Abbey Alkon, Ph.D. –
has a master's in nursing and public health
from Columbia University and a Ph.D. in epidemiology from UC Berkeley.
She works as a research epidemiologist for the MacArthur Foundation
Network on Development and Psychopathology at UC Berkeley and is an
assistant professor in the School of Nursing at UC San Francisco.
Tom Boyce, MD –
is a professor of Epidemiology and Child Development and the
head of the division of health and medical sciences. His research
interests include: Developmental psychobiology of stress in young
children and early contextual and biological risk factors for
developmental, psychopathology, social, and behavioral factors in
disease pathogenesis.
Maximiliano Cuevas, MD –
is Chief Executive Officer of Clínica de Salud
del Valle Salinas, a network of non-profit clinics he helped found in
1980. Dr. Cuevas grew up in a farmworker family in the Salinas Valley
and worked in the fields as a young man. After attending medical school
and becoming a Board-certified OB-GYN, Dr. Cuevas returned to the
Salinas Valley to bring health care services to low-income community
members. Clinica de Salud provides comprehensive health care services
to many low-income residents of the Salinas Valley, including prenatal,
pediatric, general adult primary health care services, and dental care.
Martha Harnly, MPH –
has an MPH from UC Berkeley in Environmental Health
Sciences and she is a research scientist in the Environmental Health
Investigation Branch of the California Department of Health Services.
Her research interests include exposure assessment, mercury
contamination monitoring, and pesticide exposure in farmworking
families.
Nina Holland, Ph.D. –
is Adjunct Professor of Genetics and Toxicology at
the School of Public Health, University of California Berkeley. Her
research is focused on molecular epidemiology, reproductive
toxicology, biorepositories, and in particular on the effects of
environmental toxicants on molecular, cytogenetic, and
immunological biomarkers in children and adolescents.
Nicholas Jewell, Ph.D. –
is a professor of Biostatistics and Statistics at UC
Berkeley. Dr. Jewell is also a Fellow of the American Statistical
Association and the Institute of Mathematical Statistics. His research
interests include biostatistical techniques in epidemiological data
analysis and stochastic processes, genomics, and statistical methods
related to infectious diseases.
Caroline Johnson, Ph.D. –
has her Ph.D. in counseling psychology and has
completed postdoctoral work in advanced neuropsychology. She is the former
director of the Neuropsychology (Pediatric) Assessment Service in the
Department of Neurology at Children's Hospital, Oakland.
Jim Leckie, Ph.D. –
received his Ph.D. from Harvard in Environmental Health
Sciences and is a professor of environmental engineering and applied
earth sciences at Stanford University.
Michael Lipsett, MD –
has a JD from UC Berkeley and an MD from UC San
Diego. He is currently the Public Health Medical Officer with the
California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment. Dr.
Lipsett is also an assistant clinical professor in the Department of
Epidemiology and Biostatistics at UC San Francisco. His research
interests include air pollution, asthma, and respiratory health.
Burt Lubin, MD –
received his MD from University of Pittsburgh Medical
School. He is director of medical research at Children’s Hospital,
Oakland and an adjunct professor of pediatrics at UC San Francisco. Dr.
Lubin is a specialist in hematology and sickle cell disease.
Janet Macher, Ph.D. –
is an air pollution research specialist with the
California Department of Health Services. She has a master’s degree
from the University of California and doctorate from Harvard University
with emphasis on industrial hygiene, public health, and microbiology.
Dr. Macher studies engineering measures to control airborne infectious
and hypersensitivity diseases, evaluates methods to collect and
identify airborne biological material, and participates in
investigations of building-related illness outbreaks in the state of
California.
Tom McKone, Ph.D. –
is an adjunct professor in Environmental Health Sciences at
UC Berkeley. His research interests include risk assessment methods,
mass transfer at environmental and human/environment boundaries, model
uncertainty and reliability in exposure/risk assessment, environmental
and occupational radioactivity, biotransfer and bioconcentration.
James Meyers, Ph.D. –
has a Ph.D. in education from Harvard and an MPH in health
education from UC Berkeley. He is an Agricultural and Environmental
Health Specialist with the Center for Occupational and Environmental
Health at UC Berkeley. His research interests include ergonomics and
agriculture, pesticide regulation, and agricultural health and safety.
Ira Tager, MD –
is a professor of Epidemiology at UC Berkeley’s
School of Public Health and the director for Family and Community
Health. Dr. Tager is also an American Association for the Advancement
of Science Fellow. His research interests include respiratory health
effects of smoking during pregnancy, development of exposure assessment
instruments, and effects on oxidant and particulate air pollution on
cardio-respiratory morbidity and mortality.