Quiz Highlights UCSF's Role in National Service

David Kessler
Here's
the quiz: UCSF in the Nation's Service UCSF has a distinguished record of placing its students and faculty into positions of high governmental responsibility in health. Can you place the people with the positions?
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- 1. Harold Varmus, MD, led the NIH from 1993 to 1999. A
UCSF microbiology faculty member for more than 20 years, he shared the 1989
Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine with Chancellor Michael Bishop, MD,
for their discovery of proto-oncogenes, normal genes that have the potential
to convert to cancer genes. Now Varmus is president of Sloan-Kettering Memorial
Cancer Center. Read a 1989 autobiography of Varmus here.
- 2. Former Chancellor Philip Lee, MD, served as assistant
secretary of health under President Lyndon Johnson in the 1960s and under
President Bill Clinton in the 1990s. He was UCSF's chancellor from 1969
to 1972, and co-founded the Institute for Health Policy Studies at UCSF in
1972. He also served as director of health services for the Agency for International
Development, and was the first head of the Physician Payment Review Commission
set up by Congress and the first president of San Francisco's City Health
Commission. Lee now is professor emeritus of social medicine. Read an interview
with Lee here.
- 3. Lewis Butler, LLB, served as assistant secretary for
planning and evaluation in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare
during the Nixon administration. He co-founded UCSF's Institute for
Health Policy Studies with Phil Lee. Currently, he is chairman emeritus of
the Ploughshares Fund and California Tomorrow, and co-chairman of the Revolt
of the Elders Coalition.
- 4. School of Medicine Dean David Kessler, MD, vice chancellor
of medical affairs, was the outspoken commissioner of the FDA from 1990 to
1997 under Presidents George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton. Read about him taking
on the tobacco industry as FDA commissioner
here.
- 5. Jere Goyan, PhD, served as dean of the UCSF School of
Pharmacy from 1967 to 1992, but took a 16-month leave of absence in 1979 to
lead the FDA. Read more about Goyan here.
- 6. CDC Director Julie L. Gerberding, MD, MPH, remains an
associate professor of medicine at UCSF. Before taking the position at the
CDC, she directed the Epidemiology and Prevention Interventions Center at
San Francisco General Hospital Medical Center. Read about UCSF's influence
at the CDC in the UCSF
Magazine.
- 7. Vice Admiral Richard H. Carmona, MD, MPH, FACS, surgeon
general of the United States, earned his bachelor of science and medical degrees
and completed his surgical residency at UCSF after service in the Army's
Special Forces in Vietnam. Read about Carmona's visit to San Francisco
here.
- 8. Robert A. Derzon, MHA, MBA, LLD, was director and CEO
of the UCSF Hospital and Clinics before joining the Department of Health and
Human Services Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) as its first administrator
in 1977. HCFA now is called the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
- 9. Bruce Alberts, PhD, chaired the UCSF Department of Biochemistry
and Biophysics until his election as president of the National Academy of
Sciences in 1993. An expert on molecular analyses of chromosome replication,
he is one of the original authors of the widely used textbook The Molecular
Biology of the Cell. He has served on the advisory board of the National Science
Resources Center to improve teaching of science, as well as on the National
Academy of Sciences' National Committee on Science Education Standards
and Assessment. Returning to UCSF in 2005, he resumed his efforts to improve
science education through projects such as the Science & Health Education
Partnership (SEP) at UCSF, which he had founded 20 years earlier. Read about
how Alberts has worked to improve science education or view a video
here.
- 10. Shirley Chater, PhD, served as commissioner of the Social Security Administration from 1993 until February 1997. Chater earned her master's degree in nursing at UCSF and held joint appointments at UC Berkeley and UCSF for 17 years. She served at UCSF as vice chancellor for academic affairs before becoming president of Texas Woman's University. Currently, Chater is University of California Visiting Professor at UCSF's Institute for Health & Aging and in the School of Nursing's Department of Community Health Systems. Read more here.