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Richard H. Carmona, M.D., M.P.H., FACS

17th Surgeon General of the United States (2002-2006)
Distinguished Professor, University of Arizona

Born to a poor immigrant family in New York City, Richard Carmona experienced homelessness, hunger and health disparities during his youth. The experiences greatly sensitized him to the relationships among culture, health, education and economic status, and ultimately shaped his future.

After dropping out of high school, Dr. Carmona enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1967. By the time he left active duty, he was a Special Forces, combat-decorated Vietnam veteran. He then pursued a college degree and entered medical school at the University of California, San Francisco where he won the prestigious Gold Cane award.

Dr. Carmona became a surgeon with a sub-specialty in trauma, burns and critical care and was recruited to Tucson to establish the first trauma system in southern Arizona, which he did successfully. Later, while working full time as a hospital and health system CEO, he earned a master’s degree in public health policy and administration from the University of Arizona.

In 2002, Dr. Carmona was nominated by the president and unanimously confirmed by the United States Senate to become the 17th Surgeon General of the United States. After completing his statutory four-year term as Surgeon General in 2006, Dr. Carmona joined Tucson-based Canyon Ranch as vice chairman. He is president of the nonprofit Canyon Ranch Institute and Distinguished Professor at the Zuckerman College of Public Health at the University of Arizona.

Canyon Ranch Institute
University of Arizona, College of Public Health

Panelists:

Kyu Rhee, MD, MPH, FAAP, FACP

Chief Public Health Officer, Health Resources and Services Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Prior to joining HRSA, Dr. Rhee was Director of the Office of Innovation and Program Coordination at the National Institutes of Health's National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities. Before that, he was Chief Medical Officer of Baltimore Medical System Inc., the largest network of Federally Qualified Health Centers in Maryland. In addition, Dr. Rhee served five years as a National Health Service Corps Scholar and Medical Director at the Upper Cardozo Health Center in Washington, D.C.

Dr. Rhee is board-certified in internal medicine and pediatrics. He received his medical degree from the University of Southern California and did his residency in internal medicine and pediatrics at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. Dr. Rhee also holds a masters degree in public policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. He received his Bachelor degree from Yale University in Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry.

Health Resources and Services Administration

Marie Morilus-Black, LCSW-R

Director, Children and Youth Services, D.C. Department of Mental Health

Marie Morilus-Black is currently the Director of Child and Youth Services for the District of Columbia. Previously, Morilus-Black was the Director of Family Voices Network of Erie County, the children’s division of the Department of Mental Health of Erie County in Buffalo, N.Y., where she successfully ran and sustained a System of Care Grant. She obtained her master's degree in social work at the University of New York at Buffalo and has been in the field of human services for almost 20 years.

Morilus-Black is an expert in the field of child welfare and mental health and is very knowledgeable of the juvenile justice system. She is responsible for managing and implementing the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administrative (SAMHSA) grant of $9.5 million dollars over six years for the Erie County Department of Mental Health, which works in collaboration with the Department of Social Services and Juvenile Justice Probation of Erie County.

Most recently, Morilus-Black published a peer-reviewed article in the Community Mental Health Journal entitled “Social Supports for Youth and Families." She has conducted numerous workshops on issues impacting children and families involved in the multiple systems cited above both, locally and nationally. For the last couple of years, she has presented and served as a facilitator at the SAMHSA New System of Care Communities Orientation Meeting.

She has served as a faculty member at the Annual Conference of the Research and Training Center for Children’s Mental Health and the bi-annual training institute held by the National Technical Assistance Center for Children's Mental Health at the Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development, with a focus on local systems of care for children, adolescents and young adults with or at-risk for mental health challenges. Morilus-Black is also known for her work in utilizing data to improve practice, particularly in the area of clinical service delivery in a culturally and linguistically competent manner. This particular area of interest drove her study to become a Six Sigma Green Belt.

Children and Youth Services
School Based Mental Health Program

Peter S. Jensen, MD

President, REACH Institute and Professor of Psychiatry, Mayo Clinic

Peter S. Jensen, M.D., is professor of psychiatry and co-chair, Division of Child Psychiatry and Psychology at the Mayo Clinic. Concurrent with this position, Dr. Jensen serves as president & CEO of the REACH Institute (REsource for Advancing Children’s Health), a federally chartered 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to disseminating evidence-based interventions for child and adolescent mental health.

Prior to these current duties, Dr. Jensen was the Ruane Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University and founding Director of the Center for the Advancement of Children’s Mental Health at Columbia University in New York, and Associate Director for Child and Adolescent Mental Disorders Research, National Institute of Mental Health.

Dr. Jensen is the author of nearly 300 peer-reviewed articles and chapters and 20 books, and has received awards for his teaching and research from many national organizations, including the American Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, the Society for Child Psychiatric Nursing, NAMI and CHADD. His research focuses principally on the testing of optimal methods for encouraging and assisting healthcare and educational professionals to apply evidence-based interventions for improving children’s mental health.

The REACH Institute
Mayo Clinic

Bernadette Melnyk, PhD, RN, PNP, PMHNP, FNAP, FAAN

Dean, ASU College of Nursing and Health Innovation

Bernadette Melnyk, Ph.D., RN, CPNP/PMHNP, FNAP, FAAN is Dean and Distinguished Foundation Professor in Nursing at Arizona State University College of Nursing and Health Innovation. Dr. Melnyk is an internationally recognized expert in theory-based intervention research and evidence-based practice as well as in child and adolescent mental health. She has worked with numerous healthcare systems throughout the nation and globe to advance and sustain evidence-based practice.

