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To: Kaslin

Overall positive article but I wish the author (female) didn’t focus so much on wardrobe.

I would love to know more about Dr. Birx’s military career and medical career.


8 posted on 03/25/2020 6:04:29 AM PDT by SueRae (An administration like no other.)
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To: SueRae

Wikipedia

White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator
Assumed office February 27, 2020

Born April 4, 1956 (age 63), Pennsylvania, U.S.
Children 2

Education Houghton College (BS)
Pennsylvania State University, Hershey (MD)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Army
Rank Colonel

Deborah Leah Birx (born April 4, 1956) is an American physician and diplomat who serves as the response coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force as of March 2020.[1]

Birx has served as Ambassador-at-Large and United States Global AIDS Coordinator since 2014, responsible for the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) program in 65 countries supporting HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention programs.[2]

Deborah Birx was born in Pennsylvania and is the daughter of Donald Birx, a mathematician and electrical engineer, and Adele Sparks Birx, a nursing instructor.[3][4][5]

She attended Lampeter-Strasburg High School and graduated from Carlisle High School in Pennsylvania in the early 1970s.[6]

She majored in chemistry at Houghton College in 1976 and then earned her medical degree from the Hershey School of Medicine at Pennsylvania State University.[3] In 1980 she began in internal medicine and basic and clinical immunology at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the National Institutes of Health.[7]

Career

Birx served as a physician in the United States Army, rising to the rank of colonel[6] before she retired from military service. She started her career with the United States Department of Defense as a clinician in immunology, focusing on HIV/AIDS vaccine research.[7]

She then served in the Department of Allergy and Clinical Immunology at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center from 1985 to 1989, authoring an article on the defective regulation of Epstein–Barr virus infection in patients with HIV/AIDS and related disorders that The New England Journal of Medicine published in 1986 and that Robert R. Redfield of the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (presently the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)) co-authored.[8]

In 1996, she became the Director of the United States Military HIV Research Program at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, a role she held until 2005.[7]

From 2005 to 2014, Birx served as the director of CDC’s Division of Global HIV/AIDS (DGHA), which is part of the agency’s Center for Global Health.[9]

Birx was nominated by President Barack Obama as United States Global AIDS Coordinator and confirmed by the Senate; she was sworn in April 4, 2014.[10] She described her role as ambassador to help meet the HIV prevention and treatment targets set by Obama in 2015 to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030.[11]

On February 27, 2020, Vice President Mike Pence named Ambassador Birx as response coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force.[1]

Birx serves as a Member of the Board for Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria as of March 2020.[12]

Selected honors and awards

Two U.S. Meritorious Service Medals[7]
Legion of Merit Award for her research, leadership and management during her tenure at the Department of Defense[7]


22 posted on 03/25/2020 6:31:40 AM PDT by Liz ( Our side has 8 trillion bullets; the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.)
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