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In 1995
James W. Curran was appointed professor of
epidemiology and dean of the Rollins School of Public Health.
He also holds adjunct appoints in Medicine, Nursing and the
Graduate School.
Graduating from the
University of Notre Dame, he received his MD from the University of Michigan
and a master of public health from Harvard University. He worked at the
Centers for Disease Control where he headed the HIV/AIDS science and prevention
efforts until 1995. While at the CDC, he attained the rank of the assistant
surgeon general.
Dr. Curran is a fellow
of the American Epidemiologic Society,
The American College of Preventive Medicine, and the
Infectious Diseases Society of America. Author or co-author of more than
250 scholarly publications, he has been a member of the American Medical
Association since 1971. He was elected to the Institute of Medicine of
the National Academy of Science in 1993 where he chairs the Board on Population
Health and Public Health Practice, in 1999 he received the Lifetime Award
in Health from the Atlanta Business Chronicle. He is a member of the Rotary
Club of Atlanta and serves on many local, national and international non-profit
boards.
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