Wednesday, January 13, 2021
Andria Apostolou, PhD, MPH
Since 2014, Dr. Apostolou has served as the Indian Health Service National STD Program lead. She is also a senior epidemiologist with the Division of Epidemiology and Disease Prevention working on a variety of public health projects including immunizations and, currently, on Covid-19 response. Dr. Apostolou was previously with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a Health Systems Integration Scholar and as an Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer assigned to the New Jersey Department of Health.
Dr. Apostolou holds a PhD in Molecular Medicine from the University of Maryland and an MPH in Biostatistics and Epidemiology from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.
Sheila A. Caldwell, Ph.D.
Dr. Caldwell is a Program Director in the Divison for Research Capacity Building within the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. Dr. Caldwell manages IDeA Networks of Biomedical Research (INBRE) and Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRA) grants. In addition, she directs the trans-NIH Native American Research Centers for Health (NARCH) program. Dr. Caldwell earned a Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular Oncology from George Washington University. Dr. Caldwell conducted postdoctoral reserach at the National Cancer Institute.
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Jamie Ritchey, PhD, MPH
Dr. Ritchey is the Tribal Epidemiology Center Director at the Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc. She has held this position for over eight years and provides public health technical assistance and training for American Indian Tribes in the Indian Health Service Phoenix and Tucson Service Areas. She has advanced training and technical experience in epidemiology, design methodologies, social and behavioral health theory, grant writing and reporting, program evaluation, and chronic, infectious, injury, and behavioral health programming.
Jonathan Davis, PhD
Dr. Davis is the Geospatial Data Analyst and Program Manager for the Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc. He has held this position since 2014. Dr. Davis received his PhD in Geography from Arizona State University in 2020. His research interests include qualitative methods, evaluation, digital storytelling, geospatial analysis, community based decision making, and Geodesign.
Wednesday, November 18, 2020
Harrison Platero
Mr. Platero is Diné from Canõncito Band of Navajo. His homeland is located west of Albuquerque in New Mexico. He has been a member of the Native Research Network (NRN) since its inception. Mr. Platero beleives in the mission and objectives of the NRN organization to serve professional researchers and Native communities.
Mr. Platero has contributed his services to health initiatives and education. For over 25 years, Mr. Platero has served the community through efforts ranging from health promotion to disease prevention. He has also worked with Native American populations in the southwest by assisting other professional researchers with language and cultural translation.
Formerly, Mr. Platero worked at John Hopkins University. He now works at the University of New Mexico in the sporting events department, though he has been furloughed in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. He is also a research assistance with JHU with a focus on the prevention of obesity and diabetes among Native communities.
Arun Balajee, Ph.D.
Dr. Balajee currently leads the Technical Assistance team, Tribal Support Section in the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) COVID19 response. She recently deployed to Navajo Nation and Hopi Tribe to support the COVID19 response. Through the work with the Hope Tribe, Dr. Balajee and her reserach team published two reports in the CDC’s weekly epidemiological digest, The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR).
When not working in the COVID19 response, Dr. Balajee is the Associate Director of Global Health Sciences in the Division of Viral Diseases in the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, CDC. Dr. Balajee leads a team of experts whose work includes setting up early warning surveillance systems in multiple countries to better prepare countries for the next pandemic if one arises.
David R. Wilson, Ph.D.
Dr. Wilson was appointed as the first Director of the Tribal Health Research Office (THRO) in January 2017. In this leadership role, Dr. Wilson brings together representatives from the NIH ICOs to leverage trans-NIH resources and build collaborations through the research portfolio to address tribal health concerns. He works to build a unified NIH presence with which to engage and ensure input from tribal leaders across the nation, and aims to expand training opportunities for American Indian and Alaska Native communities. Dr. Wilson comes to the NIH Office of the Director from the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health where he served as Public Health Advisor and the American Indian/Alaska Native Policy Lead.
Dr. Wilson graduated with a Ph.D. in molecular and cellular biology from Arizona State University. His commitment to encouraging underrepresented minorities to pursue careers in science began when he was a graduate student and Regent’s scholar working with high school and community college students in the Four Corners area. Dr. Wilson completed a three-year postdoc, and served as a senior research scientist at the National Institute on Aging. He also serves as an adjunct professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health at the Center for American Indian Health.
