Resources

Past Presentation

Review of Efficacy and Safety of Novavax COVID Vaccine | Past pandemic/s and their outcome/s | February 16, 2022

Date of Presentation: February 16, 2022

Type: Past Presentation  

Audience: Clinical  

Program: Virology ECHO Program  

Keywords: #covid-19 vaccines  #novavax  #plague  

In this presentation, Dr. Thomas Weiser, MD, MPH, Medical Epidemiologist for the Portland Area Indian Health Service, Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board and ECHO faculty member, reviews the safety and efficacy of the NVX-CoV2373 vaccine (Novavax COVID Vaccine) in adults. Then, Dr. Thomas Becker, Medical Epidemiologist and ECHO faculty member, discusses past non-Covid pandemics, how they changed societal and individuals’ behavior and what happened in their disease natural histories to alter their course/s.

Recording:

Presented by:

Dr. Thomas Weiser | Dr. Tom Becker

Thomas Weiser, MD, MPH, is the Medical Epidemiologist for the Portland Area Indian Health Service assigned to the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board and NW Tribal Epidemiology Center. He has been with PHS since 1998, initially serving as an IHS Medical Officer in Whiteriver, Arizona from 1998-2005. He completed the CDC Epidemic Intelligence Service from 2005-2007. In addition to supporting general public health and epidemiologic research at the NW Tribal Epidemiology Center, Tom is also the Co-Chair of the Portland Area IHS Institutional Review Board. Nationally, he has served on the IHS Heroin, Opioids and Pain Efforts (HOPE) Committee as the Chair of the Metrics Sub-committee and since 2018 has served as the IHS ex-officio representative to the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).

Thomas Becker, MD, PhD, is a medical epidemiologist, and trained in internal medicine, anthropology, and public health; he began his career at the University of New Mexico before moving to the Northwest about 20 years ago. Since his arrival in Portland, Becker has worked with the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board and Oregon Health & Science University. He has published on a diverse range of American Indian health issues, including both infectious and chronic diseases. And with the Indian Health Board, he has been involved in etiologic studies, community prevention programs and education programs to improve career opportunities for people in tribes nationwide.

Resources Provided:

Date added: February 16, 2022