8 - 10 a.m. | Phyllis Frosst, Ph.D. Head Policy and Program Analysis Branch Science Policy Analyst Policy and Program Analysis Branch NHGRI | Phyllis Frosst is investigating genetic discrimination, direct to consumer marketing of genetic tests and pharmacogenomics. |
| Don Hadley, M.S., C.G.C. Investigator Social and Behavioral Research Branch NHGRI | Don Hadley is researching the components of a genetic counseling session, including how people are informed of genetic disorders and how they make decisions regarding genetic testing. |
| Sarah Harding, M.P.H. Community Outreach Analyst Education and Community Involvement Branch Office of the Director NHGRI | Sarah Harding creates and implements community engagement programs focusing on genetics. |
| Jessica Hooks, B.S., M.S. Genetic Counselor Charlotte Fetal Care Center Carolina Healthcare System | Jessica Hooks is a prenatal genetic counselor who sees preconception and prenatal patients for a variety of indications. She also serves as the genetic counselor for the Charlotte Fetal Care Center which is a multidisciplinary team dedicated to the prenatal treatment of complex birth defects and obstetrical complications. |
| Donna Krasnewich, M.D., Ph.D. Program Director Division of Genetics and Developmental Biology NIGMS | Donna Krasnewich is knowledgeable in diseases resulting from abnormal metabolism of carbohydrates. |
| Dale Lea, R.N., M.P.H., C.G.C., F.A.A.N. Health Educator Education and Community Involvement Branch Office of the Director NHGRI | Dale Lea develops genetics, health education and community involvement programs and resources, and translates genetic and genomic information for the public. She also develops genetic and genomic health information and educational resources for healthcare professionals. |
| Judith Miller, M.S. Genetic Couselor Champaign, Ill. | Judith Miller is currently retired after working for 12 years as a genetic counselor. She provided general genetic counseling for 8 years, and then established a cancer genetics program. |
| Courtney Nichols, M.S., C.G.C. Genetic Counselor Johns Hopkins University | Courtney Nichols is a genetic counselor who coordinates several research studies aimed at understanding the genetic causes of diseases where multiple genes and other factors are involved, called complex diseases. She works on studies of autism, hypertension, and Hirschsprung disease.. |
| Eleanor Rees, M.S., C.G.C. Certified Genetic Counselor Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center | Eleanor Rees currently works at Dartmouth-Hithcock Medical Center, a tertiary care teaching hospital located in Lebanon, NH. She does both prenatal genetic counseling and cancer genetic counseling. |
| Emily Smith, M.S. Genetic Counselor Southampton Hospital | Emily Smith is the first and only genetic counselor for a small community-based hospital. She mainly works in a clinical cancer genetics setting but occasionally will work in other areas of clinical genetics. Her non-clinical duties include coordinating monthly multidisciplinary breast conferences, lecturing medical students and residents about topics in genetics, and speaking to the community about the importance of family history. |
| Robin Troxell, B.S., M.S. Genetic Counselor Maternal Fetal MedicineSt. Johns Hospital | Robin Troxell sees high risk prenatal patients with the MFM OB. She also coordinates the monthly outreach pediatrics genetics clinic for the University of Missouri. |
| Ian Wallace, B.S., M.S. Genetic Counselor Chelmsford, Mass. | Ian Wallace provides prenatal genetic counseling services to patients, which includes diagnostic testing, carrier screening, teratogenic risk assessment, recurrence risk assessment, preconception counseling, and psychosocial counseling. |
| Kris Wetterstrand, M.S. Senior Program Analyst Division of Extramural Research, NHGRI | Kris Wetterstrand works on the Large-scale Sequencing Program, which managed the Human Genome Project, and the Human Microbiome Project, an effort to sequence the DNA of microbes (e.g. bacteria) that live in and on humans. |
9 - 11 a.m. | Samir Kelada, Ph.D., M.P.H. Post-doctoral Fellow Genome Technology Branch NHGRI | Samir Kelada is interested understanding the complex relationships between genes and the environment that cause asthma. |
10 - Noon | Kimberly Barr, M.S., C.G.C. Regional Genetics Educator Kaiser Permanente | Kimberly Barr is a board certified genetic counselor with a special interest in developing genetic education materials for patients and healthcare providers. |
| David Bodine, M.D., Ph.D. Investigator Genetics and Molecular Biology Branch Head Hematopoiesis Section NHGRI | Dave Bodine is investigating the genetics of pluripotent hematopoietic stem cells (PHSCs) to improve the effectiveness of bone marrow transplantation and to find better ways to use these unique cells for gene replacement therapy. |
