Jeffrey P. Koplan, M.D.,
M.P.H.
Director, Centers for
Disease Control
Dr. Jeffrey P. Koplan has actively worked toward polio eradication for
many years. He has provided leadership for the STOP (Stop Transmission of
Polio) initiative, launched in January 1999, to provide technical field
staff to assist local teams. He recently returned from a visit to
Bangladesh where he worked alongside local health workers and field
supervisors.
Born in 1945, Dr. Koplan was a medical student at Mount Sinai School of
Medicine and later earned a master's degree in public health at Harvard
University. He began his public health career at Centers for Disease
Control in the Epidemic Intelligence Service, investigating and
controlling outbreaks. In two decades at CDC, his career has touched on
virtually every major area of public health. Dr. Koplan shared in one of
CDC's greatest triumphs when he joined the team that eradicated smallpox
in the mid-70s. He became the first director of the new National Center
for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion within CDC in 1989. He
also spent five years in the private sector as director and president of
the Prudential Center for Health Care Research from 1994 to 1998. Dr.
Koplan was named CDC Director in July 1998 and moved into the post in
October of that year.
Last revised: January 23, 2007
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