Archway eNews UGA Home Arch Foundation Contact Us
Archway eNews Campaign Themes
Strategic Goals
Schools, Colleges, Units
Recognition Societies
News & Events
Make a Gift
Subscribe Front page Back Issues Events
UGA establishes new Faculty of Infectious Diseases to target threats to animal and human health worldwide
Infectious Diseases
   
  ALSO IN THE MAY 2008 ISSUE
  FEATURE: SECRETARIES OF STATE AT UGA
  NEW FACULTY OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES: UGA has a new multidisciplinary Faculty of Infectious Diseases to address threats to animal and human health..
 

UGA VS. OXFORD DEBATE: Oxford Union Society wins the third debate hosted by UGA at Oxford to lead the series.

 

LIFELONG LOVE LEADS TO $1.8 MILLION DONATION: Natalie Cohen, a former state tennis champ, leaves UGA $1.8 million for academic scholarships.

  SARASVATI NAMED FIRST JANE WILLSON PROFESSOR IN ARTS: Bala Sarasvati, a professor of dance, has been named to the first Jane Willson Professorship in Arts.
 

FACULTY AND STAFF SUPPORT ARCHWAY CAMPAIGN: As UGA's Archway to Excellence campaign comes to a close, faculty, staff and retirees have another opportunity to contribute to its success.

  BACK ISSUES
 
 
UGA Among "Best Values"
 

The University of Georgia has established a new multidisciplinary Faculty of Infectious Diseases to address infectious disease threats to animal and human health worldwide.

Research goals for the new faculty include increasing understanding of the basic biology of infectious agents, their interactions with human and animal hosts, their natural ecology and the epidemiology of the diseases they cause. Equally important, the new faculty will focus on the application of this knowledge to improving the detection, control and prevention of infectious diseases through countermeasures such as vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics.

“The Faculty of Infectious Diseases builds on a combination of historic strengths plus recent UGA investments in faculty and infrastructure that position the university to be a major player nationally in the area of infectious diseases, especially zoonotic emerging infectious diseases,” said David Lee, UGA vice president for research.

Zoonotic diseases affecting humans – including bird flu, West Nile Virus, tularemia and HIV – are diseases of animal origin. It has been estimated that nearly 75 percent of the world’s emerging or re-emerging infectious disease threats are zoonotic in nature.

“Dealing effectively with the pathogens that cause these diseases requires integrating research in animal and human health and developing successful countermeasures,” said Lee. “It also requires that researchers – faculty and students – from many different disciplines work together in collaborative, interdisciplinary teams.”

Formation of the Faculty of Infectious Diseases, an initiative of the Office of the Vice President for Research, coincides with several recent research developments at UGA and in Georgia: opening of the Animal Health Research Center, a state-of-the-art biocontainment facility for studies of animal and human health; the re-deployment of Riverbend South as an infectious disease research facility; and recruitment of Egbert Mundt, one of the world’s foremost experts in poultry vaccines as Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in poultry medicine.

In addition, UGA and Emory University researchers last year received one of six Centers of Excellence in Influenza Research and Surveillance grants funded by the National Institutes of Health to bolster understanding of how the influenza virus causes disease and how the human immune system responds to infection with the virus. The Georgia Research Alliance, a partnership of academic research universities, industry and state government, last year launched a new statewide initiative for vaccine development, and UGA is leading the state’s bid to bring the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility (NBAF) to Athens. NBAF is a proposed national facility dedicated to research on foreign animal and zoonotic diseases.

Seven additional tenure track or tenured faculty positions, funded last year by the University System of Georgia Board of Regents, will augment existing UGA expertise in infectious disease. Duncan Krause, professor of microbiology, and the director of the new Faculty of Infectious Diseases, noted, “Targeted recruitments of this magnitude are rare, and this initiative provides UGA with an exceptional opportunity both to build collaborative bridges between existing strengths and to expand in important new areas.”

The new faculty is now recruiting members. Full membership is open to UGA faculty, while faculty at other institutions, state and federal agencies, and industry partners that collaborate with UGA can apply for associate membership. Full members may apply for seed grants; associates may partner with full members in seeking seed grant funding. Companies involved in vaccine, therapeutic and diagnostics development and production may join the Faculty of Infectious Diseases as corporate members or sponsors.

Complete information about the UGA Faculty of Infectious Diseases, including membership and seed grant guidelines, can be found at www.id.uga.edu.

 
Go Home Go Ways to Give

For questions, comments or requests, please e-mail archway@uga.edu, call toll free 1-888-268-5442, or write
The University of Georgia Office of Development, 394 South Milledge Avenue, Suite 100, Athens, Georgia 30602-5582.
This site is developed and maintained by the The Division of External Affairs at the University of Georgia.
© 2005 University of Georgia