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Keiji Fukuda (福田 敬二, born 1954)〔 is an American physician with expertise in influenza epidemiology. In March 2009, Fukuda was appointed Assistant Director-General for Health, Security and Environment ''ad interim'' for the World Health Organization (WHO), and as of September 2010 he holds this position permanently.〔WHO Biography (). Retrieved on 2009-09-15〕 The media have referred to him as the WHO "flu chief" during the 2009 swine flu outbreak.〔McGroarty, Patrick (April 29, 2009). "(WHO says swine flu moving toward pandemic level )", Associated Press. Retrieved on 2009-04-30.〕 Fukuda came to the WHO in 2005. He first worked as Coordinator of the Global Influenza Program from 2006 to 2008 and was then appointed its Director. Before joining the WHO in 2005, Fukuda was Chief of the Epidemiology Unit, Influenza Branch at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.〔Fukuda, Keiji, and Colmey, John (January 12, 1998). "('This is serious': A leading influenza expert says Hong Kong's "bird flu" still carries potentially wide-ranging risks )", ''Time'' 151 (1). Retrieved on 2009-04-30.〕 ==Biography== Fukuda's parents were physicians. His father immigrated from Japan to Vermont to complete an anesthesia fellowship there, and stayed on to work at the Barre hospital.〔Pasanen, Melissa (spring 2005). "(Walking the tightrope: For Keiji Fukuda, MD '83, being one of the leaders of the fight against influenza means balancing the quiet work of science and the occasional loud warning call )", ''Vermont Medicine'', pp. 26–30. Retrieved on 2009-04-30.〕 Keiji Fukuda attended Oberlin College for his BA, which was temporarily interrupted by a nine-month backpacking excursion through Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. He studied medicine at the University of Vermont College of Medicine, completed in 1983. Part-way through medical school, he spent six months working with indigenous tribes in southern India, which helped further his interest in international health. He went on to complete his internal medicine residency at Mount Zion Hospital in San Francisco, and then a Master of Public Health at University of California, Berkeley. For one year, he worked in San Francisco Bay Area in clinics that focus on leprosy and tuberculosis, and then moved to Atlanta, GA where he spent two years studying in the Epidemiology Intelligence Service training program at the CDC.〔 In 1994 he led a committee that revised the definition of chronic fatigue syndrome,〔Brody, Jane E. (December 21, 1994). "(Clearing Up Confusion on Fatigue Syndrome )", ''The New York Times'', p. C10.〕 which has since become the most widely used clinical and research definition of the illness. He has focused on influenza since 1996, leading teams that investigated outbreaks of avian influenza and of SARS.〔Reynolds, Gretchen (November 7, 2004). "(The Flu Hunters )", ''The New York Times Magazine'', pp. 36–43, 52, 68, 92–93. Retrieved on 2013-02-17. "At 49, Fukuda, the top influenza epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looks...reassuring."〕 On April 28, 2009 he pointed out that it was already too late to contain the 2009 swine flu outbreak. He currently resides in Geneva, Switzerland.〔"(CDC Disease Fighters Go Where Virus Action Is )", CDC.gov. Retrieved on 2009-05-02.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Keiji Fukuda」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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