| Arlyss Anderson
Rothman, Ph.D., M.H.S., R.N.-C.S., F.N.P., is
assistant professor of family health care nursing
in the School of Nursing, University of California,
San Francisco. She has a doctorate in organizational
theory and health services delivery and a master’s
degree in health services. Anderson Rothman has worked
in primary care as a family nurse practitioner and
educator for over twenty-five years and has been
conducting health services research for five years.
Her studies have included nurse practitioner practice
in California, the future of medical education in
California, interdisciplinary health care teams in
ambulatory care, residents’ attitudes toward
fellowship training, the future of primary care in
the United States, and the need for nurse management
training programs. Anderson Rothman maintains a private
practice as a family nurse practitioner in Berkeley,
California.
Paul Brodeur was a staff writer at the
New Yorker for nearly forty years. During that time,
he alerted the nation to the public health hazard
posed by asbestos, to depletion of the ozone layer
by chlorofluorocarbons, and to the harmful effects
of microwave radiation and power-frequency electromagnetic
fields. His work has been acknowledged with a National
Magazine Award and the Journalism Award of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. The United
Nations Environment Program has named him to its
Global 500 Roll of Honour for outstanding environmental
achievements.
Ethan Bronner is the assistant editorial
page editor of the New York Times. From 1999 through
2001 he was the paper’s education editor. He
came to the New York Times in 1997 as a national
correspondent and reported on trends in higher education
and grades K–12. From 1985 until 1997 he was
with the Boston Globe, where he served as Middle
East correspondent, based in Jerusalem, and a Supreme
Court and legal affairs correspondent in Washington,
D.C. He began his journalistic career at Reuters
in 1980 and reported from London, Madrid, and Brussels.
Bronner is the author of Battle for Justice: How
the Bork Nomination Shook America, which was chosen
by the New York Public Library as one of the twenty-five
best books of 1989. He received a B.A. in letters
from Wesleyan University and an M.S. from Columbia
University’s School of Journalism.
Digby Diehl is a writer, literary collaborator,
and television, print, and Internet journalist. Recently
honored with the Jack Smith Award from the Friends
of the Pasadena Public Library, his book credits
include Angel on My Shoulder, the autobiography of
singer Natalie Cole; The Million Dollar Mermaid,
the autobiography of MGM star Esther Williams; Tales
from the Crypt, the history of the popular comic
book, movie, and television series; and A Spy for
All Seasons, the autobiography of former CIA officer
Duane Clarridge. For eleven years, Diehl was the
literary correspondent for ABC-TV’s Good Morning
America and was recently the book editor for the
Home Page show on MSNBC. He continues to appear regularly
on the morning news on KTLA. Previously the entertainment
editor for KCBS television in Los Angeles, he was
a writer for the Emmys and for the soap opera Santa
Barbara, book editor of the Los Angeles Herald Examiner,
editor in chief of art book publisher Harry N. Abrams,
and the founding book editor of the Los Angeles Times
Book Review. Diehl holds an M.A. in theatre from
UCLA and a B.A. in American studies from Rutgers
University, where he was a Henry Rutgers Scholar.
He is presently collaborating with Coretta Scott
King on her memoirs.
Richard S. Frank is a freelance writer
and editor and is currently an adjunct professor
at Boston University’s Washington Journalism
Center. From 1976 to 1997 he was the editor of National
Journal, the Washington-based week¬ly on national
politics and federal policy. During his tenure, the
magazine won two National Magazine Awards, and its
reporters won numerous national awards for public
affairs reporting. His earlier journalistic experience
included stints as a local government reporter for
the Bergen Record in New Jersey, as a statehouse
and city hall reporter for the Baltimore Evening
Sun, as state legislative correspondent and public
transportation reporter, and later as a Washington
correspondent, for the Philadelphia Bulletin, and
as international economics and trade reporter, associate
editor, and managing editor at National Journal.
He interrupted his journalistic career for almost
two years to serve as chief administrative assistant
to the mayor of Baltimore. He has a bachelor’s
degree from Syracuse University in international
relations and journalism and a master’s degree
from the University of Chicago in political science,
and he was an Advanced International Reporting Fellow
at Columbia University.
