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Conferences & Events

Outbreak: Plagues that changed History
September 27 – January 30, 2009
Organized by the Global Health Odyssey Museum; come see Byrn Barnard’s images of the symptoms and paths of the world’s deadliest diseases – and how the epidemics they spawned have changed history forever.

The CDC Leaders

"Too many people fail to realize that real communication goes in both directions."

- Lee Iacocca

Louise Galaska

Louise Galaska

Acting Chief Management Official, Coordinating Center for Environmental Health and Injury Prevention

As the acting chief management official for the Coordinating Center for Environmental Health and Injury Prevention (CCEHIP), Louise Galaska is responsible for improving business services, practices, and systems through effective and efficient strategic thinking, critical analysis, resource and performance management, change leadership, policy development, communications and coalition building. She has direct authority for all business operations such as fiscal, human capital, information technology, procurement, grants, facilities, property, security, and similar functions and assets. She also promotes CCEHIP´s leadership development initiative, called ´Growing Great,´ and supports CCEHIP´s management effectiveness initiatives, among other responsibilities.

As part of the CDC Management Council, she helps govern and set the agency's direction for business and administrative services, strategies, and operations.

Ms. Galaska´s first job at CDC was as a VD investigator (a position now known as "STD disease intervention specialist") in Chicago, identifying and counseling people who had been exposed to gonorrhea or syphilis and referring them, and their sex partners, for treatment.

She completed undergraduate studies at Barat College, earning two Bachelors of Arts degrees—one in history and one in American studies. She then went to work for CDC in Chicago´s health department and learned public health through "shoe-leather" epidemiology. She spent the next 15 years working in STD, HIV and TB control and prevention in state and local health departments. In 1993, she came to Atlanta and, for the next eight years, worked in cancer prevention and control in NCCDPHP. In 2001, she joined CDC´s Injury Center as deputy director.

She and her husband Pete have one son.

 

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Page last modified: 03/23/2007
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