DirectoryMix Web Resources » Article Details

CDC Director To Address Public Health And Drinking Water At ACE08 - Read More

Date Added: May 24, 2008 01:04:03 AM
During keynote address at AWWA's Annual Conference and Exposition on June 9, Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, will discuss water professionals' role in protecting public health. Gerberding will speak about ways that drinking water and medical communities can work together to help increase public knowledge of science of water. She also will ...

Category: Health » Public Health and Safety


No comments are posted yet


 
Name:*
Email:*
Website:  (optional)
Comment:*
(html and bb codes are filtered and not allowed)

Do the math:*CAPTCHA - Do The Math
 

Related Articles

Austrian health researcher may face fraud, criminal charges

An Austrian government report charges that clinical trials conducted by researchers at a major medical school in Austria were riddled with procedural and ethical problems, the Nature Publishing Group said Monday.

The Hamner Institutes for Health Sciences Sponsors Drug Safety Session at the 2008 CED Biotech Conference

The Hamner Institutes for Health Sciences (www.thehamner.org) will sponsor an interactive session on drug safety entitled “Paradigm Shift in FDA Approval” at the May 20th 2008 Council for Entrepreneurial Development (CED) Biotech Conference. The confe

An assessment of McCain's and Obama's health insurance proposals

They approach the problem of America's growing uninsured and underinsured populations in dramatically different ways. When it came to promoting his health insurance initiative, Sen. John McCain's timing seemed unfortunate.

M-R faces $2.3M in health-life-safety costs

Superintendent Marty Payne updated the Monmouth-Roseville School Board on the district’s upcoming health-life-safety audit that carries a $2.3 million price tag. All of the district’s seven buildings need work to be completed to remain “up to snuff

Pollution persists at health threat at many U.S. beaches

The nation's ocean, bay and Great Lakes beaches continue to suffer from water pollution that puts swimmers' health at risk, according to a leading environmental group.