Gerald Keusch
Professor, International Health at Boston University
Schools
- Boston University
Links
Biography
Boston University
Dr. Keusch is a graduate of Columbia College and Harvard Medical School. He has been involved in academic medicine for his entire career, currently as Professor of Medicine and International Health at Boston University where he serves as an Associate Director of the National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory, Senior Advisor to the Center for Global Health & Development, and Special Assistant for Global Health to the University President. His research has focused on infectious diseases relevant to developing countries, from molecular pathogenesis to field research on diarrheal disease, nutrition, and HIV/AIDS. He is the author of over 300 original publications, reviews, and book chapters, and is the editor of 8 scientific books. Over his career he has received all three major awards of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, including the Squibb, Bristol, and Finland Lectureship awards. He has served as President of the Massachusetts Infectious Diseases Society and on the Council of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. He is an elected member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation, the Association of American Physicians, and the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Science. Dr. Keusch was co-chair of an IOM/NRC report released in September 2009 titled “Sustaining Global Surveillance and Response to Emerging Infectious Diseases.” He is a member of multiple committees for the Tropical Diseases Research Program at WHO, chairing the TropicaNet Advisory Committee. Prior to his present appointments, he was Associate Director for International Research in the office of the Director, and Director of the Fogarty International Center at the National Institutes of Health from 1998 to 2004, and Chief of the Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Diseases at Tufts Medical Center from 1979 to 1998.
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Cases
New Report Charts Ways to Expedite Research During Epidemics
April 18, 2017
Scientific American Gerald Keusch, School of Medicine “When the largest Ebola outbreak in history exploded across West Africa in 2014, public health authorities raced to test experimental vaccines and drugs they hoped would quell the massive epidemic…” Expert quote: “There will be one. The more we can start now, the better we’ll be.” View full […]
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Bats increasingly seen as vectors
February 1, 2012
JAVMA News Gerald Keusch, School of Public Health, Center for Global Health & Development Gerald T. Keusch, MD, said bats are a “largely unknown, underinvestigated, poorly understood, now-definitive vector for new emerging viruses.”… View article
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Lethal viruses could leap continents in bushmeat trade
January 12, 2012
New Scientist Gerald Keusch, School of Public Health The illegal bushmeat trade not only threatens the survival of endangered species in Africa, but could also lead to outbreaks of deadly human diseases in North America and Europe… View article
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