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May 16, 2001
Contact: Jennifer Day, (313) 577-1058, jday@med.wayne.edu
Director of U.S. Office for
Human Research Protections to speak at WSU
Dean’s Distinguished Lecture May 24
Greg Koski, MD, PhD, director of the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Human Research
Protections, will speak May 24 at a Wayne State University School of Medicine
Dean’s Distinguished Lecture.
Dr. Koski, the first person to hold his
post in the newly created federal office, will give a lecture, “Integrity,
Caring and Trust: The Foundations of Responsible Human Research,” to a diverse
audience that will include many current WSU medical researchers.
The event will be at 4 p.m. in the
Green Auditorium in Gordon Scott Hall of Basic Medical Sciences, 540 E.
Canfield. The lecture is free and open to the public. For more information,
please call (313) 577-1335.
Before accepting his current post late
last year, Dr. Koski had been director of human research affairs for Partners
Healthcare System at Massachusetts General Hospital and his alma mater, Harvard
Medical School.
During his 30 years at Harvard, Dr.
Koski actively participated in every aspect of academic medicine, including
basic research, clinical investigation, teaching, administration and patient
care. He has been both an Internal Review Board chair and a research subject.
Within the Department of Anesthesia, Dr. Koski was a senior member of the
Cardiac Anesthesia Group. He also served as director of the department’s Henry
K. Beecher Memorial Research Laboratories and as director of resident selection
and recruitment.
As director of human research affairs
at Partners Healthcare, Dr. Koski was responsible for the ethical and regulatory
oversight of human investigation, including protection of human participants in
research studies.
Dr. Koski’s interest in the
protection of human subjects and research ethics grew strongly after joining the
Subcommittee on Human Studies of Massachusetts General Hospital in 1989. This
committee, established in 1963 under the leadership of Dr. Henry Beecher, became
Dr. Koski’s training ground for his latest challenge as director of the Office
for Human Research Protections.
The WSU School of Medicine Dean’s
Distinguished Lecture Series was initiated in 1993 to provide a forum for
education and discussion of issues related to academic medicine with relevance
to physicians, administrators and other health care professionals.
With
more than 1,000 medical students, WSU is among the nation’s largest medical
schools. Together with the Detroit Medical Center, the school is a leader in
patient care and medical research in a number of areas including cancer,
genetics, pediatrics and the neurosciences.
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