulatory care of patients. Born and raised in the Rio Grande Valley, Dr. Martinez received his bachelor of arts in biology and psychology from Southern Methodist University. He received his doctor of medicine and conducted his internal medicine residency training at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. Dr. Martinez currently serves as Executive Vice President, Chief Medical Officer/Chief Physician Executive and as an active board member at Doctors Hospital at Renaissance, where he previously held the position of Chief of Staff (2011-2013). Other positions Dr. Martinez holds at Doctors Hospital at Renaissance include vice president and co-founder of the Physician Health Plus physician health organization, chairman of the Graduate Medical Education Committee, and physician champion for the Internal Medicine Residency program. Dr. Martinez also serves as the first and current President of the Renaissance Medical Foundation which is the rapidly expanding branch of employed physician groups and Clinical Integration initiative at DHR. He is the President/founding member of the RioOne Health Network, which is a regional healthcare hub for electronic medical record information sharing among hospitals and providers. Dr. Martinez is also an active member of the Board of Directors for the Border Health Political Action Committee. He is a member of the American Medical Association, Texas Medical Association, Hidalgo-Starr Medical Association, and the American College of Physician Executives. Dennis McNamara, MD Dr. Dennis McNamara is a Professor of Medicine and the Director of the Center for Heart Failure Research at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC). Dr. McNamara, a graduate of Yale University and Harvard Medical School, completed his research and clinical training at 9 Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston before joining the University of Pittsburgh faculty in 1994. For the last twenty years his research has focused on the pathogenesis of primary dilated cardiomyopathy and the impact of genetic heterogeneity on clinical outcomes. He directed the recently completed IPAC study (Investigation of Pregnancy Associated Cardiomyopathy), a thirty center investigation of myocardial recovery for women with peripartum cardiomyopathy. He is a recognized leader in the field of pharmacogenomics and heart failure therapeutics, and his laboratory has functioned as the core genomics lab for numerous multi-center trials including the AHeFT study of Heart Failure in African Americans. He is the Principal Investigator for the NIH funded multicenter investigation GRAHF2, (Genomic Response Analysis for Heart Failure Therapy in African Americans) which will explore the potential use of genomics to tailor heart failure therapeutics. Randall C. Morgan, MD, FAACOS, MBA Fellowship Trained in Pediatric and General Orthopedics. Dr. Morgan is a surgeon achieving a career of excellence in service to his patients, a visionary leader in group medical practice, community and youth mentorship. As a Sarasota Orthopedic Associates physician he presently serves as Executive Director of Orthopedic Montague Cobb/NMA Health Institute while engaged as an orthopedic surgeon locally. Dr. Morgan earned a BA in Chemistry from Grinnell College, Iowa and began a long career of medicine after acceptance at Howard University College of Medicine. He served an internship and orthopedic surgery residency at Northwestern University, Chicago where he was recognized as “Resident of the Year” and also as Chief Resident of Orthopedic Surgery. He then served as Resident Physician at the prestigious Rancho Los Amigos Hospital in Downey, CA completing his residency. Dr. Morgan joined two of his NW faculty members in their private practice in Evanston, IL and became the first African American staff surgeon at the hospital. Dr. Morgan practiced in his hometown, Gary, IN and with the assistance of his father, Dr. Randall Morgan, Sr, he founded the Orthopedic Centers of Northwestern Indiana serving as president. He completed a fellowship in Pediatric Orthopedics at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital. He served as Asst. Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at Indiana University and as Clinical Associate at NW University. He later earned his MBA from University of South Florida. In addition to his contributions to community service Dr. Morgan is a Diplomat of the American Board of Orthopedic Surgery, a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and certified by the American Board of Managed Care Medicine. A singular highlight was receiving an honorary Doctor of Science by his alma mater, Grinnell College. Dr. Morgan presently serves as Clinical Assistant Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at FL State School of Medicine and Clinical Asst. Professor of Community Medicine at the University of CT Health Center. It is there that he continues to develop his research interest in healthcare and musculoskeletal disparities. Lydia Pan, PhD As Program Director, Lydia is primarily responsible for leading the formation of a collaborative project to address disparities in adult vaccination rates. Her responsibilities include developing a business plan for the Vaccination Disparities Project (VDP), managing daily operations, recruiting members to the Steering Committee, and raising funds through sponsorship and other means. 