| Emily Edelman, M.S., C.G.C. Project Director National Coalition for Health Professional Education in Genetics NHGRI | Emily Edelman is a genetic counselor who coordinates multiple projects at a non-profit organization dedicated to providing education in genetics to healthcare providers. She works with other genetic counselors, scientists, physicians, nurses, physician assistants, bioethicists, patient advocates, and other health professionals. She has experience in providing genetic counseling to individuals with a family history of cancer, and other rare and common conditions. |
| Joan Ehrhardt, M.S. Birth Defects Program Coordinator Michigan Department Community Health | Joan Ehrhardt coordinates birth defects tracking, prevention and referral education and activities for state and local programs, health providers and the general public. |
| Tracy Futch, M.S., Ph.D. Senior Genetics Counselor DNA Direct | Tracy Futch is a genetic counselor working at DNA Direct in San Francisco. She provides genetic counseling as well as guidance and decision support for genomic medicine to patients, providers, and payors. |
| Amy Gaviglio, M.S. Genetic Counselor Minnesota Department of Health | Amy Gaviglio is currently a genetic counselor for the newborn screening program in Minnesota. She also supervises the short-term follow-up unit in the program in order to ensure babies identified get diagnosed and services. |
10 - 11 a.m. | Eric Green, M.D., Ph.D. Director National Human Genome Research Institute NHGRI | Eric D. Green is the Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, a position he had held since late 2009. Previously, he served as the NHGRI Scientific Director (2002-2009), Chief of the NHGRI Genome Technology Branch (1996-2009), and Director of the NIH Intramural Sequencing Center (1997-2009). Since the early 1990s, Dr. Green has been extensively involved in efforts to map, sequence, and understand eukaryotic genomes. His work included significant, start-to-finish involvement in the Human Genome Project, and more recently has involved several major efforts that utilize large-scale DNA sequencing to address important problems in genomics, genetics, and biomedicine. |
| Joe McInerney, M.S. Director National Coalition for Health Professional Education in Genetics | Joe McInerney received his MS in human genetics and genetic counseling from the State University of New York at Stony Brook, in 1976. He then spent more than two decades at the Biological Sciences Curriculum Study (BSCS), in Colorado, where he was director for 14 years and wrote textbooks and other educational materials in biology, with a focus on genetics and evolution. Since October 2000, he has been executive director of National Coalition for Health Professional Education in Genetics, where he develops educational materials in human genetics and genetic medicine for a broad range of health professionals. |
| Claire Noll, M.S., C.G.C. Genetic Counselor Houston, Tex. | Claire Noll has worked for 10 years in prenatal, cancer, and research (cardiovascular) genetic counseling. This has included a lot of genetics by email, phone, and videoconference, so chatting on DNA Day fits right in. She loves working in this field because it can explain a lot that people may have wondered about, such as why people are different in many ways and why they are the same in many ways. |
| Dawn Peck, M.S. Genetic Counselor University of Missouri Health Care. | Dawn Peck has been the coordinator for Biochemical Genetics Clinic at the University of Missouri Health Care since 2000. Her primary interests are newborn screening and public health genetics. |
| Kate Reed, M.P.H., Sc.M. Genetic Counselor National Coalition for Health Professional Education in Genetics | Kate Reed works as a genetic counselor with both children and adults. As a counselor, she helps geneticists with diagnosing people with genetic conditions and helps families understand and adapt to diagnoses. She also works as a project director at the National Coalition for Health Professional Education in Genetics where she helps to teach doctors and other health professionals about genetics. |
| Lakshmi Warrier, M.S. Genetic Counselor Helen Diller Comprehensive Cancer Center at University of California San Francisco Medical Center | Lakshmi Warrier works as a genetic counselor with the Cancer Risk Program at the Helen Diller Comprehensive Cancer Center at UC San Francisco Medical Center. Her work responsibilities pimarily focus on working wth families with breast, ovarian and other cancers at the Breast Care Clinic, research recruitment, and education. |
11 a.m. - 1 p.m. | Shawn Burgess, Ph.D. Senior Investigator Genome Technology Branch Head Developmental Genomics Section NHGRI | Shawn Burgess is studying developmental processes and their relation to human genetic disease. |