Rachael Tracy, MPH
Ms. Tracy is a proud member of the Navajo Nation. She received her M.P.H. from the University of Oklahoma and her B.S. from Arizona State University. Currently, Ms. Tracy serves as the Indian Health Service Health Research Director and Chair of the National Institutional Review Board. Her professional career has taken her down the path of 25 years of public service at the Indian Health Service, National Institutes of Health, California Rural Indian Health Board, and Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, where she has gained expertise in public health, community health, health education, and research translation and implementation science, and human research protections. Ms. Tracy has had the honor of working with American Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, Filipino, Latino, and African American communities throughout the United States.
Frank Morgan
Frank Morgan is of the Salt Clan, born for Yucca Fruit People. His maternal grandfathers are Ledge of Mountain Clan and paternal grandfathers are Manygoats Clan. Mr. Morgan grew up in the Four Corners area on a farm and sheep ranch. He is a Navajo raised in the traditional way of life.
Mr. Morgan went to a BIA school and public school. He studied at the University of New Mexico, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, and Fort Lewis College. His studies led to an ethnographic research career in which his knowledge of Navajo culture and language became his primary means in his work. Mr. Morgan is a translator, interpreter, curriculum writer, health educator, and organizational trainer. He believes that everyone should know how to speak, read and write his or her traditional language. Through the knowing of one’s traditional language can personal identity, strength and stability be instilled.
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Open Prayer:
Frank Morgan
Frank Morgan is of the Salt Clan, born for Yucca Fruit People. His maternal grandfathers are Ledge of Mountain Clan and paternal grandfathers are Manygoats Clan. Mr. Morgan grew up in the Four Corners area on a farm and sheep ranch. He is a Navajo raised in the traditional way of life.
Mr. Morgan went to a BIA school and public school. He studied at the University of New Mexico, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, and Fort Lewis College. His studies led to an ethnographic research career in which his knowledge of Navajo culture and language became his primary means in his work. Mr. Morgan is a translator, interpreter, curriculum writer, health educator, and organizational trainer. He believes that everyone should know how to speak, read and write his or her traditional language. Through the knowing of one’s traditional language can personal identity, strength and stability be instilled.
Keynote Speaker:
Yvette Roubideaux, MD, MPH, Vice President for Research and Director of the Policy Research Center, NCAI
Dr. Yvette Roubideaux (Rosebud Sioux/Standing Rock Sioux) is the Vice President for Research and Director of the Policy Research Center at the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI). The mission of the NCAI Policy Research Center is to provide tribal leaders with the best available knowledge to make strategically proactive policy decisions in a framework of Native wisdom that positively impact the future of Native peoples. Her prior work includes research, education, health systems administration, and policy development in the areas of American Indian/Alaska Native health and the quality of diabetes care. She served in the Obama Administration as a Senior Advisor to the HHS Secretary for American Indians and Alaska Natives and as the Director of the Indian Health Service (IHS). She is an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Health Systems, Management, and Policy in the Colorado School of Public Health at the University of Colorado, and her previous academic appointments include Clinical Professor and Associate Dean for Diversity, Inclusion and Leadership at the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine at Washington State University, and Assistant Professor at the University of Arizona College of Medicine and Zuckerman College of Public Health. Dr. Roubideaux served as the co-director of the Coordinating Center for the IHS Special Diabetes Program for Indians Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Demonstration Projects, directed training programs to encourage American Indian and Alaska Native students to enter health and research professions, is a founder of the Native Research Network, Inc., and served as President of the Association of American Indian Physicians. Dr. Roubideaux received her undergraduate, medical, and public health degrees at Harvard, is the author of several peer-reviewed research publications, and co-edited the 2001 book, Promises to Keep: Public Health Policy for American Indians and Alaska Natives.
Dan Calac, MD, has served as Chief Medical Officer of Indian Health Council, Inc. (IHC), a consortium of nine tribes located in North County San Diego since 2003. The IHC provides on-site and outreach services and programs to nearly 5,000 clients and provides over 20,000 visits per year. Also, since 2003, Dr. Calac also serves as Principal Investigator with the California Native American Research Centers for Health (NARCH) whose goals are to increase the quantity and quality of research on the health of Native Americans in California and to increase the number of Native American students and faculty in California universities.
The research that Dr. Calac is involved in builds capacity and strengthens relationships with academic partners to promote further studies within the high-risk population he serves. Additionally, his work addresses health disparities among Native populations and introduces methods utilizing community based participatory research to reduce disparities and increase the health literacy of this population.
Dr. Calac received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School and did both internship and residency in internal medicine and pediatrics at the Combined Internal Medicine/Pediatrics Residency Program at University of Southern California/Los Angeles County (USC-LAC).
Dr. Calac has numerous publications; serves on many boards, committees and councils; and speaks to many groups across the country.