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NYS Department of Health
Wadsworth Center, Infectious Disease
University at Albany, School of Public Health
SUNY Downstate Medical Center

Partner Institutions
National Development & Research Institute
New York Blood Center
Centers for Desease Control & Prevention


New York State Department Health
http://www.health.state.ny.us

Training is undertaken within two major entities of the New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH):



Wadsworth Center, Division of Infectious Disease
http://www.wadsworth.org
http://www.wadsworth.org/divisions/infdis.htm

The Wadsworth Center, located in Albany, New York, is the most comprehensive state public health laboratory in the nation. Its public health mission encompasses basic and applied research in the biomedical and environmental fields, clinical and environmental testing, and quality assurance. In addition, education in the biomedical and environmental sciences is an important mission of the Wadsworth Center; two of the academic departments of the University at Albany’s School of Public Health the Department of Biomedical Science and Department of Environmental Health and Toxicology are based at the Wadsworth Center. The Center responds to public health threats, and develops and applies the most up-to-date technologies and methods to ensure rapid, accurate detection of disease with a minimum turnaround time. Through licensure and training, the Center assures high quality performance of clinical, environmental, hospital and commercial laboratories and of tissue banks that provide services to New Yorkers. The Wadsworth Center encompasses four laboratory campuses, the Biggs Laboratory, the David Axelrod Institute and the Griffin Laboratory (all within a 12-mile radius). The Center includes over 1000 (staff and support staff) positions and it receives millions of dollars in extramural grants and contracts from Federal Agencies and from private foundations. The Wadsworth Center is organized into four major scientific divisions. State-of-the-art instrumentation in the Wadsworth Center includes a federally funded microscopy and image analysis facility, a national biotechnology resource available to qualified biomedical researchers. Core instrumentation facilities in molecular genetics, immunology, and biochemistry, imaging and molecular structure support both clinical science and research activities. Seminar programs host external speakers to the Center each week throughout the year, and a rich mix of intramural presentations in clinical and basic science provide both the permanent scientific staff and the dozens of on-site graduate students and postdoctoral trainees with opportunities to gain up-to-date information and concepts. Trainees are encouraged to participate in these seminars and especially the monthly seminar presented jointly by the Division of Infectious Disease and the Division of Epidemiology.

Division of Epidemiology
http://www.health.state.ny.us

The mission of the Division of Epidemiology is to protect the health of all New Yorkers by providing leadership in the development and application of scientifically sound principles of epidemiology and disease prevention and control. The Division conducts disease surveillance; provides expert technical assistance; collaborates with communities, local health units, and health care professionals; and shares expertise, epidemiologic information, and knowledge, in confronting the variety of endemic, epidemic, and emerging communicable diseases.

The Division of Epidemiology is comprised of a Statistical Unit and four bureaus: Bureau of Sexually Transmitted Disease Control, Bureau of Tuberculosis Control, Bureau of HIV/AIDS Epidemiology, and the Bureau of Communicable Disease Control. The Bureau of Communicable Disease Control consists of a variety of large, high-profile programs including Immunization, Arthropod-borne Disease Control, Zoonoses, Regional Epidemiology, Infection Control and Emerging Infections Program. The Division includes over 300 staff positions and it receives millions of dollars in extramural grants and contracts from Federal Agencies for communicable disease surveillance and control.



University at Albany, School of Public Health
http://www.albany.edu/sph

Established in 1985, the School of Public Health was created as a joint venture between the New York State Department of Health and the University at Albany, State University of New York. The New York State Department of Health is unique among state health departments in size, sophistication, and the support of both public health research and practice. Formally accredited by the Council on Education for Public Health, the School of Public Health offers four academic departments, with MPH, MS, DrPH, and PhD degrees, in the basic disciplines that constitute public health: Biomedical Sciences and Environmental Health and Toxicology, Epidemiology and Biostatistics and Health Policy Management.



SUNY Downstate Medical Center
http://www.downstate.edu
http://www.hivcenter.org

Formally known as The State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn, SUNY Downstate Medical Center can trace its roots back to 1860, when a school of medicine was founded at the Long Island College Hospital. The new college’s faculty revolutionized medical education in this country by bringing the teaching of medicine to the hospital bedside, thus rejecting the idea that physicians should be trained exclusively in university lecture halls.

Today, SUNY Downstate is one of the nation’s leading urban medical centers. SUNY Downstate comprises a College of Medicine, College of Health Related Professions, College of Nursing, School of Graduate Studies, and University Hospital of Brooklyn.

University Hospital of Brooklyn (serving a population of over 2.3 million people) is Brooklyn’s only hospital located at an academic medical center. As such, it offers the most advanced and comprehensive care in Brooklyn. Many of its physicians are regularly rated among the best in New York City. Some are known throughout the world.

With the borough of Brooklyn being so particularly hard hit by the AIDS epidemic, Downstate Medical Center has been a pioneer in AIDS care and was established to integrate and expand the multidisciplinary efforts that exist within the HIV care and research programs. It is composed of care providers and investigators with academic appointments at SUNY Downstate. Under the direction of Dr. Jack DeHovitz, the goal of the HIV Center for Women and Children is to provide first-rate interdisciplinary health care to all persons with HIV disease.





PARTNER INSTITUTIONS


National Development and Research Institute (NDRI)
http://www.ndri.org

National Development and Research Institutes, Inc. (NDRI) is a not-for-profit organization located in New York City and was established in 1967 to advance and utilize scientific knowledge toward innovative solutions for substance abuse, mental health problems, HIV/AIDS and related medical and social concerns, especially among high-risk populations. NDRI’s focus has broadened to reflect the changing nature of urban problems and includes HIV/AIDS prevention and epidemiology, at-risk youth, correlates of urban violence, health needs of drug users, and evaluation of a broad range of service and preventive programs. The interdisciplinary staff and international network of collaborators consists of investigators with expertise in sociology, psychology, anthropology, epidemiology, ethnography, medicine, statistics, and public health. NDRI is composed of nine Institutes and Center, including a Training Institute that has delivered over 1,000 training programs to over 20,000 individuals.



New York Blood Center (NYBC)
http://www.nybloodcenter.org

The New York Blood Center is the premier training site for specialists in transfusion medicine in New York, and offers both one- and two-year traineeships. The Center’s research arm, the Lindsey F. Kimball Research Institute, is one of the world’s leading centers for basic and applied research in hematology and transfusion medicine, dedicated to the study of blood and blood transfusion, and the prevention, treatment and cure of blood-borne and other diseases. Research at NYBC engages 208 scientists and staff working in 17 specialized laboratories. The Laboratory of Epidemiology is currently engaged in five large ongoing projects, three of which are part of an NIH-sponsored multi-center research program for prevention of HIV infection. The Laboratory of Molecular Diagnostics and Transfusion Transmitted Diseases are focused on nucleic acid amplification technologies for the genotyping of blood donors and for the study of infectious diseases that may be transmitted by blood transfusion. Infectious diseases currently under study include HTLV I/II, HIV, HCV, non-enveloped viruses such as Hepatitis A, as well as surveillance for transfusion transmitted diseases.



The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
http://www.cdc.gov

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is recognized as the lead federal agency for protecting the health and safety of people - at home and abroad, providing credible information to enhance health decisions, and promoting health through strong partnerships. CDC serves as the national focus for developing and applying disease prevention and control, environmental health, and health promotion and education activities designed to improve the health of the people of the United States.




Last updated: Wednesday, December 20, 2006

450 Clarkson Ave / Brooklyn, NY 11203 Box 1240 / Tel: 718 270-4571

NYS International Training & Research Program