Noon - 2 p.m. | Barbara Biesecker, Ph.D. Associate Investigator Genetic Counselor Social and Behavioral Research Branch NHGRI | Barb Biesecker direct the JHU/NHGRI Genetic Counseling Training Program and has been doing genetic counseling for thirty years. Her primary interests are in achieving quality of life for those affected with a genetic condition or at risk. |
| Les Biesecker, Ph.D. Senior Investigator Genetic Disease Research Branch Head Human Development Section NHGRI | Les Biesecker is researching the clinical and molecular delineation of human malformation syndromes. |
| Vence Bonham, J.D. Chief Education and Community Involvement Branch Office of the Director Associate Investigator Social Behavioral Research Branch NHGRI | Vence Bonham researches the ethical, legal, social and policy implications of genomic discoveries, particularly health professionals' and lay persons' understanding of race, ethnicity and genetics. |
Noon - 1 p.m. | Eric Green, M.D., Ph.D. Director National Human Genome Research Institute NHGRI | Eric D. Green is the Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, a position he had held since late 2009. Previously, he served as the NHGRI Scientific Director (2002-2009), Chief of the NHGRI Genome Technology Branch (1996-2009), and Director of the NIH Intramural Sequencing Center (1997-2009). Since the early 1990s, Dr. Green has been extensively involved in efforts to map, sequence, and understand eukaryotic genomes. His work included significant, start-to-finish involvement in the Human Genome Project, and more recently has involved several major efforts that utilize large-scale DNA sequencing to address important problems in genomics, genetics, and biomedicine. |
| Alan Guttmacher, M.D. Acting Director Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development NIH | Alan Guttmacher serves as the Acting Director of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development where he oversees the institute's efforts to conduct and support research on the health of children, adults, families, and populations. His areas of expertise include pediatrics, medical genetics, and the development of new approaches for translating the findings of the Human Genome Project into better ways of diagnosing, treating, and preventing disease. |
Noon - 2 p.m. | Lucia Hindorff, Ph.D., M.P.H. Epidemiologist Office of Population Genomics Office of the Director NHGRI | Lucia Hindorff is working with a number of investigators around the country on a program that is designed to take the most promising genetic variants from recent studies and learn more about them in large populations with extensive data. She hopes to learn more about the different pathways that these variants are involved in and possibly identify some environmental factors that may modify disease associations. She is also one of the curators of the NHGRI GWAS Catalog, a summary of findings from published genome-wide association studies. |
| Renee Jones, M.S., Ph.D. Genetic Counselor Maternal Fetal Medicine Community Health Network | Renee Jones primarily works with patients who have questions or concerns about prenatal genetic testing opportunities. She also see patients who have a strong family history of cancer and may want more information about cancer genetic testing. Family history of genetic diseases such as cystic fibrosis or spinal muscular atrophy can lead patients to consult with her regarding their risks during a current or future pregnancy for these conditions. |
| Elizabeth Kramer, M.G.C, C.G.C. Director of Genetic Counseling Maryland Perinatal Associates | Elizabeth Kramer is the supervising prenatal genetic counselor at a busy perinatal practice. She see patients for a variety of indications, including abnormal ultrasounds or bloodwork, prenatal screening and testing and family history of genetic disease. |
| Jean McEwen, J.D., Ph.D. Program Director Ethical Legal and Social Implications Program Division of Extramural Research NHGRI | Jean McEwen manages a portfolio of grants regarding the ethical, legal, and social implications of genomics research, focusing on law, genetic variation, and social policy. She slso oversee the Ethical, Legal and Social Implications (ELSI) component of the 1000 Genomes Project, the Human Microbiome Project, and various other large genomics research projects. |
| Judith Miller, M.S.(Genetic Counseling), M.S. (Biochemistry) Licensed Genetic Couselor Champaign, Ill. | Judy Miller retired several years ago from her position as genetic counselor after establishing a new program in cancer genetics at Carle Clinic in Urbana IL. Prior to that, she worked for many years in a setting where she practiced genetic counseling with patients in all areas of genetics: pediatrics, prenatal, adult genetics, metabolic. She participated in the Chatroom last year and enjoyed it very much. |
