View allAll Photos Tagged CentersForDiseaseControl,

Collection:

Images from the History of Medicine (IHM)

 

Contributor(s):

Centers for Disease Control (U.S.)

 

Publication:

[Atlanta, Ga.] : U.S. Centers for Disease Control, [198-]

 

Language(s):

English

 

Format:

Still image

 

Subject(s):

Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome -- prevention & control, Sexual Abstinence

 

Genre(s):

Posters

 

Abstract:

Black and white poster. Title at top of poster. Visual image is a b&w photo reproduction featuring a woman sitting in a chair with her legs crossed. She is shown only from the shoulders down. Caption below photo. Note in lower right corner. Publisher information at bottom of poster.

 

Extent:

1 photomechanical print (poster) : 56 x 41 cm.

 

Technique:

black and white

 

NLM Unique ID:

101444901

 

NLM Image ID:

A028302

 

Permanent Link:

resource.nlm.nih.gov/101444901

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

 

Poison Packets Just a Spoonful of Artificial Sweeteners.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Maj. Gen. Daryl Bohac (center), Nebraska adjutant general, joins Eric Kasowski, (left) Centers for Disease Control; James Lawler, (right) University of Nebraska Medical Center; and others, Feb. 6, 2020, for a panel during a press conference at the UNMC campus on the state’s support of passengers arriving in Nebraska from China. The press conference was hosted by UNMC Chancellor Jefferey Gold. With approval by the Department of Defense, the Nebraska National Guard is providing unoccupied lodging quarters with 85 rooms, and three other vacant buildings to support a federal Health and Human Services request. DoD installations are only providing housing support. DHHS is responsible for all care, transportation and security of the travelers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Maj. Gen. Daryl Bohac, Nebraska adjutant general, joins Eric Kasowski, (speaking) Centers for Disease Control; James Lawler, University of Nebraska Medical Center; Shelly Schwedhelm, Nebraska Medicine; and Dana Hall, Department of Health and Human Resources, Feb. 6, 2020, for a panel during a press conference at the UNMC campus on the state’s support of passengers arriving in Nebraska from China. The press conference was hosted by UNMC Chancellor Jefferey Gold. With approval by the Department of Defense, the Nebraska National Guard is providing unoccupied lodging quarters with 85 rooms, and three other vacant buildings to support a federal Health and Human Services request. DoD installations are only providing housing support. DHHS is responsible for all care, transportation and security of the travelers. (Nebraska National Guard photo by Sgt. Lisa Crawford)

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Publication:

[194-?]

 

Format:

Still image

 

Subject(s):

United States. Public Health Service.

 

Abstract:

View of U.S. Public Health Service worker (?) in gas-mask and coveralls spraying hydrogen cyanide beneath the floorboards in the hull of a ship during a visit by League of Nations fumigation experts to the New York Quarantine Station.

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : 12 x 17 cm.

 

Provenance:

Donation; Centers for Disease Control; 1983.

 

Technique:

black and white

 

NLM Unique ID:

101443787

 

NLM Image ID:

A016029

 

Permanent Link:

resource.nlm.nih.gov/101443787

ACT-UP demonstrated at the CDC in Atlanta, GA, on this rainy day. ACT-UP's intent was to raise awareness that AIDS/HIV affected women differently and to demand research of women and AIDS.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

(From Left): Eric Kasowski, Centers for Disease Control; Maj. Gen. Daryl Bohac, Nebraska adjutant general; James Lawler, University of Nebraska Medical Center; Shelly Schwedhelm, Nebraska Medicine; and Dana Hall, Department of Health and Human Resources sit on a panel during a press conference at the UNMC campus on the state’s support of passengers arriving in Nebraska from China. The press conference was hosted by UNMC Chancellor Jefferey Gold. With approval by the Department of Defense, the Nebraska National Guard is providing unoccupied lodging quarters with 85 rooms, and three other vacant buildings to support a federal Health and Human Services request. DoD installations are only providing housing support. DHHS is responsible for all care, transportation and security of the travelers. (Nebraska National Guard photo by Maj. Scott Ingalsbe)

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Maj. Gen. Daryl Bohac, Nebraska adjutant general, joins Eric Kasowski, (speaking) Centers for Disease Control; James Lawler, University of Nebraska Medical Center; Shelly Schwedhelm, Nebraska Medicine; and Dana Hall, Department of Health and Human Resources, Feb. 6, 2020, for a panel during a press conference at the UNMC campus on the state’s support of passengers arriving in Nebraska from China. The press conference was hosted by UNMC Chancellor Jefferey Gold. With approval by the Department of Defense, the Nebraska National Guard is providing unoccupied lodging quarters with 85 rooms, and three other vacant buildings to support a federal Health and Human Services request. DoD installations are only providing housing support. DHHS is responsible for all care, transportation and security of the travelers. (Nebraska National Guard photo by Sgt. Lisa Crawford)

www.cdc.gov/flu

 

This transmission electron micrograph (TEM) depicted Russian influenza-A H1N1, (A/USSR/90/77 strain), virions, which had been magnified 189,000x.

