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个人简介

Dr. Noreen Hynes has over 30 years of medical and public health experience in both international and domestic settings. Her career has encompassed basic and applied research, epidemiology, public health, clinical medicine, and the regulatory aspects of medical countermeasures for emerging infectious diseases. Dr. Hynes has been affiliated with The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions and the Schools of Medicine and Public Health University since 1997. She is currently an Associate Professor of Medicine (part time) in the School of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and is jointly appointed in the School of Public Health in the Department of International Health. Since retiring from a 30-year career with the U.S. government in 2007, Dr. Hynes has served as the director of the new Geographic Medicine Center in the Division of Infectious Diseases in the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, as the Medical Director of the Johns Hopkins Tropical & Travel Medicine Service, and as the Baltimore Site Director for the CDC-sponsored GeoSentinel Surveillance System. Since 2002, she has taught in the Summer Institute of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene at the School of Public Health. Dr. Hynes' research interests focus on infectious diseases at the clinical-public health interface in resource constrained settings in both tropical and temperate regions. Research projects address vaccine preventable diseases, the epidemiology of tropical diseases amongst travelers and immigrants, including emerging and reemerging infectious diseases, such as sexually transmitted infections, dengue and chikungunya. MD, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (1985)

研究领域

Vaccine preventable diseases; Epidemiology of diseases amongst travelers; Effective strategies for stemming the health care provider brain drain from resource poor to resource rich areas

近期论文

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1. Franco C, Hynes NA, Bouri N, Henderson DA. The dengue threat to the United States. Biosec Bioterr 2010; 8(3). 2. Borio LL and Hynes NA. 2009. Plague as an agent of bioterrorism. In Mandel G et al (eds). Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 7th edition, Elsevier Health Sciences, Burlington, MA. 3. Borio LL, Hynes NA, Henderson DA. 2009. An overview of bioterrorism. In: Mandel G et al (eds). Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 7th edition, Elsevier Health Sciences, Burlington, MA. 4. Hynes NA. 2010. Haemophilus ducreyi (chancroid). In JG Bartlett et al (eds). The Johns Hopkins ABX Guide: Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, 2nd edition, Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Sudbury, MA. 5. Hynes NA. 2010. Herpes simplex virus. In JG Bartlett et al (eds). The Johns Hopkins ABX Guide: Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, 2nd edition, Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Sudbury, MA. 6. Hynes NA. 2010. Human papillomavirus. In JG Bartlett et al (eds). The Johns Hopkins ABX Guide: Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, 2nd edition, Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Sudbury, MA. 7. Hynes NA. 2010. Neisseria gonorrhoeae. In JG Bartlett et al (eds). The Johns Hopkins ABX Guide: Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, 2nd edition, Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Sudbury, MA. 8. Hynes NA. 2010.Treponema pallidum (syphilis). In JG Bartlett et al (eds). The Johns Hopkins ABX Guide: Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, 2nd edition, Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Sudbury, MA. 9. Hynes NA. Project BioShield: a tool for developing, using, and stockpiling needed public health emergency medical countermeasures, in The Jordan Report: Accelerated Development of Vaccines 2007. 2007. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, NIH Publication No. 06-6057.

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