svenners
<p>After completing his bachelor’s degree, Scott joined the United States Peace Corps and taught physics in a public high school in Liberia, West Africa. Later, he moved to Taiwan for five years where he taught English, mathematics and computer science. He then obtained a Master’s of Public Health from Tulane University in the Department of International Health and Development with a concentration in quantitative epidemiology and biostatistics. Scott received fellowship support to pursue his Ph.D. from the Tulane/Xavier Center for Bioenvironmental Research and collaborated with the Harvard School of Public Health for his dissertation research, which utilized quantitative epidemiological methods to investigate the effects of indoor and outdoor air pollution in China on respiratory health and rates of daily mortality. </p> <p>Scott did post-doctoral research for four years at the Harvard School of Public Health. His research utilized molecular epidemiological methods to study environmental endocrine disruptors and human reproduction. During these four years, he was the executive director of a large, prospective study that was funded by the US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences to investigate the effects of pesticide exposures on fertility and pregnancies of young couples living in agricultural communities in China. While a post-doc, Scott won a four-year K01 grant from the US National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences to investigate genetic susceptibilities to the effects of pesticides in the Chinese cohort (gene-environment interactions). In 2005, Scott was appointed as Research Assistant Professor in the Center for Population Genetics in the Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the University of Illinois at Chicago, School of Public Health. He joined the Simon Fraser Faculty of Health Sciences as an Assistant Professor in 2008.</p>
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| svenners | Jan 17, 2011 |
