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Child Death Review: Using Data to
Understand Why Children Die and Taking Action to Prevent Child Deaths
Wednesday, February 22, 2006, 2-3:15 p.m., Eastern
Time
Presenter Information
Michael
Kogan, Ph.D.
Director, Office of Data and Program Development
Maternal and Child Health Bureau
Health Resources and Services Administration
5600 Fishers Lane
Room 18-41
Rockville, MD 20857
Phone: (301) 443-3145
Fax: (301) 443-3145
Email: mkogan@hrsa.gov
Michael Kogan holds a Ph.D. in Epidemiology from Yale University. He is currently
the Director, Office of Data and information Management for the Maternal
and Child Health Bureau. In this position he is responsible for directing
activities of the office with an emphasis on 1) maternal and child health
research; 2) building the data capacity of federal, state and local areas
in maternal and child health; and 3) building the maternal and child health
epidemiology capacity in the United States.
Prior to this position, he worked as a Senior Epidemiologist at the National
Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
He serves on the editorial boards of the Maternal and Child Health Journal
and the American Journal of Public Health. His research interests include:
the effect of prenatal and pediatric care services on maternal and child
health, the effect of lack of health care coverage on access and continuity
of care, multiple births and determinants of preterm birth.
Captain
Stephanie Bryn, M.P.H.
Director
Injury and Violence Prevention
Division of Child, Adolescent and Family Health
Maternal and Child Health Bureau
5600 Fishers Lane, Room 18A-38
Rockville, MD 20857
Phone: 301-443-6091
E-mail: sbryn@hrsa.gov
Captain Stephanie Bryn, Director of Injury
and Violence Prevention Programs for the Health Resources and
Services Administration’s (HRSA) Maternal and Child Health
Bureau (MCHB), facilitates technical assistance and education/training
to States, organizations, and others through a network of national
resource centers referred to as the Children’s Safety Network
(CSN) and by providing vision and leadership for injury and violence
prevention programming. She administers the three CSN resource
centers that provide training and technical assistance to maternal
and child health (MCH) agencies, State MCHB grantees, health
and safety organizations, and others with the mission of reducing
injury and violence in the United States. Captain Bryn also oversees
the Health, Mental Health and Safety Guidelines for Schools cooperative
agreement with the American Academy of Pediatrics and the National
Association of School Nurses. She is the Project Officer for
HRSA’s Bullying Prevention Youth Media Campaign ($3.4 million)
focused on families; tweens aged 9–13 years; teens; health
care providers; school personnel; parent, tween, and teen organizations;
faith-based organizations; and professional organizations. Captain
Bryn directs the work of the MCH National Child Death Review
(CDR) Resource and Policy Center that provides education and
training and technical assistance to State CDR Coordinators.
She is active in the National Organization for Youth Safety,
the American School Health Association, PROJECT CHANGE, and SafeUSA.
Theresa
Covington, M.P.H.
Director
National MCH Center for Child Death Review
c/o Michigan Public Health Institute
2438 Woodlake Circle, Suite 240
Okemos, MI 48864
Phone: 800-656-2434
Fax: 517-324-7365
Email: tcovingt@mphi.org
Theresa Covington, M.P.H., is the Senior
Program Director for the Child and Adolescent Health Programs at
the Michigan Public Health Institute. In this capacity, she is the
Director of the National Resource Center for Child Death Review,
which is funded by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the Health
Resources and Services Administration. She developed and has managed
the Michigan Child Death Review Program since 1994 and oversees the
Michigan Fetal and Infant Mortality Review Program. She has more
than 20 years’ experience in the planning, funding, administration,
and evaluation of innovative community-based health and human service
programs. She holds a master’s in public health from the University
of Michigan.
Sally
Fogerty, B.S.N., M.Ed.
Associate Commissioner
Center for Community Health
Massachusetts Department of Public Health
250 Washington Street, 5th Floor
Boston, MA 02108-4619
Phone: 617-624-6090
Fax: 617-624-6062
E-mail: sally.fogerty@state.ma.us
Sally Fogerty currently serves as the
Associate Commissioner of the Center for Community Health of the
Massachusetts Department of Public Health’s Bureau of Family
and Community Health. The Center is responsible for HIV/AIDS services,
substance abuse services, State Title V maternal and child health
programs, the Massachusetts WIC program, Early Intervention – Part
H of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (formerly P.L.
102-119), Healthy Start, family planning services, Services for Children
with Special Health Care Needs, and multiple chronic disease and
health promotion activities as well as Rape Crisis Centers, the Sexual
Assault Nurse Examiner Program, violence and injury prevention programs,
school health programs, and the State Tobacco Control Program.
Ms. Fogerty has been involved in the development of comprehensive program
initiatives across the life span, integration of preventive and health
promotion strategies into the established medical service system to promote
the development of a comprehensive system of care for mothers, children,
and elders, setting of policies, and overseeing multiple statewide initiatives
and programs related to perinatal, early childhood, and children and
adolescents including school health
Mary
Overpeck, Dr.P.H.
Manager
Injury Prevention Program
New Mexico State Department of Health
1190 S. St. Francis Drive
Santa Fe, NM 87502
Phone: 505-827-2613
Fax: 505-827-2530
E-mail: mary.overpeck@state.nm.us
Dr. Overpeck served as a data consultant
to the National Maternal and Child Health Center for Child Death
Review while working as an epidemiologist in the Office of Data and
Program Development at the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration
Bureau of Maternal and Child Health. She currently manages the Injury
Prevention Program at the New Mexico Department of Public Health.
She has performed research and served as principal investigator on
numerous national and international studies of infant, child, and
adolescent health. She also has published and served as an expert
on injury and violence among infants, children, and adolescents.
Dr. Overpeck is a past Chair of the American Public Health Association’s
Injury Control and Emergency Health Services section. Her graduate
work in epidemiology and maternal and child health was completed
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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