Health Sciences Media Relations
USC Recruits International Leader from Johns Hopkins to Launch Global Health Institute and Lead the Department of Preventive Medicine
June 9, 2008
LOS ANGELES--One of the world’s leading public health experts will become has been named founding director of the new USC Institute for Global Health and chairman of the Department of Preventive Medicine of at the Keck School of Medicine of USC.Keck School Dean Carmen A. Puliafito on behalf of USC Provost C.L. Max Nikias today announced the appointment of Jonathan Samet, M.D., effective Nov. 1, 2008. Samet comes to USC from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. An international authority on the effects of smoking and of air pollution, he has served as professor and chairman of the Department of Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins since 1994. For the last 10 years, he also has directed the Institute for Global Tobacco Control at Johns Hopkins.
Elected to the prestigious Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 1997, Samet has contributed to many of the U.S. Surgeon General’s reports and was the Senior Scientific Editor for the 2004 and 2006 reports on active and passive smoking, respectively. Among numerous other honors, Samet has received two U.S. Surgeon General’s Medallions, in 1990 and 2006. In 2005 his work received international recognition with the Prince Mahidol Award in Public Health, named for the father of modern medicine and public health in Thailand.
He has worked actively to promote tobacco control around the world, particularly in China and Mexico. He has also addressed some of the most critical issues in indoor and outdoor air pollution, such as lung cancer and radon, and airborne particles and health. Studies done by Samet and his colleagues have been critical in setting air quality standards for particles and ozone.
“We are thrilled to bring to the University of Southern California an academic health leader of the stature of Jon Samet,” Puliafito said. “His international reputation for scientific excellence in the interest of global health includes involves a tremendous track record of leadership on scientific and advisory boards. It also includes , a stellar roster of scientific publications, and a deep commitment to excellence in the quest for improved public health around the globe. His appointment will generate significant momentum as we expand and strengthen the research enterprise at the Keck School of Medicine of USC. It will also and enhance our ability to collaborate collaboration with other USC faculty across the university.”
Puliafito described the new Institute for Global Health as a catalyst for such collaboration. “The Institute for Global Health will create synergy amongwill pull together USC faculty across numerous schools, all of whom have research interests in the arena of global health. Jon Samet’s expertise and experience are a perfect fit for USC, one of this country’s leading research-driven, international universities,” he said.
Samet views the environment as the focal point for the new institute’s activities. “The damage done to the environment by human activities is no longer a ‘quiet crisis,’” he said. “The institute should move forward with an agenda of capacity building, research, and policy formulation that will have immediate and profound impact. “
With annual federal research funding of $35 million, the Keck School’s Department of Preventive Medicine has the largest grant portfolio of any such department in a U.S. medical school. Puliafito has given Samet a mandate to launch a major initiative to expand the Department’s research activities. Puliafito noted Samet’s key role in promoting the training of clinical research leaders at the Keck School. “As a clinician scientist himself and as someone who has taught almost 800 Master of Public Health graduates at Hopkins, Jon Samet is a unique asset in our quest in making the development of clinician-scientists a high priority at the Keck School.”
At Johns Hopkins, Samet chairs the oldest and largest department of epidemiology in the country; the department has global reach in its training and research missions. The University’s global health activities are extensive and collaborative and give emphasis to infectious diseases. Samet views his experience at Johns Hopkins as particularly relevant to USC, where he hopes to establish multidisciplinary collaborations that extend across departments and schools.
According to Samet, his decision to join the USC faculty was based in the opportunity to chair the Department of Preventive Medicine, one of the leading such departments within a medical school, and at the same time to lead the development of a model institute for multidisciplinary collaboration in global health.
Samet commented, “I found a perfect match between my view of needs in global health and what USC wanted to accomplish as an institution. I also have the opportunity to work with the Department, which has many long-term colleagues and friends among its faculty, and to lead its growth and evolution at a time when public health and clinical research are changing rapidly.”
Some of Samet’s current research projects include:
* ยท A multidisciplinary, EPA-funded center for research on the health effects of airborne particles; the center brings together epidemiologists, biostatisticians, exposure assessors and toxicologists with a goal of learning more about how inhaled particles cause premature death and morbidity;
* A global study on exposures of women and children to secondhand
tobacco smoke;
* Collaboration with Yonsei University in Seoul in a follow-up study
of the health of 1.3 million Koreans;
* A long-term study of sleep-disordered breathing and risk for
cardiovascular disease (the Sleep Heart Health Study;
* and Studies on non-infectious lung diseases in HIV-infected
persons and on the genetic basis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD).
Samet will lead the Keck School of Medicine’s Department of Preventive
Medicine, which is comprised of faculty who focus on scientific discoveries
to identify and better understand the causes of the diseases that most
impact public health, such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, and to
develop new ways to prevent them. A comprehensive external review of the
department conducted in recent years cited the “intellectual excitement of
faculty and students, a precious aura of collegiality, genuine
interdisciplinary interest, and world-class academic scholarship that
ranges over and integrates a multitude of interconnected scientific
disciplines.”
Faculty in the Department of Preventive Medicine include authorities on
chronic disease epidemiology, biostatistics, environmental medicine, health
behavior, and prevention, detection and treatment methods. Department
research findings have left indelible marks on preventive medicine
research, national and international health guidelines, physician
practices, cancer screening, preventive methods for people at high risk of
developing a chronic disease, and alcohol and tobacco education programs.
A native of Newport News, Virginia, Samet earned his medical degree at
the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in 1970. He
completed a master of science degree at the Harvard School of Public Health
in 1977 and earned a bachelor’s degree in chemistry and physics at Harvard
University in 1966.
At Johns Hopkins he holds a joint appointment in the School of Medicine’s
Oncology Center and in the Department of Medicine.
Samet is the editor of 19 books and monographs and has authored or
contributed to 270 journal articles and an additional 400 chapters,
reviews, editorials and other publications.
Among numerous honors, Samet has received two U.S. Surgeon General’s
Medallions, in 1990 and 2006. In 2005 his work received international
recognition with the Prince Mahidol Award in Public Health, named for the
father of modern medicine and public health in Thailand.
Prior to joining the faculty at Johns Hopkins, Samet was affiliated with
The University of New Mexico School of Medicine for 16 years, working in various roles and moving from assistant professor of medicine in 1978 and to professor of medicine in 1986 and at the same time becoming Chief of the Pulmonary and Critical Care Division in the Department of Medicine.
His postdoctoral training includes a medical internship at the University
of Kentucky Medical School (1970-71), a residency in medicine at the
University of New Mexico-Affiliated Hospitals (1973-75), and a research
fellowship in clinical epidemiology at the Channing Laboratory at Harvard
Medical School. He served for two years in the U.S. Army as an
anesthesiologist at Gorgas Hospital in the Canal Zone.
Samet is a diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine and the American Board of Internal Medicine’s Subspecialty of Pulmonary Medicine.



