Prev 1 of 2 Next

Laura H. Kahn

Unifying the U.S. government response to bioterrorism

For Washington to respond effectively to a bioterrorist attack, the CDC must be allowed to help lead the investigation--no matter where the attack occurs.

The role of bats in disease transmission

Bats are a Halloween fixture given their vampiric lore, but a better understanding of their ecology, biology, and immunology could aid public health.

Strong health care equals strong emergency response

A nationalized health care and health insurance system in the United States would make economic sense and facilitate better disaster preparedness.

Health-care realities during a pandemic

Unless the United States solves its nursing shortage, the people most likely to care for the sick and dying during an influenza pandemic would be family and friends.

Biosecurity lessons from the Bruce Ivins case

By greatly expanding the number of scientists who work with deadly Category A agents, the United States might have inadvertently increased its risk of bioterrorism.

Food-borne illness: Attack of the killer tomatoes

As the United States experiences its largest foodborne outbreak in a decade, some prudent personal precautions could prevent future illnesses from occurring.

How evil can prevail in state-sanctioned biowarfare research

When societies break down because of war or civil strife, it allows some physicians and/or researchers to act upon their worst prejudices.

The furor over genetically modified foods

Growing crops resistant to drought and disease sounds like a good idea, but the companies promoting such crops need to ensure that they're safe.

In pursuit of international biosecurity oversight

Achieving global cooperation in biosecurity oversight requires an international organization with legitimacy and a solid reputation.

The potential dangers in medical isotope production

Physicians use medical isotopes such as technetium 99 to save lives, but terrorists could use the production byproducts to build crude nuclear weapons.

Stethoscopes belong in museums

When treating twenty-first century patients, primary-care physicians shouldn't rely on nineteenth century technology.

Public health lessons from virtual game worlds

The play in virtual game worlds is fantasy, but the players are living, breathing human beings whose behavior during an online pandemic could give insight into disease spread.

The growing number of immunocompromised

Effective pandemic planning must take into account the challenges posed by immunocompromised individuals, who are at an increased risk for acquiring and spreading infections to others.

The scourge of antibiotic-resistant bacteria

Antibiotics combat bacterial infections such as pneumonia, but their misuse and overuse actually harms public health.

Why evolution should be taught in public schools

The constant struggle against intelligent design dogma hinders efforts to prepare the next generation to understand the life sciences.

The sewer: Guardian against disease

As more and more people inhabit overpopulated megacities, innovative sewage removal and treatment systems might serve as the best way to prevent an epidemic.

Children: The bioterrorists we love

Given their aversion to cleanliness and a dislike for hygiene, kids play a major role in spreading disease such as influenza.

The spread of mosquito-borne diseases

Think of a mosquito as a flying hypodermic needle that can inject disease from one individual to the next.

Prev 1 of 2 Next

Profile

Laura H. Kahn (Profile Image)

Laura H. Kahn

A general internist who began her career in health care as a registered nurse, Kahn works on the research staff of Princeton University's Program on Science and Global Security. Her expertise is in public health, biodefense, and pandemics. From 2003-2005, she led a study that assessed the public health infrastructures of New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. She has also co-organized the Carnegie Corporation’s "Biodefense Challenge" seminar series, which introduces biosecurity, codes of conduct, and dual-use biotech threats to the life sciences community. Prior to joining Princeton, she was a managing physician for the New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services and a medical officer for the Food and Drug Administration.

Columnist Resources

Recommended Links