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Young Epidemiology Scholars (YES) was a United States scholarship program in the area of public health which was created in 2003 [1] and closed in May 2011. [2] It was sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and administered by the College Board .
The RWJF Young Epidemiology Scholars Program was a competitive regional and national program to engage high school students in innovative project work in epidemiology—the basic science of public health, modeled on the prizes established by the Westinghouse and Intel corporations to encourage student interest and initiative in mathematics ...
He is a regular contributor to the Institute for Family Studies. [39] In 2015, VanderWeele was one of 47 scholars who filed an amicus brief in support of respondents and affirmance in the case of Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644 (2015). [40]
Joann G. Elmore is a professor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine, professor of Health Policy and Management at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health Director of the UCLA National Clinician Scholars Program, the endowed chair in Health Care Delivery for The Rosalind and Arthur Gilbert Foundation, and a practicing physician.
The American College of Epidemiology (ACE) is an American organization incorporated in 1979 to support and promote the work of American epidemiologists. It is based in Raleigh, North Carolina . Members of the American College of Epidemiology are permitted to use the acronym "MACE", after their names and titles, identifying themselves as such.
Nov. 16—The Hormel Institute is launching the Young Scientist Program in partnership with Austin Public Schools. The program will engage 6-8 grade students from IJ Holton Intermediate School and ...
Gerardo J. "G.J." Meléndez-Torres is professor of Clinical and Social Epidemiology at the University of Exeter, England and a member of the Peninsula Technology Assessment Group. In 2024, he was awarded senior investigator status at the NIHR in recognition of his outstanding contribution to research.
In 1945, the designation of "Institute of Public Health" was changed to the "School of Public Health" by the Trustees of Columbia University. [9] In 1967, the nation's first Psychiatric Epidemiology Training Program was established with funding from the National Institute of Mental Health.