Joseph B. McCormick

Joseph B. McCormick is a physician, scientist, and educator from the United States.

Biography

Early life

Joseph B. McCormick was born in Knoxville, Tennessee on October 16, 1942. His early years were spent on a farm in Indiana. [1]


Education

Florida Southern College. 1964 Graduated cum laude. Majored in chemistry and mathematics.

Duke University School of Medicine. 1967 - 1971

Harvard School of Public Health. 1970 Masters of Science

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. 1971 - 1973 Internship and residency in Pediatrics (under Dr. C. Everett Koop)

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 1975 - 1976 Fellow, Preventive Medicine Residency Program [2]

Early career

Following graduation from college, he located in Brussels, Belgium and attended the Alliance Francaise and the Free University for a year. He learned the French language to enable him to teach sciences and mathematics in a secondary school in Kinshasa, Congo. While living in the Congo, he worked in a local hospital and developed an interest in medicine and specifically tropical diseases.

Medical career

In 1974, following his residency training, he was appointed an Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer at the CDC. In 1993, he was appointed Chairman of Community Health and Sciences at the Aga Khan University Medical School (AKU). He established an epidemiology program, similar to the CDC. In 1997 he returned to France where he started epidemiology programs for the Institute Pasteur and for Aventis Pasteur, the world's largest vaccine manufacturer. He became Assistant Dean, University of Texas Health Science Center School of Public Health, at Brownsville campus on January 1, 2001.

Milestones

McCormick studied patients with Lassa fever while in Africa. After clinical testing, he found that prompt and aggressive treatment with ribavirin significantly improved patient survival. [3] Dr. McCormick has over 200 scientific publications with co-authors from over 20 different countries.[4] He has held several university positions and had over 30 consultancies with organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO), Pan American Health Organization. He has acted as reviewer for many scientific journals.[5] Dr. McCormick was interviewed in 2006 for the television program Frontline "The Age of Aids" produced by the Public Broadcasting Service. [6]

Volunteer work

1969 Summer Fellowship with the Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama, Guatemala.
1971 Summer Fellowship in Rural Health Clinics in Haiti

Academic appointments

Regional Dean, James H. Steele Professor of Epidemiology, U. of Texas Houston School of Public Health
Professor, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
Professor and Chairman, Department of Community Health Sciences, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan
Visiting Scientist at Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation, La Jolla, California
Adjunct Professor at Emory University
Adjunct Professor at University of North Carolina
Member, Scientific Board, Centre Internationale de Recherche Medical (CIRMF), Paris, France
Membre du Groupe d'Etudes de Virologie de L’Institut Pasteur (1984 -1990)

Awards and honors

He is the recipient of humanitarian awards from Florida Southern College and Duke University Medical School.[1]

Personal life

He is an accomplished amateur pianist, and enjoys outdoor activities such as running, cycling, back packing, skiing and fly-fishing. Dr. McCormick is fluent in several languages. He is married to a fellow epidemiologist Dr. Susan Fisher-Hoch.[7]

Publications (books, articles)

Joseph B. McCormick is a co-author with Fisher-Hoch of the book Level 4: Virus Hunters of the CDC.,[8][9]

gollark: This is why AMD was basically irrelevant for many years until Zen back in 2017 or so.
gollark: Each pair of "cores" shares a bunch of resources, so it isn't really as fast as an actual "core" in other designs, and I think their IPC was quite bad too, so the moderately high clocks didn't do very much except burn power.
gollark: See, while the FX-4100 is allegedly a fairly high-clocked quad-core, this is misleading. AMD's Bulldozer architecture used "clustered multithreading", instead of the "simultaneous multithreading" on modern architectures and also Intel's ones at the time.
gollark: (as this is based on a tower server and not a rack one, you might not even have ridiculously noisy fans in it!)
gollark: Anyway, I don't think this computer is worth £300, inasmuch as you could buy an old server with a Sandy Bridge era CPU for let's say £120, buy and install an equivalent GPU (if compatible, you might admittedly have some issues with power supply pinout) for £100 or so, possibly upgrade the RAM and disks for £50, and outperform that computer with £30 left over.

See also

  • Lassa Fever

References

  1. "Dr. McCormick". blue.utb.edu. Archived from the original on 2015-06-13. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  2. "https://sph.uth.edu/cv/mccormick.pdf" (PDF). sph.uth.edu. Retrieved 2015-06-11. External link in |title= (help)
  3. Fisher-Hoch SP, McCormick JB (2004). "Lassa fever vaccine". Expert Review of Vaccines. 3 (2): 189–97. doi:10.1586/14760584.3.4.S189. PMID 15056044.
  4. "Publications of Joseph B McCormick - University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) - SciVal Experts 4.6". experts.scival.com. Retrieved 2015-06-11./uthealthhouston/expertPubs.asp?n=JOSEPH+B+MCCORMICK&u_id=102254&oe_id=1&o_id=11
  5. https://practice.sph.umich.edu/practice/dynamic/site.php?module=courses_one_instructor&id=140
  6. https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/interviews/mccormick.html
  7. "Instructor's Background". blue.utb.edu. Archived from the original on 2015-06-13. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  8. McCormick, Joseph; Fisher-Hoch, Susan (1999) [1996], Level 4: Virus Hunters of the CDC, Horvitz, Leslie Alan ("Updated edition" 3rd ed.), Barnes & Noble, ISBN 978-0-7607-1208-5, retrieved 2008-08-02
  9. Henig, Robin Marantz (1996-08-18). "Viral Nightmares". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2015-06-11.Viral Nightmares
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