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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Infection Expert Named CDC Chief
Title:US: Infection Expert Named CDC Chief
Published On:2002-07-02
Source:Associated Press (Wire)
Fetched On:2008-01-23 02:57:23
INFECTION EXPERT NAMED CDC CHIEF

WASHINGTON (AP) - A scientist who helped pioneer AIDS protection for
hospital workers and went on to battle anthrax has been chosen to head the
nation's top public health agency, administration officials said Tuesday.

Dr. Julie Gerberding will become the first female director of the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.

Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson will appoint her on
Wednesday at a ceremony at the CDC's Atlanta headquarters, said
administration officials, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Gerberding is an infectious-disease specialist who became one of CDC's most
quoted investigators during last fall's anthrax attacks.

Numerous health organizations had lobbied Thompson and the White House to
appoint her to lead CDC, saying her anthrax experience would prove crucial
as the agency prepares against another bioterrorism strike.

"She's somebody who has been able to withstand the pressure and take the
heat and always use good science-based judgment to make decisions," said
Dr. James Curran of Emory University, the CDC's former AIDS chief, who has
known Gerberding for over a decade.

But she faces some immediate challenges: ensuring the CDC is ready should
bioterrorism strike again even as it fights everyday diseases - and
learning to work with the CIA, FBI and proposed Homeland Security
Department, a function new to CDC's doctors.

Gerberding had no comment Tuesday on the new post. But in an interview with
The Associated Press on Monday, she acknowledged that blending CDC's
scientific work into the new terrorism-defense bureaucracy will take effort.

Indeed, the very scientists at CDC who understand bioterrorism best also
are its experts on West Nile virus and other more everyday threats to
people's health. The CDC has explained to Washington officials that
infectious disease is infectious disease whether it's natural or
weaponized, and that its experts can't be separated to anti-terrorism work
only.

"We feel very optimistic our perspective is being heard," Gerberding said
Monday. "The bottom line is we support this and we're going to make it work."

Gerberding, 46, had been the CDC's acting deputy director for science, one
of a four-member team in charge of the agency while the Bush administration
hunted a new director. Dr. Jeffrey Koplan stepped down as CDC director on
March 31, saying it was time to move on after more than three years in the job.

The CDC investigates outbreaks of infectious diseases and works to prevent
other illnesses. But members of Congress had strongly criticized CDC for
acting too slowly when anthrax struck and not communicating the danger
clearly enough.

Once the CDC began explaining anthrax risks, Gerberding quickly became a
chief spokesman, winning attention in Washington and the confidence of
health secretary Thompson. That left health officials and other CDC
watchers hoping Gerberding's appointment means the agency will be more open
with the public the next time crisis strikes.

"If something happens, the world is going to want to know how the CDC is
reacting to it," said Home Depot co-founder Bernard Marcus, a longtime CDC
booster who recently gave the agency $3.9 million to equip a 24-hour
emergency response hub.

Gerberding began her career at the University of California, San Francisco,
where she won acclaim for developing one of the first programs to give
health workers stuck with HIV-tainted needles medication to prevent
infection, said Tom Coates, the university's AIDS research director.

The CDC recruited her in 1998 to run its own program fighting
hospital-spread infections, antibiotic resistance and medical errors. Then
anthrax struck.

Gerberding "gained a lot of credibility" during the anthrax investigation,
said Dr. Gail Cassell of Eli Lilly & Co., a bioterrorism adviser to the
government who had lobbied the White House to appoint her.

But Cassell said one of Gerberding's first steps should be "a really
critical analysis of CDC and its programs," to ensure the agency is using
new resources to properly prepare for bioterrorism.
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