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Address
722 West 168th Street (Rm. 1021)
New York, NY   10032
Phone:212-305-8054
Fax: 212-342-5160
Email:[email protected]

Mailman School Affiliations:
Center for Infectious Disease Epidemiologic Research  Curriculum Coordinator
National Center for Disaster Preparedness  Senior Research Scientist
Northeast Biodefense Center (NBC) 

Education and Training
PhD 1977 University of Wisconsin
MS 1974 University of Wisconsin
BS 1971 City College New York
 
Stephen S. Morse

Professor of Clinical Epidemiology,  Mailman School of Public Health

and:
Founding Director & Senior Res. Scientist, Center for Public Health Preparedness

Dr. Stephen Morse's interests focus on epidemiology of infectious diseases, and improving disease early warning systems. In 2000, he returned to Columbia after 4 years in government as program manager for Biodefense at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Department of Defense, where he co-directed the Pathogen Countermeasures program and subsequently directed the Advanced Diagnostics program. Before coming to Columbia, he was assistant professor of Virology at The Rockefeller University in New York, and remains an adjunct faculty member. His book, Emerging Viruses (Oxford University Press) was selected by "American Scientist" for its list of "100 Top Science Books of the 20th Century”. Dr. Morse was chair and principal organizer of the 1989 NIAID/NIH (National Institutes of Health) Conference on Emerging Viruses, for which he originated the term and concept of emerging viruses/infections; served as a member of the Institute of Medicine/National Academy of Sciences' Committee on Emerging Microbial Threats to Health (and chaired its Task Force on Viruses), and was a contributor to its report, Emerging Infections (1992). He currently serves on the Steering Committee of the Institute of Medicine's Forum on Microbial Threats, and the National Academy of Sciences' Committee on Future Biowarfare Threats; and has served as an adviser to numerous government and international organizations. He was the founding chair of ProMED (the nonprofit international Program to Monitor Emerging Diseases) and was one of the originators of ProMED-mail, an international network inaugurated by ProMED in 1994 for outbreak reporting and disease monitoring using the Internet.
 
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