TAB 3 Advisory Committee Staff Bios (as of April 13) DAN GUTTMAN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON HUMAN RADIATION EXPERIMENTS STAFF Biographical Sketch Dan Guttman has been a partner at Spiegel & McDiarmid, a Washington, D.C. law firm which represents public agencies, workers and consumers in energy, communication and environmental matters, and human rights issues. He has assisted local governments and worker representatives in the ongoing conversion of the nuclear weapons complex, and Nye County, Nevada, the site of the proposed nuclear waste repository. Following graduation in 1971 from Yale law School, he co-authored the Ralph Nader sponsored book, The Shadow Government: The Government's Multibillion Dollar Giveaway of its Decision-making Powers to Private Management Consultants, "Experts," and Think Tanks. He served as special counsel to Senator David Pryor in the oversight and investigation of the Federal use of private expertise in the performance of the basic work of government. He participated on the National Academy of Public Administration's Standing Panel on Executive Organization and Management, and was the recipient of a German Marshall Fund grant to advise on energy conservation in Czechoslovakia. He has written for publications including The New Republic, The Washington Monthly, Public Power, and The Harvard Journal on Legislation. He served as research assistant to Andy Rooney in the production of "Mr. Rooney Goes to Washington," an award winning CBS news documentary. He was graduated phi beta kappa with highest honors from the University of Rochester in 1968. JEFFREY P. KAHN EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND 1989 - PhD, Georgetown University (Philosophy/Bioethics) 1988 - MPH, The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health (Health policy) 1983 - BA, University of California, Los Angeles (Microbiology) Areas of Specialization: Applied ethics, including clinical and theoretical bioethics, ethics and genetics, ethics and public health (health policy, health care, finance); ethical theory. Competent in Jewish bioethics. EXPERIENCE April 1994-present Acting Staff Director, and Senior Policy and Research Analyst. Federal Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments. May 1992-present Assistant Professor and Director, Graduate Program in Bioethics, Center for the Study of Bioethics, Medical College of Wisconsin. Duties include initial development and ongoing administration of graduate program and its curriculum leading to a Master of Arts degree in Bioethics, teaching and administration of graduate and medical school courses in bioethics and health policy, preparation of large center grant applications, and organizational responsibility for Midwestern Intensive Bioethics Course (MIBC). Member, Medical College of Wisconsin Human Research Review Committee (IRB). July 1989- April 1992 Assistant Professor, Department of Medical Humanities, East Carolina University School of Medicine. Duties included the development and teaching of first- and second-year medical school Philosophy and Medicine courses, third-year ethics components of clinical rotations, fourth-year medical school elective "Policy Issues in Health Care Delivery," and clinical ethics consultations in residency programs and for house staff. SELECTED RECENT PUBLICATIONS 1. Elliott, CE, Kahn, JP, "When the Medium is the Message: Bioethics in the Age of Punditry," Hastings Center Report, forthcoming. 2. Kahn, JP, "Sin Taxes as a Mechanism of Health Care Finance: Moral and Policy Considerations," in JF Humber and RF Almeder, editors, Biomedical Ethics Reviews: 1994 (Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, in press). 3. Kahn, JP, "Animal Research: Law and Policy," Encyclopedia of Bioethics, second edition (New York: Macmillan and Co., in press). 4. Kahn, JP, "Genetics and the Problem of Harm," in David Thomasma and John Monagle, editors, Health Care Ethics: Critical Issues (Gaithersburg, MD: Aspen Publishers, 1994). SELECTED RECENT PROFESSIONAL PAPERS AND LECTURES 1. "The Principles of Bioethics and their Competitors: Clash of the Titans or Tempest in a Teapot?," invited speaker for 1994 Spring Faculty Colloquium, Social Perspectives on Bioethics: Assumptions, Principles & Practices, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, March 31, 1994. 2. "Health, International Trade, and Exploitation: How American Policymakers Stay Hooked on Tobacco," invited speaker for Conversations in Bioethics series, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, February 22, 1994. 3. "Clinical Trials and Informed Consent," invited panelist on program for Wisconsin Medical Manufacturers Association, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, January 20, 1994. 4. "The New Genetics: Ethical and Social , invited speaker for short-course for genetic counselors entitled "Humanizing Genetic Testing: Clinical Applications of New Genetic Technologies," Chicago, IL, December 17, 1993. STEPHEN KLAIDMAN EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND 1955-59 - City College of New York, Queens College, New School for Social Research SELECTED EXPERIENCE April 1994 - present Director of Communications and Senior Policy and Research Analyst, Federal Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments. 1993 - May 1994 Visiting Professor of Journalism, Pennsylvania State University. 1990 - 1993 Director, Undergraduate Values Project, Georgetown University. 1989 - 1990 Guest Scholar, Woodrow Wilson International Center. 1984 - 1989 Senior Associate, Institute for Health Policy Analysis, Georgetown University (Duties included fund-raising and conference planning). 1984 Consultant, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. 1983 Consultant, Office of the Secretary of Defense. 