10 Eleventh Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Lydia brings to her current role a breadth of experience from the pharmaceutical sector. From 2007 until 2014, she served as a Director of Science Policy and Public Affairs at Pfizer, providing support for the rare diseases, personalized medicine, clinical trial issues, diseases of the developing world, academic-industry relations and pharmaceutical innovation. In this role, she represented Pfizer in various industry association working groups, the NIH Drug Repurposing Roundtable, the Personalized Medicine Coalition Public Policy Committee and played an instrumental role in the establishment of the WIPO Re:Search consortium to catalyze innovation against neglected tropical diseases. Lydia has also made significant professional contributions to biomedical research, as head of a drug discovery biology laboratory for osteoporosis and musculoskeletal disease therapeutics within Pfizer Global R&D that produced several clinical candidates (1993-2007) and as Staff Scientist and Director of the Molecular Biology Core Laboratory at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York (1991-1993). Her education includes a BS in Biology from Yale University, PhD in Biology from the University of California San Diego and postdoctoral training at Stanford University. Lydia has authored or co-authored more than 30 scientific journal articles and book chapters. Gary A. Puckrein, PhD Dr. Gary A. Puckrein is President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Minority Quality Forum. The Forum is dedicated to improving the quality of health care through the use of evidence-based, data-driven initiatives. The Forum maintains a centralized data warehouse of vital statistics, demographics, environmental information, provider claims, prescription drug use, clinical laboratory values, health-care access points, and other data. The Forum employs these data resources to build web-based indexes and atlases that enable users to measure and forecast health status and disease prevalence in small geographic areas, evaluate the impact of specific interventions, and monitor changes in health outcomes. The Forum has also recently launched the Clinical Trial Engagement Network, the healthcare industry resource addressing a critical need in drug research – improving the representation of diverse populations, including African Americans, Asian Americans and Hispanics, in clinical trials. Dr. Puckrein is considered a preeminent authority on health information products and was the publisher of American Visions and Minority Health Today. Dr. Puckrein has served on numerous health-care advisory boards, including the National Advisory Board on Health Disparities for the Health Research and Educational Trust (American Hospital Association), the CLAS/Health Disparities Expert Panel (National Committee for Quality Assurance), and the Pharmacy Education Advisory Council (American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy). Between 1974 and 1992, Dr. Puckrein taught and lectured at Brown University, Rutgers University, Connecticut College, and Roger Williams College. Dr. Puckrein has received many awards and honors, including being named a visiting scholar and fellow at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History and a visiting fellow at Princeton University. He was awarded doctoral and master’s degrees in history from Brown University, and a bachelor’s degree from California State University at Los Angeles. Mitchel Craig Rothholz, RPh, MBA Mitchel C. Rothholz is a pharmacist currently serving as Chief Strategy Officer for the American Pharmacists Association (APhA) responsible for the development and coordination of the organization’s strategic plan, governance and policy development activities, and public health initiative. He has served in numerous roles as an APhA staff member since 1994. He is a 1984 graduate of the University of Florida, College of Pharmacy, and earned a Masters in Business Administration, Healthcare Management, from Regis University in 2005. He has served as the Executive Director of the Alabama Pharmacy Association (1989-1994) and worked in numerous roles for the Florida Pharmacy Association (1984-1989). He has practical experience in 11 Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches community (both chain and independent) pharmacy, nursing home, hospital, and managed care practice settings. He is a nationally recognized expert on Pharmacy-Based Immunization Delivery, and serves as a national faculty member for APhA’s Certificate Training Program. He serves as Secretary for the Joint