Richard Garfield, DrPH Biography |
Title: |
Henrik H. Bendixen Clinical Professor of International Nursing at Columbia University |
Position: |
None Found to the question "Should the US Have Attacked Iraq?" |
Reasoning: |
No position found as of Oct. 25, 2006
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Theoretical Expertise Ranking: |
Experts Individuals with PhD's, JD's, or equivalent advanced degrees in fields relevant to the US - Iraq conflict. Also top-level government officials (such as foreign leaders, US presidents, Founding Fathers, Supreme Court Justices, members of legislative bodies, cabinet members, military leaders, etc.) with positions relevant to the US - Iraq conflict. |
Involvement and Affiliations: |
Henrik H. Bendixen Clinical Professor of International Nursing, Columbia University Coordinator, WHO/PAHO Nursing Collaborating Center, Columbia University Member, Board of Advisors, Education for Peace in Iraq Co-chair, Human Rights Committee, American Public Health Association Visiting Professor, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Executive Committee Member, University Senate, 2005 Member, University Advisory Task Force Co-Chair to the SRSG for Tsunami Recovery, 2005 Human Rights Institute Keynote, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, 2003 Fellow, American Academy of Nursing, 2002 Atlantic Policy Fellowship, British Council, 2001 Fellow, Center for the Study of Societies in Crisis, City University of New York, 2000 Irving H. Mauss Visiting Professor, North Shore Hospital, 2000 Edward Barsky International Health Award, Physician's Forum, 1998 Member, Nursing Research Committee Presbyterian Hospital, 1994 Cecil and Ida Green Honors Visiting Professor, Texas Christian University, 1993 Recipient, Dorothy and Thomas O'Neil Distinguished Faculty Award for Community Service, Columbia University School of Nursing, 1991 |
Education: |
DrPH, Columbia University MS, Columbia University MPH, Columbia University |
Other: |
Visited Iraq 6 times during 1996-2003 to collaborate with UNICEF, the World Food Program, and the Iraqi Ministry of Health
Evaluated the overall humanitarian impact of the Oil for Food program
Worked in Iraq for WHO to assist in reconstruction, manage reactivation of health services, and prepare the post-Oil for Food UN program
Designed a child survival strategy for USAID in Iraq, 2004 |
Quoted in: |
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