Paul Jellinek, Ph.D., is a principal at
Isaacs/Jellinek and senior fellow at Health Policy
Associates. He served on the staff of the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation from 1983 to 2002, the last
eleven years as a vice president for programs. At
the Foundation, he was involved in developing and
managing programs to improve access to health care,
reduce the harm from substance abuse, and improve
the organization and delivery of chronic care services.
Jellinek has had a particular interest in developing
programs to strengthen community capacity, including
Fighting Back and Join Together. A former fellow
at the Bush Institute for Child and Family Policy
in North Carolina, his articles have appeared in
the New England Journal of Medicine, Health Affairs,
and Issues in Science and Technology. Jellinek received
a Ph.D. in health policy and administration with
a concentration in health economics, as well as a
master’s degree in health administration, from
the School of Public Health at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is a graduate of
the University of Pennsylvania and the University
of South Florida.
Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, M.D., MBA, joined
the staff of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation in
April 2001 as the senior vice president and director
of the health care group. In January 2003, she became
the Foundation’s fourth president and chief
executive officer. Prior to coming to the Foundation,
Lavizzo-Mourey was the Sylvan Eisman Professor of
Medicine and Health Care Systems at the University
of Pennsylvania. Lavizzo-Mourey served as the deputy
administrator of the Agency for Health Care Policy
and Research (now the Agency for Health Care Research
and Quality). While in government service, she worked
on the White House health care policy team, including
the White House Task Force on Health Care Reform,
where she co-chaired the working group on quality
of care. Lavizzo-Mourey has served on numerous federal
advisory committees and is a member of the Institute
of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and
a Master of the American College of Physicians–American
Society of Internal Medicine. She earned her medical
degree at Harvard Medical School and a MBA degree
at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton
School. After completing a residency in internal
medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in
Boston, Lavizzo-Mourey was a Robert Wood Johnson
Clinical Scholar at the University of Pennsylvania,
where she also received her geriatrics training.
Laura C. Leviton, Ph.D., is a senior program
officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Before
joining the Foundation, she was a professor of public
health at the University of Alabama at Birmingham
and before that, on the faculty of the University
of Pittsburgh School of Public Health. Leviton is
a leading writer on evaluation methods and practice,
in particular for disease prevention. She was president
of the American Evaluation Association in 2000, coauthored
a leading evaluation text, and serves on several
editorial boards for evaluation journals. She received
the 1993 award from the American Psychological Association
for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology in
the Public Interest for her work in HIV prevention
and health promotion in the workplace. She served
on an Institute of Medicine committee to evaluate
preparedness for terrorist attacks, and was a member
of the CDC’s National Advisory Committee on
HIV and STD Prevention.
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Jane Isaacs Lowe, Ph.D.,
is a senior program officer at the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation and serves as the team leader for the
vulnerable populations portfolio, a program staff
group focused on improving social health outcomes
for low-income children, families, and older adults.
At the Foundation, she is also responsible for the
development of minority health professions training
programs and a matching grants program with local
funding partners. She is a current fellow at the
New York Academy of Medicine and a member of the
board of Grantmakers in Aging. Lowe came to the Foundation
from the University of Pennsylvania School of Social
Work, where she served as a member of the faculty
from 1989 to 1998. She was the recipient of the Outstanding
Teaching Award in 1992 and 1997. From 1976 to 1989
she worked at the Mt. Sinai Medical Center (New York
City), where she served as a faculty member in the
medical school’s Department of Community Medicine
and as a hospital social work administrator. Lowe
has extensive experience in chronic illness, community-based
health, and program planning. She earned her bachelor’s
de¬gree in sociology and education from Cedar
Crest College, her master’s degree in social
work from Columbia University, and her doctorate
in social welfare policy and planning from Rutgers
University.
Carolyn Newbergh is a Northern California
writer who has covered health care trends and policy
issues for more than twenty years. Her freelance
work has appeared in numerous print and on-line publications.
As a reporter for the Oakland Tribune, she wrote
articles on health care delivery for the poor as
well as emergency room violence, AIDS, and the impact
of crack cocaine on the children of addicts. She
was also an investigative reporter for the Tribune,
winning prestigious honors for a series on how consultants
intentionally cover up earthquake hazards in California.