Commission of Pharmacy Practitioners, a collaborative forum of 11 national pharmacist organizations. He currently serves on the HHS National Vaccine Advisory Committee (NVAC), Leadership Steering Committee of the National Adult and Influenza Immunization Summit (NAIIS), the Advisory Board of the Immunization Action Coalition, and HHS - NVAC Working Groups. He is a participant on several immunization stakeholder task forces, and has been involved in numerous immunization grant and cooperative agreements. He has assisted numerous pharmacists in implementing immunization and other patient care services. In 2014, he received an Immunization Champion Award from the National Adult and Influenza Immunization Summit. He has worked on projects involving collaboration between pharmacists, physicians and other healthcare professionals leading to improved patient care outcomes, and has spent the last 20 years working with other immunization stakeholders on the creation and implementation of immunization neighborhoods. Albert T. Roy Albert Roy is the Alliance for Lupus Research (ALR) Executive Director for their Lupus Clinical Investigators Network (LuCIN). Prior to joining ALR, Mr. Roy was Chief Executive Officer of Lupus Therapeutics. Mr. Roy brings more than fifteen years of non-profit, fundraising and medical research experience to the lupus community. Prior to joining Lupus Therapeutics, Mr. Roy spent eleven years at CureSearch for Children’s Cancer, a multi-million dollar public charity whose mission is to support targeted and innovative children's cancer research. CureSearch served as the fiscal, administrative and philanthropic agent for the world’s largest pediatric cancer clinical trials research network, the Children’s Oncology Group (COG). The COG is comprised of 5,000 physician-investigators and more than 200 international academic research hospitals. Mr. Roy began his tenure at CureSearch as the Chief Administrator to COG Group Chair, and then served in various roles as the Director of Finance and Planning, Senior Director of Grants & Contracts Management, and culminating his tenure as Vice President of Operations and Research Programs. During his tenure, he was responsible for managing a research portfolio exceeding $50 million per year and coordinating the formation of strategic partnerships with more than 200 academic research hospitals throughout North America to conduct Phase I, II and III pediatric cancer clinical trials. In addition, Mr. Roy played a major role in the organization's efforts to forge strategic partnerships with the biopharmaceutical industry. In 1999, Mr. Roy began his professional career as the Lead Clinical Research Associate within the Division of Hematology/Oncology at Children's National Medical Center in Washington, DC. Mr. Roy received his Bachelor's Degree from Ithaca College and Master's Degree from Johns Hopkins University. Mr. Roy and his wife Michelle have two children, Caden (age 9) and Noelle (age 7). Ho Luong Tran, MD, MPH Dr. Tran is the President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Council of Asian and Pacific Islander Physicians (NCAPIP). Dr. Tran holds a doctor of medicine degree from Saigon Medical School, Vietnam, completed a Pediatrics residency at St. Luke Presbyterian Medical Center in Chicago, Illinois and obtained a master’s degree in Public Health at the University of Illinois. 12 Eleventh Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches She was involved in understanding the multifaceted aspect of health status and health care delivery in relation with the diversity of the population and became an advocate for policy changes for health equity. In 2009, she received the Minority Health Trail Blazer Award from the Office of Minority Health, HHS. Dr. Tran has provided keynote addresses on the elimination of health disparities within the Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander populations and communities, conducting workshops on the elements of diversities of different racial/ethnic groups that might impact on their health statuses, and holding cultural competency training sessions nationwide. Active in her community, she was the President of the Vietnamese American Community in Illinois and chaired both the State of Illinois Governor’s Advisory Council on Asian Affairs, and the city of Chicago Mayor’s Council on Immigrant and Refugee Affairs. She was appointed to the HHS Secretary’s National Minority Health Advisory Council and served on many other commissions. Dr. Tran was the President & CEO of the Asian and Pacific Islander American Health Forum, a national advocacy organization with the mission to enable Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders attain the highest possible level of health and well-being. During her tenure, she helped create the Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander Alliance, the National Council of Asian Pacific Islander Physicians and the Blueprint for Achieving Optimal Health and Well-Being of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders. Lisa