
|

|
|
|

2010 SciPAC
Awardees
2010 Derek Dunn Memorial
Scientist Officer of the Year Award
|
CDR
Daphne Moffett |
|
Dr.
Daphne B. Moffett is a Commander in the US Public Health
Service and the Associate Director for Science in the
Division of Health Assessment and Consultation (DHAC) at
CDC/ATSDR. She is responsible for managing, coordinating and
providing oversight for division science and science policy
activities. These duties include ensuring that
evidence-based science and public health practices are
integrated into the public health assessment process
employed at hazardous waste sites and in division products
(public health assessments, health consultations, and health
advisories). CDR Moffett is the previous Chairman of the
Board of Directors for the Commissioned Officers Association
and serves on several committees across the PHS, the agency,
and her discipline including co-chairing the CDC/ATSDR
Associate Directors for Science Development Workgroup,
membership in the Society of Toxicology, and as the
Historian for the USPHS Scientist Professional Advisory
Committee. She has provided guidance to the Surgeon General
and the Scientist Professional Advisory Committee on
recruitment, retention, and career development of PHS
scientists.
CDR Moffett serves on editorial review boards, grant review
panels and has taught environmental public health courses in
the US and internationally. She has published book chapters
and manuscripts in the areas of toxicology, environmental
health, injury prevention and HIV. She has been recognized
by the agency for her expertise on chemical weapons of mass
destruction and industrial chemicals and has served as an
on-call expert during national events. She recently deployed
to Haiti to serve as the agency expert in environmental
health, sanitation, and toxicology.
Education: B.S. (Chemistry) University of Akron; Ph.D.
(Biochemistry) Montana State University; Postdoctoral
Training (Toxicology and Public Health) Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. |
| |
2010 Junior Scientist Officer of the Year Award
|
LCDR Robin Toblin |
|
LCDR
Robin Toblin joined the Public Health Service as an Epidemic Intelligence
Service (EIS) Officer at CDC in 2007 following the completion of her joint PhD
(clinical psychology) / MPH (epidemiology) degree from the University of
Southern California. At CDC, she was assigned to the Division of Unintentional
Injury Prevention and focused largely on prescription drug overdose deaths and
unintentional strangulation deaths amongst youth via the "choking game." Her
study on the "choking game" was featured in over 300 news and TV outlets on the
day of release and was reprinted in two journals including JAMA. She also worked
with families of the victims to assist with advocacy. For her efforts, LCDR
Toblin earned a Commendation Medal. She also was deployed on four Epi-Aids, or
epidemiology field investigations.
Currently, LCDR Toblin serves as one of the first two epidemiologists hired by
the Federal Bureau of Prisons in Washington, DC. She will be transferring in
June to the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Center for Military
Psychiatry and Neurosciences, Military Psychiatry Branch under the DoD
Behavioral Health MOU. LCDR Toblin's title will be Clinical Research
Psychologist, and she will conduct epidemiologic and clinical research focused
on the mental health of troops and will provide mental health clinical care.
In addition to her professional work, LCDR Toblin has been an active member of
SciPAC, currently serving as the liaison to the Junior Officer Advisory Group,
or JOAG. LCDR Toblin is one of 20 voting members in JOAG and is the Membership
Committee Chair, which has a roster of 55 people.
In this committee, she has expanded the purview of the committee to include 4
subcommittees with subcommittee chairs as compared to the prior year in which
the committee had 8 members and a singular task.
Further, she is also the secretary of the Psychologist Professional Advisory
Group, PsyPAG, which is currently just one of two elected positions for the
group of 100 psychologists. LCDR Toblin is also an active member of her
deployment team, Mental Health Team 5, and her local COA branch chapters
(Atlanta and now DC) and looks forward to joining the Scientist category women's
running team for a second year at the COF Scientific and Training Symposium in
San Diego.
|
| |
2010 Scientist Responder of the Year Award
|
CDR Ross Spears
|
|
CDR
Ross Spears received his Bachelor of Science degree in both
Chemistry and Biology from Western Kentucky University. He received
his Master's Degree in Coal Chemistry from Western Kentucky
University. He received his Ph.D. in Chemistry from The University
of Alabama. He worked for over 14 years in environmental
remediation, primarily in the mining sector. In 2002, he joined the
Food & Drug Administration as a Consumer Safety Officer and was
subsequently called to active duty. After his call to active duty,
Commander Spears was transferred to CDC to help start a new
regulatory office, the Division of Select Agents and Toxins. He has
since been stationed at CDC's Division of Emergency Operations,
which runs CDC's Emergency Operations Center. He is now stationed at
CDC's Office of Health & Safety as Senior Science Officer and
emergency response planner.
Commander Spears has been very active in emergency response since
his earliest days in the Public Health Service. He has deployed in
every hurricane season since 2004. He has served on SERT teams, the
original IRCT-4, and now is Deputy Plans Chief on RDF-3. He
developed CDC's "Common Operating Picture," a SharePoint-based site
that serves as CDC's primary information exchange tool in all
emergency operations. He is a co-principal investigator on two
research projects studying human factors in emergency operations. He
has been a co-author on many of CDC's internal response plans, and
is currently project lead on management of material for CDC
workforce protection. |
|
|
|

|
|