Warner C. Greene, MD, PhD
Director, Senior Investigator, and Nick and Sue Hellmann Distinguished Processor, Translational Medicine at Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology
Professor of Medicine, Microbiology and of Immunology, UCSF
Member, Institute of Medicine of the National Academies
Fellow, American Academy for the Advancement of Science
Co-Director, UCSF-GIVI Center for AIDS Research
Councilor and President, Association of American Physicians.
Presenting: Death By Friendly Fire During HIV Infection
Location:
Northwestern University - Chicago Campus
Wieboldt Hall, Room 431
340 E. Superior Ave.
Dr. Greene earned a bachelor’s degree at Stanford University and an MD/PhD at Washington University School of Medicine. He took his internship and residency training in Medicine at the Massachusetts General Hospital at Harvard. After serving as a Senior Investigator at the National Cancer Institute and a Professor of Medicine and Howard Hughes Investigator at Duke University Medical Center, Dr. Greene accepted his current position as the Founding Director of the Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology in 1991. The ongoing research in Dr. Greene’s laboratory focuses on the molecular mechanisms underlying HIV pathogenesis, latency, and transmission. He is the author of more than 366 scientific papers and has been recognized as one of the 100 Most Cited Scientists in the world. In 2007, Dr. Greene expanded his work to include global health in sub-Saharan Africa in his service as president and executive chairman of the Accordia Global Health Foundation. Accordia established the Infectious Diseases Institute at Makerere University in Uganda, which has trained thousands of African health care workers, is caring for 30,000 HIV-infected patients, and has brought health care to nearly 500,000 people living in remote rural regions of Uganda.