Valtierra Lisa’s years of experience in the pharma/patient advocacy arena has aided her in her current focus on cross cultural marketing, concentrating on the US Latino population. She works across therapeutic areas to assist brand teams in incorporating Hispanic markets in their overall strategies, developing in-language and culturally relevant and resonant campaigns. Her work entails ensuring appropriate resources for projects that integrate with general market strategies, as well as raising awareness of the need to create campaigns that reach diverse audiences with accessible and actionable information. Her focus has spanned several therapeutic areas including diabetes, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C, atrial fibrillation, Parkinson's disease, and women's sexual health. Her latest campaign, Cuida Tu Don de la Salud with legendary host, Don Francisco, as its ambassador, is a Spanish language site with videos and helpful tips for people with type 2 diabetes and their caregivers. Lisa was named one of 2014's Top Marketers of the Year and an Outstanding Multicultural Marketer of the Year by DTC Perspectives. Lisa is a proud Los Angeles native and UCLA graduate currently living in Connecticut. Deidre Walton, JD MSN RN-PHN Dr. Deidre Walton is the current President of the National Black Nurses Association, Inc. A nominee by Modern Healthcare for the 100 most influential people in healthcare, 2014, she is an outstanding leader, one who is known for her acumen about health policy, human rights, health care reform, and negotiating change. She earned her BSN, MSN, and JD and is a graduate of the US Army Command and General Staff College. She has extensive Managed Care experience in nursing practice, education and administration where she develops, implements, supports and promotes health services strategies, tactics, policies and programs that drive the delivery of quality health care. As a patient advocate, and an international leader in healthcare, her expertise is often requested for the resolution of issues regarding healthcare finance, quality patient care, 13 Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches culturally competent care, and safety for patients and employees. Dr. Walton’s familiarity with managing large cost-related data sets has provided opportunities for her to implement review processes and “road maps” in health systems that help to improve health outcomes among persons with complex health conditions. She was appointed to the Joint Commission’s Nursing Advisory Council for the 2015-2016 terms. Most recently, she was selected as a member of the Steering Committee for the Nurses on Board Coalition, sponsored by the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation in partnership with the AARP’s Center for Championing for Nursing in America. She also serves on the Board of Directors for the National Coalition of Ethnic Minority Nurses Association, and American Heart Association Diversity Leadership Committee, and serves on the Advisory Board for the UCLA Resource Center for Minority Aging Research. Much of her knowledge, wisdom, and skills were manifest during her work with the Campaign for Action Diversity Steering Committee that produced the far-reaching and dynamic strategic plan for creating a diverse workforce. Verna L. Welch, PhD, MPH Verna L. Welch is a Senior Medical Director and Team Leader of the Outcomes Research Scientists Team in the Vaccines Business Unit at Pfizer Inc. The team’s mission is to help customers discover the real-world value, both human and economic, of Pfizer vaccines by being a first in class, trusted, customer facing, medical partner who meets the real-world needs of our customer by generating, interpreting and communicating health outcomes and pharmacoeconomic information. Verna joined Pfizer as a member of the Specialty Care Business Unit field-based anti-infectives outcome research scientists’ team supporting the Southeast in August of 2008 after a career at Morehouse School of Medicine where she was an Associate Professor in Community Health and Preventive Medicine and Director of the Cardiovascular Health Research Program. Verna rapidly progressed during her industry career becoming team leader after eight months as an individual contributor. While at Pfizer, Verna has supported a diversity of therapeutic areas and has experience in designing and implementing clinical trials, epidemiologic and outcomes research studies. She has supported pharmacoeconomic and outcomes research studies across the product life cycle including due diligence, comparative effectiveness, launch and LOE. As a manager, Verna has effectively led diverse teams and is experienced in building teams, managing resources, and aligning across complex, matrix organizations. Verna has nearly 20 years of health-related experience in various sectors including pharmaceutical industry, academia, health plans, contract research organizations, and government. She received a BS degree in