| Barry Starr, Ph.D. Director Stanford at the Tech Department of Genetics Stanford University | Barry Starr runs a program out of Stanford's Department of Genetics where he trains science graduate students how to communicate science to the public. He does this by having the students run fun hands on genetics activities at The Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose and by having them answer people's genetics questions online at our Understanding Genetics Web site. |
| Amber Trivedi, M.S. Senior Genetic Counselor InfoMed Medical Decisions, Inc. | Informed DNA provides genetic counseling over the telephone. Amber Trivedi provides cancer and reproductive genetic counseling, leads a team of other genetic counselors, and is involved in Informed DNA's business processes. |
| Della Brown White, Ph.D. Research Fellow Social and Behavioral Research Branch NHGRI | Della Brown White is examining social and cultural factors that may influence participation in genetics research among minority populations. |
| Sandy Woo, M.S. Genetic Counselor Kaiser Permanente | Sandy Woo provides genetic counseling (risk assessment, education, facilitating decisions ) to families and individuals with or who are at risk for birth defects/ genetic conditions. |
1 - 2 p.m. | Laura Lyman Rodriguez, Ph.D. Acting Director Office of Policy, Communications and Education Senior Advisor to the Director for Research Policy Office of the Director NHGRI | Laura Lyman Rodriguez is the Acting Director for the Office of Policy, Communication, and Education and the Senior Advisor to the Director for Research Policy at the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), National Institutes of Health (NIH). She works to develop and implement policy for research initiatives at the NHGRI, as well as programs that work across all of the NIH Institutes. She is particularly interested in the policy and ethics questions related to the inclusion of human research participants in genomics and genetics research and sharing human genomic data through broadly used research resources (e.g., databases). |
1 - 3 p.m. | Jeff Schloss, Ph.D. Program Director Technology Development Division of Extramural Research NHGRI | Jeff Schloss is a program director in the extramural division of NHGRI. Developing technology for sequencing complete human genomes for $1000 or less is the centerpiece of his technology development programs, and he also leads the Centers of Excellence in Genomic Science program. Jeff's formal science training is in cell and molecular biology. |
2 - 3 p.m. | David Adams, M.D., Ph.D. Assistant Clinical Investigator Office of the Clinical Director NHGRI | David Adams is studying rare inborn errors of metabolism and other rare genetic syndromes to understand the disease process and identify potential treatments. |
2 - 4 p.m. | Megan Deeney, M.S. Genetic Counselor Perinatal Associates of Northern Nevada | Meghan Deeney is a genetic counselor working in a high risk perinatal practice. She counsels patients and families who have high risk pregnancies based on family history, age, maternal conditions, etc. Another part of her practice is cancer genetic counseling. In this role, she provides medical information, risk assessment, testing options, and psychosocial support for individuals and their families who have strong family histories of cancer. |
| Ellyn Farrelly, M.A. Genetic Counseling Graduate Student Stanford University | Ellyn Farrelly is currently completing a Master's degree in Human Genetics and Genetic Counseling at Stanford University. Her research interests are in disability rights. |
| Angela Filose, M.S. Genetic Counselor Kaiser Permanente | Angela Filose works as a genetic counselor with prenatal, pediatric and hereditary cancer patients. She helps evaluate patients for genetic conditions in themselves or their babies, and helps guide them through the information. |
| Laura Fuqua M.S., C.G.C. Genetic Counselor Genzyme Genetics | Laura Fuqua is a Genetic Counselor II at Genzyme Genetics. She provides genetic consultations to families undergoing or planing a pregnancy in northern California. She enjoys presenting genetic/medical/scientific information in a meaningful, sensitive way. |
| Heather Junkins, M.S. Scientific Program Analyst Office of Population Genomics Office of the Director NHGRI | Heather Junkins works in the Office of Population Genomics on a variety of projects that aim to promote the application of genomic technologies to population-based studies. Included in the portfolio are projects that are developing standard phenotype and exposure measures for genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and using well-characterized cohorts to follow-up on putative casual variants. She is also the curator of the NHGRI GWAS Catalog. |
