Rachel Morello-Frosch | |
---|---|
Spouse | David Eifler |
Children | Milo Eifler |
Academic background | |
Education | BSc, Development Studies, MPH, Epidemiology and Biostatistics, PhD, Environmental Health Science, 1998, University of California, Berkeley |
Thesis | Environmental justice and California's "riskscape": the distribution of air toxics and associated cancer and non-cancer health risks among diverse communities (1997) |
Academic work | |
Institutions | University of California,Berkeley Brown University |
Main interests | Environmental racism in the United States |
Rachel A. Morello-Frosch is an American environmental health scientist. She is a professor in the Department of Environmental Science,Policy and Management &School of Public Health at the University of California,Berkeley. In 2022,Morello-Frosch was elected a Member of the National Academy of Medicine for being a "renowned expert on structural determinants of environmental health inequities" and a "leader in the application of community-engaged data science."
Morello-Frosch was born to immigrant parents Marta Eugenia Morello and Norbert Frosch. Her mother was from Argentina and was a literature professor at Ohio State University and the University of California,Santa Cruz [1] and her father was a Holocaust survivor who emigrated to the US from Austria [2] and became an industrial designer. Morello-Frosch completed her Bachelor of Arts degree in Development Studies,Master's degree in Epidemiology and Biostatistics,and her Ph.D. in Environmental Health Sciences at the University of California,Berkeley (UC Berkeley). [3] While completing her graduate degrees,she underwent chemotherapy for breast cancer. [4] She was also named a 1995 Fellow of the Robert &Patricia Switzer Foundation. [5]
Following her PhD,Morello-Frosch completed a National Science Foundation (NSF) post-doctoral fellowship and U.C. President's postdoctoral fellowship before teaching at San Francisco State's College of Health and Human Services. [6] She eventually became an assistant professor of environmental studies at Brown University. [4] In this role,she co-authored a study on air pollution in Los Angeles with Manuel Pastor,Jr. Their study found that the schools with the highest air pollution had the highest minority student enrollment. They also found that air pollution is associated with decreased achievement in school. [7] In 2004,Morello-Frosch was appointed the Robert and Nancy Carney Assistant Professor of Community Health and Environmental Studies Assistant Professor of Community Health and Environmental Studies. [6] Following her promotion,Morello-Frosch and Bill Jesdale publishing findings that suggested that cancer risks from air toxics are greatest in the nation's highly segregated metropolitan areas. [8] She also received the 2005 William G. McLoughlin Award for Teaching Excellence in the Social Sciences. [9]
Morello-Frosch eventually returned to UC Berkeley as an associate professor in their Department of Environmental Science,Policy and Management and School of Public Health. She continued to focus on air pollution and other environmental health and social inequality issues. Due to her focus on climate justice issues,Morello-Frosch received the 2010 Damu Smith Environmental Achievement Award from the Environment Section of the American Public Health Association. [10] During her early tenure at the institution,she became interested in water quality due to the prolonged drought in California from 2011 to 2017. As such,she established the Community Engagement Core - Water Equity Science Shop (CEC-WESS) of the UC Berkeley Superfund Research Program Center. [11] [12] Beyond water quality issues,Morello-Frosch received a 500 Cities Data Challenge grant in 2018 to "develop a nationwide noise model with the 500 Cities data to examine the relationship between environmental noise,sleep patterns,mental health outcomes,and hypertension in American communities." [13]
During the COVID-19 pandemic,Morello-Frosch raised concerns that wildfire smoke could exacerbate COVID-19 as it causes a higher density of tiny aerosol particles in the atmosphere so the virus could survive for longer and travel farther on the particles. [14] In 2021,Morello-Frosch was appointed to sit on the White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council. [15] The following year,she was elected a Member of the National Academy of Medicine for being a "renowned expert on structural determinants of environmental health inequities" and a "leader in the application of community-engaged data science." [16]
Morello-Frosch has been outspoken on social and political issues. In 2021,with other faculty at the University of California,she joined a letter calling Palestinian activism "a global movement for liberation from settler colonialism and racial apartheid." [17] In 2018,she co-hosted an event marking the 30th anniversary of the Middle East Children's Alliance,a Palestinian charity and activist group that has been highly critical of Israel's treatment of Palestinians in Gaza Strip and the occupied West Bank. [18]
Morello-Frosch and her husband David Eifler are the adoptive parents of National Football League linebacker Milo Eifler. [19]
The University of California,Berkeley School of Public Health,also called Berkeley Public Health,is one of fourteen schools and colleges at the University of California,Berkeley. The School of Public Health is consistently rated alongside the best in the nation,with recent rankings placing its doctoral programs in Epidemiology,Biostatistics,Environmental Health Sciences,and Health Policy among the top in their fields,The school is ranked 8th in the country by U.S. News &World Report. Established in 1943,it was the first school of public health west of the Mississippi River. The school is currently accredited by the Council on Education for Public Health.
The Rausser College of Natural Resources (RCNR),or Rausser College,is the oldest college at the University of California,Berkeley and in the University of California system. Established in 1868 as the College of Agriculture under the federal Morrill Land-Grant Acts,CNR is the first state-run agricultural experiment station. The college is home to four internationally top-ranked academic departments:Agriculture and Resource Economics;Environmental Science,Policy,and Management;Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology;and Plant and Microbial Biology,and one interdisciplinary program,Energy and Resources Group. Since February 2020,it is named after former dean and distinguished professor emeritus Gordon Rausser after his landmark $50 million naming gift to the college.
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Jillian Fiona Banfield is professor at the University of California,Berkeley with appointments in the Earth Science,Ecosystem Science and Materials Science and Engineering departments. She leads the Microbial Research initiative within the Innovative Genomics Institute,is affiliated with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and has a position at the University of Melbourne,Australia. Some of her most noted work includes publications on the structure and functioning of microbial communities and the nature,properties and reactivity of nanomaterials.
Irva Hertz-Picciotto,is an environmental epidemiologist best known for her studies of autism. She is Professor and Chief,Division of Environmental and Occupational Health,Department of Public Health Sciences,at the University of California,Davis (UC-Davis). In addition,she is on the Research Faculty of the MIND Institute at UC-Davis;is Deputy Director of the UC-Davis Center for Children's Environmental Health;and is on the faculty of the Center for Occupational and Environmental Health of the Universities of California at Berkeley,Davis,and San Francisco. Hertz-Picciotto serves on the advisory board of the anti-toxic chemical NGO Healthy Child,Healthy World.
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Harold S. "Hal" Johnston was an American scientist who studied chemical kinetics and atmospheric chemistry. After beginning his teaching career at Stanford University,he was a faculty member and administrator at the University of California,Berkeley for nearly 35 years. In 1971,Johnston authored a paper suggesting that environmental pollutants could erode the ozone layer.
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