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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 ...
Ying was born in Taipei in 1966. She moved to Singapore with her family in 1973 as a child where she was a student at Rulang Primary School [4] and Raffles Girls' School.She then went to New York City, earning a B.Eng. degree, summa cum laude, from Cooper Union in 1987. [5]
Red Cross Youth, Singapore Red Cross Archived 9 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine; Saint John Ambulance Brigade, Singapore; Girl Guides Singapore; The Boys' Brigade in Singapore; Girls' Brigade Singapore; The Singapore Scout Association
When she returned to Singapore she established the country's first HIV programme and patient care centre. [4] Her first frontline experience with infectious diseases were when the Nipah virus infected Singapore in 1999. [4] In 2002, Leo was made a Senior Consultant in the National Centre for Infectious Diseases. [3]
The National Centre for Infectious Diseases (Abbreviation: NCID; Malay: Pusat Nasional bagi Penyakit Berjangkit; Tamil: தேசிய தொற்றுநோய் மையம்; Chinese: 国家传染病中心), previously known as the Communicable Disease Centre (Abbreviation: CDC), is a national public health institute under the Ministry of Health of Singapore.
The Logistics Institute – Asia Pacific is a collaborative effort between NUS and the Georgia Institute of Technology for research and education in logistics. [115] The Next Age Institute, a partnership with Washington University in St. Louis, is the most recent cross-university centre involving NUS, established in February 2015. [116]
Maggie Tan married another Queen's Scholar, political activist Lim Hong Bee. [5] [18] They had two daughters; Patricia Lin, a television presenter in Singapore and later a professor in California, and Gillian Lin, a graduate of the Royal College of Music, London who performed internationally as a concert pianist and recording artist for RCA.