| Christine Kobelka, B.Sc., B.P.H.E., B.Ed., M.Sc. Genetic Counselor Kaiser Permanente | Christine Kobelka is a genetic counselor who works with patients who have, or are at risk for genetic conditions. She takes family histories, helps evaluate patients, and arranges/helps interpret genetic testing results. |
| Carla Matteson, Ph.D. Professor of Medical Genetics Co-Director, Genetics Center, Director Biochemical and Molecular Genetics Laboritories University of Tennessee Genetics Center | Carla Matteson directs a molecular laboratory and teaches med students, grad students and residents about genetics and genetic testing. She also administers a 25-person genetic center with clinical and laboratory activities. |
3 - 4 p.m. | Anna Rossoshek, M.S., M.B.A. Senior Scientific Administrative Analyst Division of Intramural Research NHGRI | Anna Rossoshek's duties require her to be very familiar with the entire Extramural grants portfolio. Her grant portfolio deals mostly with R13 conference grants. She is an active member of the Knockout Mouse Project program and GTEx program. She has many administrative duties as well, including but not limited to RMS and Grant budgeting, conference/workshop event planning, and she is responsible for contractors in the office. Her scientific background makes her proficient in mouse genetics and genomics, however, it is not limited to that. |
| Matt Tschirgi, M.S., C.G.C. Genetic Counselor Genzyme Genetics | Matt Tschirgi is a prenatal genetic counselor who works with women who have high risk pregnancies. He provides information about testing options, results, and genetic risk assessment. |
4 - 6 p.m. | Julie Segre, Ph.D. Senior Investigator Genetics and Molecular Biology Branch Head Epithelial Biology Section NHGRI | Using contemporary genomic methodologies, Julie Segre's laboratory focuses on the role that bacteria and other small micro-organisms may play in human health and disease. The Segre laboratory estimates that approximately one million bacteria reside on each square centimeter of skin; many common skin conditions are associated with both impaired skin barrier function and increased microbial colonization. By sequencing the DNA of bacteria collected from the skin of humans and mouse models of human disease, her group investigates how these bacteria contribute to health and, conversely, how changes in the bacterial community structure might contribute to chronic skin disorders, such as eczema and psoriasis. |
| Vence Bonham, J.D. Chief Education and Community Involvement Branch Office of the Director Associate Investigator Social Behavioral Research Branch NHGRI | Vence Bonham researches the ethical, legal, social and policy implications of genomic discoveries, particularly health professionals' and lay persons' understanding of race, ethnicity and genetics. |
| Patricia L. Devers, M.S. Genetic Counselor Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill | Patricia Devers is a genetic counselor specializing in reproductive genetics. She sees patients in the preconceptional and prenatal period. |
| Christine Ferlatte, M.S. Genetic Counselor Berkeley, Calif. | Christy Ferlatte is a recent graduate of a Masters of Genetic Counseling program.. |
| Anne Madeo, M.S. Associate Director Johns Hopkins University/NHGRI Genetic Counseling Training Program NHGRI | Anne Madeo earned her M.S. in Human Genetics at the University of Michigan and has been working at the NIH as a Genetic Counselor since 2000. She is currently the Associate Director of the Johns Hopkins University/NHGRI Genetic Counseling Training Program. |
| Eron O'Leary, B.S., M.S. Genetic Counselor University of California, Los Angeles | Eron O'Leary works as a Cancer Genetic Counselor. She sees individuals and families who are at a high risk for hereditary cancer and discuss available and appropriate genetic testing, and the risks benefits and limitations of this testing as well as make appropriate medical management recommendations and referrals. |
| Heidi Parker, Ph.D. Staff Scientist Cancer Genetics Branch Division of Intramural Research NHGRI | Heidi Parker studies the genetics of the dog in an effort to answer questions about disease in both dogs and humans. |
| Loren Pena, M.D., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Pediatrics University of Maryland, School of Medicine Baltimore, Md. | Loren Pena is a clinical geneticist who sees patients for diagnosis and management of a variety of inherited, or sporadic, conditions. |
| Toni Pollin, M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor University of Maryland, School of Medicine Baltimore, Md. | Toni Pollin conducts research on the genetic factors in complex diseases, particularly diabetes and cardiovascular disease. She also teaches graduate and medical students and have a background in genetic counseling. |