 

Influenza type A viruses are divided into subtypes based on two proteins on the surface of the virus. These proteins are called hemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N). The current subtypes of influenza A viruses found in people are A(H1N1) and A(H3N2). Influenza B virus is not divided into subtypes. Influenza A (H1N1), A(H3N2), and influenza B strains are included in each year's influenza vaccine.

 

Influenza types A or B viruses cause epidemics of disease almost every winter. In the United States, these winter influenza epidemics can cause illness in 10% to 20% of people and are associated with an average of 36,000 deaths and 114,000 hospitalizations per year. Getting a flu shot can prevent illness from types A and B influenza. Influenza type C infections cause a mild respiratory illness and are not thought to cause epidemics. The flu shot does not protect against type C influenza.

 

For more public health images, please visit the public health image library at phil.cdc.gov

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Maj. Gen. Daryl Bohac, Nebraska adjutant general, joins Eric Kasowski, Centers for Disease Control; James Lawler, (speaking) University of Nebraska Medical Center; Shelly Schwedhelm, Nebraska Medicine; and Dana Hall, Department of Health and Human Resources, Feb. 6, 2020, for a panel during a press conference at the UNMC campus on the state’s support of passengers arriving in Nebraska from China. The press conference was hosted by UNMC Chancellor Jefferey Gold. With approval by the Department of Defense, the Nebraska National Guard is providing unoccupied lodging quarters with 85 rooms, and three other vacant buildings to support a federal Health and Human Services request. DoD installations are only providing housing support. DHHS is responsible for all care, transportation and security of the travelers. (Nebraska National Guard photo by Sgt. Lisa Crawford)

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Collection:

Images from the History of Medicine (IHM)

 

Publication:

[between 1907 and 1909]

 

Format:

Still image

 

Subject(s):

San Francisco

 

Genre(s):

Portraits

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : 13 x 18 cm.

 

Provenance:

Donation; Centers for Disease Control; 1983.

 

Technique:

black and white

 

NLM Unique ID:

101443679

 

NLM Image ID:

A015978

 

Permanent Link:

resource.nlm.nih.gov/101443679

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

www.cdc.gov/flu

 

This transmission electron micrograph (TEM) depicted Russian influenza-A H1N1, (A/USSR/90/77 strain), virions, which had been magnified 189,000x.

 

Influenza type A viruses are divided into subtypes based on two proteins on the surface of the virus. These proteins are called hemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N). The current subtypes of influenza A viruses found in people are A(H1N1) and A(H3N2). Influenza B virus is not divided into subtypes. Influenza A (H1N1), A(H3N2), and influenza B strains are included in each year's influenza vaccine.

 

Influenza types A or B viruses cause epidemics of disease almost every winter. In the United States, these winter influenza epidemics can cause illness in 10% to 20% of people and are associated with an average of 36,000 deaths and 114,000 hospitalizations per year. Getting a flu shot can prevent illness from types A and B influenza. Influenza type C infections cause a mild respiratory illness and are not thought to cause epidemics. The flu shot does not protect against type C influenza.

 

For more public health images, please visit the public health image library at phil.cdc.gov

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Collection:

Images from the History of Medicine (IHM)

 

Contributor(s):

Centers for Disease Control (U.S.)

 

Publication:

[Atlanta, Ga. : Centers for Disease Control, 198-]

 

Language(s):

Spanish

 

Format:

Still image

 

Subject(s):

Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome -- prevention & control, Condoms,

Safe Sex, Sexual Partners

 

Genre(s):

Posters

 

Abstract:

Black and white poster. Title in upper left corner. Visual image is a b&w photo reproduction featuring a young woman. She sits in a chair. Caption below photo encourages talking about condom use with a sexual partner. Note in lower right corner.

 

Extent:

1 photomechanical print (poster) : 56 x 41 cm.

 

Technique:

black and white

 

NLM Unique ID:

101444924

 

NLM Image ID:

A027968

 

Permanent Link:

resource.nlm.nih.gov/101444924

Kangding City photos from an early November 2010 to several counties in Sichuan Province's Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.

 

During the 1990s, China did some reorganization of its public health agencies on something like the U.S. model and set up national centers for disease control called the China CDC and local centers for disease control.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Maj. Gen. Daryl Bohac, (right) Nebraska adjutant general, joins Eric Kasowski, (left) Centers for Disease Control; and others, Feb. 6, 2020, for a panel during a press conference at the UNMC campus on the state’s support of passengers arriving in Nebraska from China. The press conference was hosted by UNMC Chancellor Jefferey Gold. With approval by the Department of Defense, the Nebraska National Guard is providing unoccupied lodging quarters with 85 rooms, and three other vacant buildings to support a federal Health and Human Services request. DoD installations are only providing housing support. DHHS is responsible for all care, transportation and security of the travelers. (Nebraska National Guard photo by Sgt. Lisa Crawford)

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

Notable leaders in science, medicine and healthcare met at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for MAC’s quarterly Bioscience-Health IT Leadership Council (BLC) meeting. BLC Chair and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia President Kerry Kohnen kicked off the meeting, and MAC VP of Bioscience & Health IT David Hartnett provided council updates. Rear Admiral and Deputy Director, Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health at the CDC Robin M. Ikeda and CDC Foundation President & CEO Charlie Stokes were the featured speakers.

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