Constance M. Pechura, Ph.D., is a senior
program officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation,
responsible for the Foundation’s Minority Medical
Faculty Development Program, Community Health Leadership
Program, Health Policy Fellowships Program, and Depression
in Primary Care Program. She came to the Foundation
from the Institute of Medicine
National Academies of Science, where she directed
a number of studies in health sciences policy, neuroscience
and behavioral health, and veterans’ health,
as a senior staff officer from 1988 to 1993. Pechura
also served as deputy director (from 1993 to 1995)
and director (from 1995 to 1998) of the institute’s
Board on Neuroscience and Behavioral Health. In addition,
she taught health policy in the Stanford in Washington
Program from 1993 to 1998, and anatomy and neuroscience
courses at George Washington University Medical School
and the F. Edward Hebert School of Medicine at the
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
(USUHS). Pechura earned a B.S. in psychology at Virginia
Commonwealth University and a Ph.D. in anatomy, with
a specialization in neuro¬science, from USUHS.
Her awards include a National Science Foundation
Graduate Fellowship, an Outstanding Teaching award
from the USUHS Medical School Class of 1988, and
the National Research Council’s Special Achievement
Award in 1993.
Lewis G. Sandy, M.D., is executive vice
president, Clinical Strategies and Policy, UnitedHealthcare.
At UnitedHealthcare, a diversified health and well-being
company, he leads efforts to promote efficient and
effective health care, provide tools and information
to doctors and patients to promote health, and foster
the growth of evidence-based medicine. Until 2003,
Sandy was executive vice president of the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation, where he was responsible
for the Foundation’s program development and
management, strategic planning, and administrative
operations. Between 1991 and 1996, Sandy was a vice
president of the Foundation and was active in the
Foundation’s workforce initiatives, its efforts
to track the changing health care system, its programs
to improve services for chronically ill people, and
its programs to improve managed care. An internist
and former health center medical director at the
Harvard Community Health Plan in Boston, Massachusetts,
Sandy received his B.S. and M.D. from the University
of Michigan and an M.B.A. from Stanford University.
A former Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical
Scholar and Clinical Fellow in Medicine at the University
of California, San Francisco, Sandy served his internship
and residency at the Beth Israel Hospital in Boston.
He is an associate clinical professor of medicine
at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New
Jersey/Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.
Renie Schapiro has an extensive background
in health writing and policy. She was editor of The
New Physician magazine and the Kennedy Institute
of Ethics Journal. She is coeditor of three books,
the most recent of which is Transplanting Human Tissue:
Ethics, Policy and Practise (2003). She was also
speechwriter and policy adviser to FDA commissioner
David Kessler and a research associate with the President’s
Commission on Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical
Research. She has taught health policy and bioethics
at Yale University and the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
She was a special communications officer at the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation and over the past several
years has been a consultant to the Foundation, working
closely with presidents Steven Schroeder and Risa
Lavizzo-Mourey on speeches and papers on health policy
and philanthropy. She has an M.P.H from Yale University
and a B.A. from the University of Minnesota.
Jonathan Showstack, Ph.D., M.P.H., is professor
of medicine and health policy in the Institute for
Health Policy Studies and Department of Medicine,
School of Medicine, University of California, San
Francisco. He is also associate director of the Institute.
Showstack has conducted numerous studies of the costs,
effectiveness, and outcomes of medical care and medical
education. He has over two decades of experience
in the assessment of health care technologies, including
studies of kidney and liver transplantation, coronary
artery bypass graft surgery, hepatic surgery, neonatal
intensive care, and emergency care. He received his
doctorate in sociology from the University of California,
San Francisco, and his master of public health degree
in health administration and planning from the University
of California, Berkeley.
Irene M. Wielawski is a health care journalist
with twenty years’ experience on daily newspapers,
including the Providence Journal-Bulletin and the
Los Angeles Times, where she was a member of the
investigations team. She has written extensively
on problems of access to care among the poor and
uninsured, and other socioeconomic issues in American
medicine. From 1994 through 2000 Wielawski—with
a research grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation—tracked
the experiences of the medically uninsured in twenty-five
states following the demise of President Clinton’s
health reform plan. Other projects in health care
journalism since then have included helping to develop
a pediatric medicine program for public television,
and freelance assignments for the New York Times
and the Los Angeles Times. Wielawski has been a finalist
for the Pulitzer Prize for medical reporting, among
other solo honors. She is a founder of the Association
of Health Care Journalists and a graduate of Vassar
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