Confirmed 2010 Keynotes
Howard K. Koh MD, MPH
Assistant Secretary for Health
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Dr. Howard K. Koh serves as the 14th Assistant Secretary for Health for the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), after being nominated by President
Barack Obama and confirmed by the U.S. Senate in 2009. As the Assistant Secretary for
Health, Dr. Koh oversees the HHS Office of Public Health and Science, the
Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service, and the Office of the Surgeon
General. He also serves as senior public health advisor to the Secretary. At the Office of
Public Health and Science, he leads an array of interdisciplinary programs relating to
disease prevention, health promotion, the reduction of health disparities, women’s and
minority health, HIV/AIDS, vaccine programs, physical fitness and sports, bioethics,
population affairs, blood supply, research integrity and human research protections. In
these various roles, he is dedicated to the mission of creating better public health systems
for prevention and care so that all people can reach their highest attainable standard of
health.
Dr. Koh previously served as the Harvey V. Fineberg Professor of the Practice of Public
Health, Associate Dean for Public Health Practice, and Director of the Division of Public
Health Practice at the Harvard School of Public Health. At Harvard, he also served as the
principal investigator of multiple research grants related to community-based
participatory research, cancer disparities affecting underserved and minority populations,
tobacco control and emergency preparedness. He was also Director of the Harvard
School of Public Health Center for Public Health Preparedness, which promotes
education about bioterrorism, pandemic influenza, and other emerging health threats. He
has published over 200 articles in the medical and public health literature.
Dr. Koh served as Commissioner of Public Health for the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts (1997-2003) after being appointed by Governor William Weld. As
Commissioner, Dr. Koh led the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, which
included a wide range of health services, four hospitals, and a staff of more than 3,000
professionals. In this capacity, he emphasized the power of prevention and strengthened
the state’s commitment to eliminating health disparities. During his service, the state saw
advances in areas such as tobacco control, cancer screening, bioterrorism response after
9/11 and anthrax, health issues of the homeless, newborn screening, organ donation,
suicide prevention and international public health partnerships.
Dr. Koh graduated from Yale College (where he was President of the Yale Glee Club)
and the Yale University School of Medicine. He completed postgraduate training at
Boston City Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital, serving as chief resident in
both hospitals. He has earned board certification in four medical fields: internal medicine,
hematology, medical oncology, and dermatology, as well as a Master of Public Health
degree from Boston University. At Boston University Schools of Medicine and Public
Health, he was Professor of Dermatology, Medicine and Public Health as well as Director
of Cancer Prevention and Control.
He has earned numerous awards and honors for interdisciplinary accomplishments in
medicine and public health, including the Distinguished Service Award from the
American Cancer Society, the Drs. Jack E. White/LaSalle D. Leffall Cancer Prevention
Award from the American Association for Cancer Research and the Intercultural Cancer
Council, and the Dr. Harold P. Freeman Lectureship Award. He is an elected member of
the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies. President Bill Clinton appointed Dr.
Koh as a member of the National Cancer Advisory Board (2000-2002). A past Chair of
the Massachusetts Coalition for a Health Future (the group that pushed for the
Commonwealth’s groundbreaking tobacco control initiative), Dr. Koh was named by the
New England Division of the American Cancer Society as “one of the most influential
persons in the fight against tobacco during the last 25 years”. Other awards include being
named to the K100 (the 100 leading Korean Americans in the first century of Korean
immigration to the United States), the Boston University School of Public Health
Distinguished Alumni Award (the highest award of the School) and an honorary degree
from Merrimack College. In recognition of his national contributions to the field of early
detection and prevention of melanoma, the Boston Red Sox designated him a “Medical
All Star” (2003) which included the ceremonial first pitch at Fenway Park.
Dr. Koh and his wife, Dr. Claudia Arrigg, are the proud parents of three children.
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