SPRING 2008

HIV Center E-Newsletter: Volume 2, No. 1 

HIV Center Marks 20th AnniversaryLooking Forward: The Next Five Years of the HIV CenterThe AIDS Epidemic & the HIV Center: a Parallel Timeline 1987-2007News BriefsFrom the DirectorReflections on 20 YearsRemembering Those We've Lost

Looking forward: The HIV Center's next five years

On February 1, the HIV Center commenced its next phase through a five-year renewal of the Center with the theme of "Meeting the Challenges of Global AIDS at the Intersection of Gender, Sexuality, and Mental Health." The $10 million renewal is funded by The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) to provide critical infrastructure for the HIV Center through an Administrative Core and five Research Cores. The period ahead will be shaped by many of the same priorities, people, and projects that have long been associated with the HIV Center, but a number of significant changes and innovations are specifically discussed below. (For fuller information about the Cores and a complete list of Core personnel, please click on the hypertext links below.)

The most significant change within the Core structure is the introduction of the Global Community Core (GCC), a merging and transformation of the prior International Core and Community Collaboration Core. The GCC will draw together a diverse international group from academia, government, and community-based organizations. The goal of the new Core is to ensure that HIV Center researchers identify and engage all relevant stakeholders in the research process, participate in genuinely constructive partnerships, and produce research knowledge that will have a sustainable impact on the global AIDS epidemic. The Core also strives to facilitate new and innovative collaborations that are both inter-disciplinary and multi-sectorial. The expertise of GCC faculty derives from their extensive experience in academic research, policy, health practice, and community service in the US and internationally, including South Africa, Brazil, China, Mexico, Vietnam, India, and the Dominican Republic.

Jessica Justman, M.D.

Most of the investigators and consultants of the GCC had previously served on either the International Core or the Community Collaboration Core, including Core Director Robert Remien, Ph.D. and Co-Directors Laurie Bauman, Ph.D., and Richard Parker, Ph.D. Three new Co-Investigators will be Elaine Abrams, M.D., Jessica Justman, M.D., and Patrick Wilson, Ph.D. of the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health (MSPH).

Patrick Wilson, Ph.D.

Other new Core members from outside Columbia University include Elizabeth Begier, M.D., Medical Director for Special Projects at the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Veriano Terto, M.D., Executive Director of the Brazilian Interdisciplinary AIDS Association (ABIA), and Eleanor Preston-Whyte, Ph.D., Director of Social and Behavioural Sciences at HIVAN (Centre for HIV/AIDS Networking) at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa.

Four existing Cores will also be continuing with some new areas of emphasis and new personnel. The Development Core (Director: Alex Carballo-Diéguez, Ph.D.) will continue to provide an organizational home to an array of activities designed to enhance the capacity of HIV Center investigators to conduct effective and innovative research, and will include two major new areas of emphasis.  Core Co-Investigator Iván Balán, Ph.D. will facilitate new Intercultural Sensitivity trainings tailored to the needs of HIV Center investigators.  Core Co-Investigator Ana Ventuneac, Ph.D. will also work with investigators to promote new information technologies that can advance their research design and implementation.

Sherry Glied, Ph.D.

The Ethics and Policy Core (Director: Robert Klitzman, M.D.)will enhance the Center's ability to address ethical issues and and contribute to resolving them. A new focus within the Core will be on health economics, as reflected in the addition of three new Co-Investigators.  Two are professors in the MSPH Department of Health Policy and Management: Sherry Glied, Ph.D. and Joshua Graff Zivin, Ph.D..

Peter Bearman, Ph.D.

The third is Paul Applebaum, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry and Director of the Division of Psychiatry, Law, and Ethics in the Department of Psychiatry. Also joining the Core are by two new Consultants: Peter Bearman, Ph.D., the former Chair of the Columbia Department of Sociology and Director of the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy (ISERP) at Columbia, and Florencia Luna, a Professor and Director of the Certificate of Studies in Bioethics of the Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO) at the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina.

Florencia Luna, Ph.D.

The Interdisciplinary Research Methods Core (IRMC, Director: Heino Meyer-Bahlburg, Dr. rer. nat.) will continue to serve as an interdisciplinary advisory and oversight resource to project investigators through group and individual consultations. The Statistics, Epidemiology, and Data Management (SED) Core (Director: Bruce Levin, Ph.D.) will also continue to serve as a center of excellence for the design and analysis of HIV Center studies, with Alan Berkman, M.D. also succeeding Ezra Susser, M.D., M.P.H., as Co-Director for Epidemiology. The Core will also be joined by Co-Investigator Denis Nash, Ph.D, an Associate Professor of Epidemiology at MSPH.

New HIV Center Associate Directors Alex Carballo- Diéguez, Ph.D. and Wafaa El-Sadr, M.D., M.P.H. at the HIV Center's 20th anniversary event.

As previously, the Administrative Core (Director: Anke A. Ehrhardt, Ph.D.) will provide scientific and programmatic leadership and guidance for all HIV Center research projects. Two new Associate Directors have been appointed to the Center leadership team: long-time HIV Center investigator Alex Carballo-Diéguez. Ph.D., and Wafaa El-Sadr, M.D., M.P.H., Director of the International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Programs (ICAP) at MSPH.

Cynthia Gomez, Ph.D.

Two new Senior Advisors will also join the HIV Center: Cynthia Gomez, Ph.D. Professor in the Department of Health Education at San Francisco State University and Marjorie Hill, Ph.D., Chief Executive Officer of Gay Men's Health Crisis.

Marjorie Hill, Ph.D.

In addition, the Administrative Core will coordinate a new Strategic Planning Group, a highly esteemed group of experts in the field of HIV/AIDS from around the world to assure that the Center's research agenda remains  dynamic and responsive to the evolving epidemic.