Dr. Melnyk’s record of extramural research and educational funding, including grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and HRSA totals more than $11 million. Through a series of nine randomized controlled trials, she has supported the efficacy of her COPE intervention program in improving the outcomes of critically ill/hospitalized children and premature infants and parents, which has been adopted by hospitals and insurers throughout the U.S.

Her current NIH-funded RO1 grant is a randomized controlled trial testing the efficacy of her COPE/Healthy Lifestyles TEEN program to prevent overweight/obesity and depression in 800 culturally diverse teenagers in Phoenix, Ariz.

Dr. Melnyk’s record of scholarship includes more than150 publications, two books and numerous distinguished awards for her contributions to improving children’s health, nursing and healthcare.

ASU College of Nursing and Health Innovation

Russell R. Pate, PhD, FACSM

Director, Children’s Physical Activity Research Group and Professor, University of South Carolina Arnold School of Public Health

Russell R. Pate is an exercise physiologist with interests in physical activity and physical fitness in children and the health implications of physical activity. He has published more than 230 scholarly papers and has authored or edited three books.

His research has been supported by the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Heart Association, and several private foundations and corporations. He heads a research team that currently is supported by three grants from the National Institutes of Health. He coordinated the effort that lead to the development of the recommendation on Physical Activity and Public Health of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American College of Sports Medicine (1995). He has served on the U.S. Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, the U.S. Physical Activity Guidelines Advisory Committee and an Institute of Medicine panel that developed guidelines on prevention of childhood obesity. He currently chairs the coordinating committee for the National Physical Activity Plan.

Pate has served in several leadership positions with the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), and in 1993-94 served as that organization’s president. He is a past-president of the National Coalition on Promoting Physical Activity and an elected fellow of the American Academy of Kinesiology and Physical Education. In 1996 he received the Citation Award from the American College of Sports Medicine, and in 1999 he received the Alliance Scholar Award of the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance.

A lifelong distance runner, Pate competed in three U.S. Olympic Trials marathons and twice placed among the top-ten finishers in the Boston Marathon. For more than 20 years, he served as president of the Carolina Marathon Association, which twice hosted the U.S. Olympic Trials for the Women’s Marathon.

Children's Physical Activity Research Group

Joanne Kenen

Founding Editor, New Health Dialogue blog, New America Foundation

Joanne Kenen has been writing about health reform and health policy in Washington since 1994. She writes for numerous national publications and web sites, and created the health policy blog -- which addressed coverage, cost and quality -- at the nonpartisan New America Foundation, She has published on childhood obesity and mental health.

Kenen is a journalist and author who spent more than a decade covering health policy on Capitol Hill. A longtime Reuters correspondent in New York, Florida/the Caribbean and Washington, D.C., she has covered everything from voodoo festivals to U.S. presidential campaigns. As a freelance writer with an eclectic reach, she has contributed both policy and consumer-oriented articles to numerous newspapers, websites and magazines, including The Atlantic Monthly, Washingtonian, The Washington Post, AARP, American Prospect, CURE, Parenting and Stateline.org.

As a Kaiser Family Foundation Media Fellow in 2006–07, Kenen wrote extensively about palliative medicine, the evolution of hospice care and changes in medical education. A graduate of Radcliffe College at Harvard University, she also reported from Central America earlier in her career and was the recipient of an Inter-American Press Association fellowship to write about the development of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

New America Foundation

Madelyn Clark

Youth Advisor, Alliance for a Healthier Generation

Madelyn Clark is a vibrant 17-year-old from Mechanicsville, Va. She is a member of the Youth Advisory Board to the Alliance for a New Generation’s empowerME initiative.

The Alliance for a Healthier Generation is a partnership between the American Heart Association and the William J. Clinton Foundation to fight one of the nation's leading health threats – childhood obesity. EmpowerME gives young people tools to make healthy changes in their own lives, their schools and their communities.

Clark is one of 25 youth selected after a national search for talented and motivated young people who can give feedback on the Alliances Kids’ movement programs and strategies, and generate new ideas to make healthy living the norm, not the exception.

In her home community, Clark serves on the Hanover Youth Service Council, which is made up of middle- and high-school students who conduct service projects in the community. She also serves on the Hanover Youth Perspective, which is an organization of board-appointed middle- and high-school students who provide youth a more formal role in the county's planning and development process, including plans of new parks, schools and libraries with the Hanover Planning Commission.

In the summer, Clark uses her Red Cross lifeguard certification at Kings Dominion Theme Park and also participates in the junior volunteer program at the Medical College of Virginia Hospital. She is planning a career in the healthcare profession.

Alliance for a Healthier Generation
empowerME!

Moderator

Debora Kotz

Boston Globe

Deborah Kotz has been a health reporter for nearly 20 years and wrote a cover story on dealing with the obesity epidemic in children for U.S. News and World Report. She recently moved to the Boston Globe where she launched a consumer health blog called Daily Dose that deals with news of the day with a Bostonian twist. Before coming to the Globe, she was a senior writer for U.S. News and World Report, where she covered stories on the FDA, health reform's impact on consumers, vaccinations and other topics. She also had a women's health blog. Kotz is a graduate of Cornell University, where she majored in science journalism.

Daily Dose

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