Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Centers for Disease Control and Prevention" in English language version.
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(help)The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had 10,899 employees in 2015 ...
... none of the funds available for injury prevention and control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may be used to advocate or promote gun control.
Dr. R. A. Vonderlehr of Atlanta, medical director in charge of the Communicable Disease Center, Public Health Service, Federal Security Agency, has been appointed Southeastern regional medical director of the Public Health Service. He succeeds Dr. F. V. Meriwether, who has retired after a 32-year career in public health service. Dr. Justin M. Andrews, deputy officer in charge of the Communicable Disease Center for the past six years, has been named to succeed Dr. Vonderlehr as officer in charge of the center.
Dr. Justin M. Andrews, officer in charge of the Communicable Disease Center, Public Health Service, Atlanta, has been appointed assistant surgeon general and associate chief of the Bureau of State Services of the Public Health Service by Surgeon General Leonard A. Scheele in Washington. Dr. Theodore J. Bauer, chief of the Public Health Service division of venereal disease in Washington, has been named to succeed Dr. Andrews in Atlanta. He will assume his new duties about Jan. 15.
Dr. Theodore J. Bauer, veteran Public Health Service medical officer, has assumed his new duties in charge of the Communicable Disease Center, Public Health Service, Federal Security Agency, with headquarters in Atlanta. Dr. Bauer succeeds Dr. Justin M. Andrews, who was appointed assistant surgeon general and associate chief of the Bureau of State Services with headquarters in Washington.
Dr. Theodore J. Bauer, chief of the Communicable Disease Center in Atlanta, Tuesday was appointed an assistant surgeon general of the Public Health Service in Washington. The appointment, which will become effective Sept. 1, was made by L. E. Burney, surgeon general.
Dr. Robert J. Anderson, 42, a career officer in the U.S. Public Health Service and an expert in the field of tuberculosis control, has been named chief of the Communicable Disease Center here. Anderson succeeds Dr. Theodore Bauer, who recently was appointed deputy chief of State Services in Washington. The new CDC chief will report for duty in Atlanta Oct. 1.
Dr. Robert J. Anderson, chief of the U.S. Public Health Service's Communicable Disease Center here since October 1956, has been appointed deputy chief of the service's Bureau of State Services in Washington.
Dr. Clarence A. Smith has been appointed chief of the U.S. Public Health Service's Communicable Disease Center here, it was announced Monday. Dr. Smith, who came to CDC in February 1957 as deputy chief, succeeds Dr. Robert J. Anderson, who was appointed deputy chief of the Public Health Service's Bureau of State Services in Washington.
Dr. C. A. Smith, chief of the Communicable Disease Center here since 1960, will leave for Washington this week to take a new post with the U.S. Bureau of Public Health. He will be replaced at the CDC on Sept. 1 by Dr. James L. Goddard
Dr. James L. Goddard, chief of the Communicable Disease Center in Atlanta, has been named to head the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Dr. David J. Sencer, deputy chief of the Communicable Disease Center in Atlanta since 1964, named chief of CDC Monday by Surgeon General William H. Stewart of the U.S. Public Health Service in Washington.
Dr. David J. Sencer, director of the national Center for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta for the last 10 years, was fired Monday by Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) Secretary Joseph Califano. The announcement was made Monday afternoon in Washington by an aide to Califano, while Sencer, along with 20 scientists and medical experts, was meeting in Califano's office to decide whether the government should resume the nationwide swine flu A source at the CDC indicated that Sencer is the fifth director of the six agencies within the U.S. Public Health Service to be removed by the Carter administration.
Dr. David Sencer said Tuesday afternoon that he was told his ouster as director of the national Center for Disease Control (CDC) was not a political decision, adding his departure will not dramatically affect the operation of the center in the near future... Until a successor is named, Califano asked Sencer to continue running the only federal agency based outside of Washington, D.C. "I'll keep signing the papers around here until then," he quipped.
Secretary of Health, Education Welfare Joseph Califano paid a visit to 1,200 employes of the Center for Disease Control here Tuesday and named one of the CDC's own as its new director. The appointment of Dr. William Foege, announced at the close of a 20-minute "get acquainted" speech by Califano, was greeted with a burst of applause and a minute-long standing ovation by the employes packed into the center's auditorium. Foege, named assistant director of the CDC in 1976 and an employee there since 1966, replaces David Sencer, who was ousted from the position by Califano in February after an 11-year stint as director.
Dr. William Foege, for six years director of the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and the coordinator of such major medical investigations as the probe into the causes of toxic shock syndrome and Legionnaire's disease, announced his resignation Wednesday. Foege, 47, said he will be staying at the CDC to act as a liaison between the CDC and various medical schools across the country in the area of public health. "I've been here for six years, and I believed when I first started that I should only stay five or six years," Foege said today. "I think it's a good time to leave." No effective date for his resignation was set, but Foege said he would stay on as CDC director until his replacement could be found a process he said might take "some months." His resignation, which comes exactly six years after his appointment as CDC director on April 5, 1977, was announced this morning at a CDC staff meeting. It was submitted yesterday in a letter to Dr. Edward N. Brandt, assistant secretary for health in the Department of Health and Human Services.
Dr. James O. Mason, who will become the CDC director Dec. 1, has a strong record in disease prevention and a reputation for innovation in the health care field.
Dr. James 0. Mason has been confirmed unanimously by the Senate to become assistant secretary of health in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)... Dr. Walter Dowdle, former deputy director of the agency and a 29-year veteran of the CDC, has been named acting director until a new director is selected.
Dr. William L. Roper's first day at the Centers for Disease Control began Thursday the patriotic fanfare of a John Philip Sousa march and the whispered warning, "You're a minute late..." It was at the conclusion of the ceremony, as Dr. Roper was being shepherded off by the man he replaced, Acting CDC Director Walter Dowdle, and other officials to visit the heads of the six centers that make up his diverse agency, that his meticulously planned schedule began to unravel.
The man who added "prevention" to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will head a first-of-its-kind research center to tackle health problems among insured Americans. Dr. William L. Roper, who ends his three-year stint as CDC director on June 30, will become president of Prudential Insurance Co. of America's new $20 million National Center for Health Care Research.
The CDC's deputy director, Dr. Walter Dowdle, was named acting director on Thursday. It is his second acting directorship. Dr. Dowdle also led the CDC three years ago, during the search for Dr. Roper, who left the agency Monday...
Dr. David Satcher, appointed in August to head the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, will begin his job on Nov. 15, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced Thursday.
a former CDC staff Deputy Director Claire Broome is expected to be named acting chief until a permanent successor is chosen. Satcher was confirmed Tuesday by the Senate as surgeon general... Dr. David Satcher, outgoing director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is scheduled to be sworn in this morning as U.S. surgeon general.
The agencys' former leaders say they could do more to explore the subject, but officials fear political – and personal – retribution.
... none of the funds available for injury prevention and control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may be used to advocate or promote gun control.
The agencys' former leaders say they could do more to explore the subject, but officials fear political – and personal – retribution.