1982-present Senior Research Fellow, Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown University. (Created and taught courses titled Journalism Ethics; Journalism, Ethics and the Law; and Journalism, Ethics and International Relations.) 1982-1986 Founding editor, Soviet/East European Report. 1979-1982 Chief editorial writer and columnist, International Herald Tribune. 1973-1976 Reporter and deputy foreign editor (1973- 75), Washington Post 1967-1969 Copy editor, New York Times. SELECTED PUBLICATIONS S. Klaidman, Health in the Headlines (NY: Oxford University Press, 1991). S. Klaidman, "Muddling Through," The Wilson Quarterly, Spring 1991. S. Klaidman, "Roles and Responsibilities of the Mass Media in Health Care in America," in Mass Communications and Public Health (Sage Publications, 1991). S. Klaidman, "How Well the Media Report Health Risk," Daedalus, Fall 1990. S. Klaidman, "The Role and Responsibility of the Press in America," in Liberty of Expression (Washington, DC: Wilson Center Press, 1989). ANNA C. MASTROIANNI EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND 1986 - JD, University of Pennsylvania Law School 1982 - BS, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania (Economics) 1982 - BA, School of Arts and Sciences, University of Pennsylvania (Spanish and Portuguese) Other Education: The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health (part-time study in health policy); Georgetown University, Kennedy Institute of Ethics (Completed Intensive Bioethics Course). EXPERIENCE April 1994-present Director of Committee Affairs, Deputy Staff Director and Senior Policy and Research Analyst, Federal Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments. Oct 1992-Mar. 1994 Study Director/Senior Program Officer, Division of Health Sciences Policy, Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences. Managed study on legal and ethical issues relating to the inclusion of women in clinical studies; co-managed study on intellectual property, technology transfer and conflict of interest in molecular biology. June 1989-Oct. 1992 Attorney, Green, Stewart & Farber, P.C., Washington, DC Counseling national base of health care clients on regulatory, corporate and transactional issues. Nov. 1988-June 1989 Legal Consultant, Committee on Contraceptive Development National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences. Researched and analyzed impact of FDA regulation and products liability litigation on contraceptive development. Sept.1988-Nov.1988 Assistant to DC Finance Director, Dukakis -Bentsen Campaign, Democratic National Committee. Sept.1987-Sept.1988 Attorney, Health Care Department,Epstein, Becker & Green, P.C., Washington, DC. Summer Internships and Clerkships: Epstein, Becker and Green, P.C.; Population Action International; U.S. Agency for International Development (policy Development Division, Office of Population); Bower and Gardner (Medical Malpractice Department, NY); Teaching Assistant, Legal Writing, George Washington University Law School. SELECTED PUBLICATIONS AND OTHER ACTIVITIES Mastroianni, A. , Faden, R., and Federman, D. (eds.), Women and Health Research, Ethical and Legal Issues of Including Women in Clinical Studies. (National Academy Press: Washington, DC, 1994). Glover, J., Mastroianni, A., Anderson, K. and Lynn, J. Abridged brief as amicus curiae of the American Geriatrics Society in support of the petitioner, Nancy Beth Cruzan, by her parents and co-guardians Lester L. and Joyce Cruzan. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 38: 570-576 (1990). Member, Member, Advisory Workgroup on Women in Medicine, Council on Graduate Medical Education (COGME), Division of Medicine, Bureau of Health Professions, Health Resources and Services Administration, Public Health Service, Department of Health & Human Services, Sept. 1993 - Present JEREMY SUGARMAN EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND 1993 - MA, Georgetown University (Philosophy/Applied Ethics) 1992 - MPH, The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health (Health Policy) 1986 - MD, Duke University School of Medicine 1982 - BS, Duke University (Psychology) EXPERIENCE April 1994 - present Senior Policy and Research Analyst, Federal Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments July 1993 - present Assistant Professor of Medicine and Co- Director, Program in Medical Ethics, Division of General Internal Medicine; Senior Fellow, Center for Study of Aging and Human Development; Assistant Research Professor, Center for Health policy Research and Education, Duke University. Responsibilities include teaching medical ethics to house staff, practicing general medicine, and participating on the Duke Hospital Ethics Committee. June 1990 - June 1993 Senior Clinical and Research Fellow, Division of Internal Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. SELECTED RECENT PUBLICATIONS 1. Sugarman J, Powers M. How the doctor got gagged: the disintegrating right of privacy in the physician-patient relationship. JAMA. 1991;266:3323-3327. 2. Sugarman J, Weinberger M, Samsa G. Factors associated with veterans' decisions about living wills. Arch Intern Med. 1992; 152; 343-347. 3. Sugarman J, Powe NR, Guerci AD, Levine DM. Facts and fears regarding blood transfusions in decision making for thrombolytic therapy. Am Heart J. 1993;8:494-499. 4. Sugarman J, Powe NR, Brillantes DA, Smith MK. The cost of ethics legislation: a look at the Patient Self-Determination Act. Kennedy Institute of Ethics J. 1993;3(4):387-399. 5. Sugarman J, Kass N, Faden R, Goodman S. Catalysts for conversations about advance directives: the influence of physician and patient characteristics. Am J Law Med & Ethics. 1994; in press. 6. Sugarman J. Should hospital ethics committees do research? J Clin Ethics. 1994; in press.