Mathematics from Clark Atlanta University, MPH in Biostatistics from Emory University, and a PhD in Epidemiology from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. She lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her husband. Mitzi Joi Williams, MD Dr. Mitzi Joi Williams is a neurologist and MS Specialist at the Multiple Sclerosis Center of Atlanta, in Atlanta, GA. She earned her BS degree in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology from Emory University and her Doctor of Medicine from Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta, GA. She completed Neurology residency, and a Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Fellowship at Georgia Regents University (formerly Medical College of Georgia) in Augusta, GA. She is certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, and holds memberships in the American Academy of Neurology, and the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers. 14 Eleventh Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Following completion of her training, she was appointed as the Medical Director of the Augusta MS Center, Medical Director of Adult Rehabilitation Services Georgia Regents University as well as Assistant Professor in Neurology. During her time as Medical Director of the Augusta MS Center, she served a population of over 1,000 patients from the Georgia and South Carolina areas. She currently serves as a Board Member and member of the Clinical Advisory Committee for the Georgia Chapter of the National MS Society. She is also a clinical advisor for the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation. She remains actively involved in clinical research and her research interests include investigating the course of MS in minority ethnic populations. Dr. Williams remains dedicated to educating patients and families as well as her colleagues about Multiple Sclerosis. Joseph L. Wright, MD, MPH Joseph L. Wright, MD, MPH is the newly appointed Professor and Chairman of Pediatrics at the Howard University College of Medicine in Washington, DC. He most recently served as Senior Vice President for Community Affairs at Children's National Medical Center, the nation’s thirdoldest children’s hospital, where he provided strategic leadership for the organization’s advocacy mission, public policy positions and community partnership initiatives. Dr. Wright is among the original cohort of board-certified pediatric emergency physicians in the United States with scholarly interests that include prehospital pediatrics, youth violence prevention and the needs of underserved communities. Academically, Dr. Wright has contributed to over 80 publications in the scientific literature and has been elected to both the Alpha Omega Alpha Medical Honor Society and the Delta Omega Public Health Honor Society. His advocacy and public policy scholarship has been recognized by the American Academy of Pediatrics with career achievement awards in two disciplines, injury/violence prevention and emergency medicine. Dr. Wright has also been recognized by the Los Angeles-based Starlight Foundation with its prestigious Shining Star Award for outstanding contributions in health care service to communities of color. Dr. Wright provides national leadership through service on advisory bodies including the American Hospital Association’s Maternal and Child Health Council, the March of Dimes’ Public Policy Advisory Council, and a recently completed term as an Obama administration appointee to the Food and Drug Administration’s Pediatric Advisory Committee. Dr. Wright regularly delivers invited expert testimony before Congress and state and municipal legislative bodies, has made numerous media appearances, and lectures widely to both professional and lay audiences. Dr. Wright earned a B.A. from Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT, his M.D. from Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, and a Masters of Public Health in Administrative Medicine and Management from the George Washington University. Ronald M. Wyatt, MD, MHA Ronald M. Wyatt, M.D., is the medical director in the Division of Healthcare Improvement at The Joint Commission. In this role, Dr. Wyatt promotes quality improvement and patient safety to internal and external audiences, works to influence public policy and legislation for patient safety improvements, and serves as the lead patient safety information and education resource within The Joint Commission. Dr. Wyatt collaborates in the development of National Patient Safety Goals, Sentinel Event Alerts, and Quick Safety publication, and oversees data management and analyses in the Office of Quality and Patient Safety. He is very interested in disparity, equity and professionalism in health care. Previously, Dr. Wyatt served on the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) Drug Safety Oversight Board, and as a mentor to the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMI) Advisors 15 Twelfth Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches program at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Prior to joining The Joint Commission, Dr. Wyatt served as Director of the Patient Safety Analysis Center for the Department of Defense Military Health System. He also serves as The Joint Commission representative on The National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention. He was named one of the 2013 and 2014 “Top 50 Patient Safety Experts” in the USA by Becker’s Magazine. Dr. Wyatt is a Board-Certified Internist with over 20 years practice experience and is currently licensed in the state of Alabama. He earned his medical degree at the University of Alabama Birmingham and completed residency at the St. Louis University hospital, where he served as Chief Resident in the department of Internal Medicine. Dr. Wyatt earned the Executive Master of Science in Health Administration (MSHA) from The University of Alabama at Birmingham. In 2000, the Morehouse School of Medicine conferred Dr. Wyatt with an honorary Doctor of Medical Sciences degree. He was a George W. Merck Fellow with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement 2009-2010. He also completed a Harvard School of Public Health program in Clinical Effectiveness. Thomas F. Zenty III Thomas F. Zenty III is Chief Executive Officer of University Hospitals, a comprehensive health system that cares for a million unique individuals annually with almost 25,000 physicians and employees, and a national reputation for providing the highest-quality health care. UH is an integrated system with 14 medical centers, 26 outpatient health centers, eight urgentcare centers and more than 230 physician offices across Northeast Ohio with almost $3 billion in annual revenues. The system’s flagship is University Hospitals Case Medical Center, one of only 18 hospitals in the nation on the prestigious U.S. News & World Report 2013-2014 Best Hospitals Honor Roll. This academic medical center is the primary affiliate of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. UH Case Medical Center also earned the 2012-13 American Hospital AssociationMcKesson Quest for Quality Prize – the most prestigious national award for leadership and innovation in care-quality improvement and patient safety. And UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital ranks among the country’s Best Children’s Hospitals, according to U.S. News & World Report and The Leapfrog Group. Over the past eleven years under Mr. Zenty’s leadership, UH has grown market share, raised more than$1.1 billion in philanthropy, augmented clinical research and expanded communitybenefit contributions substantially. UH is home to the Harrington Discovery Institute at UH Case Medical Center, an innovative initiative supporting leading physician-scientists nationwide in the development and commercialization of new drug therapies. A recent $1.2 billion systemwide investment added the state-of-the-art UH Seidman Cancer Center, UH Ahuja Medical Center in suburban Beachwood, and several community health centers. In January 2014, two community hospitals – UH Elyria Medical Center and UH Parma Medical Center – joined the system. Mr. Zenty is a past trustee of the American Hospital Association. Modern Healthcare has listed Mr. Zenty among the 100 Most Influential People in Healthcare and he is in the Northeast Ohio Business Hall of Fame. Mr. Zenty serves on the faculty of colleges and universities in the U.S. and abroad. Prior to assuming leadership of UH in 2003, Mr. Zenty held leadership roles with health systems in California, Arizona, New Jersey and Connecticut. 16 Eleventh Annual Summit on Health Disparities/CBC Health Braintrust Meeting & Awards Dinner: Biographical Sketches Maggie Zettle, PharmD Lieutenant (LT) Maggie Zettle serves as a Management Analyst in the National Vaccine Program Office, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health in Washington, DC. She currently leads the office efforts on adult immunizations with the recent development of the draft National Adult Immunization Plan. Pharmacy-based immunizations and improving the rates of Human Papillomavirus vaccination rates are other important aspects of her portfolio. LT Zettle has been a United States Public Health Service officer since 2012 and has completed a tour of duty as a clinical pharmacist with the Indian Health Service with an assignment in Winslow, Arizona. She participated in the Junior Commissioned Officer Student Training and Externship Program with the National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Drug Abuse prior to graduation from pharmacy school. She is a member of the Rapid Deployment Force Team 4, the District of Columbia Commissioned Officers Association, and participates on USPHS Junior Officer Advisory Group committees. LT Zettle has a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Ohio Northern University in Ada, Ohio. She is married, has one dog, and likes to spend her time traveling, cooking, spending time with her family, and learning the art of flying trapeze. 17