SCOTT
P. LAYNE, MD, is a Professor of Epidemiology and
of Environmental Health Sciences at
the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA)
School of Public Health (SPH).
He is known for cross-disciplinary work
involving biology, physics, and policy-related issues, and has
authored over 45 publications, including three U.S. patents on methods
to access and operate high-throughput laboratories.
Dr. Layne is also leading
the
development of the UCLA High Speed,
High Volume Laboratory Network for
Infectious Diseases in collaboration with Los Alamos (LANL). The
program, funded by congressionally
directed
Department of Defense investments and a grant from the California
Office of Homeland Security (press release)
that amount to $30 million, will improve
the nation's ability to make rapid and critically important decisions
to save lives in the event of bioterror attacks or infectious disease
outbreaks. The laboratory will enable public health experts to
track
diseases in near real time and dramatically shorten the time needed to
produce effective vaccines. The program will expedite
widespread
collection and testing of influenza samples within a few days of
collection and thereby guide emergency outbreak control efforts.
The
laboratory will test and analyze many more viruses than are currently
examined and enhance capacity should laboratories
be overloaded.
Dr. Layne is an editor of Firepower
in the Lab: Automation in the Fight Against Infectious Diseases and
Bioterrorism (Joseph Henry Press, 2001) and also of Jane's Chem-Bio Handbook, 2nd
and 3rd editions. In 1988, he organized the workshop A National Effort to Model AIDS
Epidemiology for the Office of Science and
Technology Policy (OSTP) and oversaw
the publication of a White House
Report that influenced AIDS research priorities in the United
States. In 1999, he also organized the meeting Automation in Threat Reduction and
Infectious Disease Research: Needs and New Direction under
the
auspices of the Institute of Medicine and National Academy of
Engineering. In August 2008, he was appointed to be a Member of
the National Biosurveillance Advisory Subcommittee (roster) as authorized under Homeland
Security Presidential Directive/HSPD-21 (White
House).
Dr. Layne teaches graduate level courses at UCLA on
infectious diseases (EPI 220) and public
health responses
to bioterrorism and pandemic influenza (EPI 226).
He is also an
instructor on bioterrorism
preparedness for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and lectures
throughout the country in this capacity.
Dr. Layne received
a Bachelor of Arts in
chemistry from DePauw University in 1976 and Doctor of Medicine
from Case Western Reserve University in 1980. He is board
certified in
internal medicine and infectious diseases, with a fellowship in adult
infectious diseases. He served as a postdoctoral
fellow and staff member at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)
from 1982-1986, as a
physicist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) from 1986-1992, and maintains
guest scientist status at LANL.
COURSES
-
Fall
2009: EPI 220 (link)
Principles of Infectious Disease Epidemiology
-
Winter 2010
-
Spring
2009: EPI/EEB M226 (link)
Global
Health Measures for Biological
Emergencies
ACTIVITIES
-
Identifying, Forecasting and
Evaluating Infectious Disease Threats (pdf)
- TradelineInc.
Conference (link)
- $9
Million for High-Speed, High-Volume Lab (press release)
-
Avian Influenza UCOP (link)
-
Testimony to California Assembly, November 2005 (download)
-
High-Throughput Laboratory Network (link)
BIO and CV
(download)
PIC (download)
WHITE PAPER Release1.0 (pdf)
This white paper summarizes our activities, progress to
date, and work
to come on the High Speed, High Volume Laboratory Network for
Infectious Diseases and Center for Rapid Influenza Surveillance and
Research at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). It
emphasizes that implementing near real-time, global and (what aspires
to) transparent surveillance of infectious diseases is an essential
next step for human health and security. It also explains how our
efforts will enable this next step, first at one laboratory site and
then at multiple networked sites. Cited on-line materials and
references at the end provide additional information.
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
- Nature Reviews Microbiology 2007 (download)
-
Emerging Infectious Diseases 2006 (download)
- Journal Association Laboratory
Automation 2003 (download)
-
Biosecurity and Bioterrorism 2003 (download)
- Los
Angeles Times 2002 (download)
-
Institute of Medicine 2002 (download)
-
Molecular Diagnosis 2001 (download)
-
Science 2001 (download)
- PNAS
1999 (download)
-
Nature Biotechnology 1998 (download)
- U.S.
Patent 5,841,975 1998 (download)
- Virology 1992 (download)
- Journal Virology 1991 (download)
- Nature 1990 (download)
- PNAS 1989 (download)
- Nature 1988 (download)
REPORTS
- Office of Science and Technology
Policy 1988 (download)
SELECTED PRESENTATIONS
- CEIRS Kick Off Meeting 2007 (download)
- AAAS
Annual Meeting 2002 (download)
COLLOQUIUM ORGANIZER
Automation in Threat
Reduction and Infectious Disease Research: Needs and New Directions was held at the
National Academy of Sciences on April
29 - 30, 1999. The colloquium put scientific needs in the drivers
seat
and then considered pivotal roles for technology in the following areas.
(a) Fighting deadly
infectious diseases such as influenza A, multi-drug resistant
tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS.
(b) Ensuring safe food by
reducing risks, detecting pathogens and toxins, and rapidly
investigating outbreaks.
(c) Mitigating bioterrorism
and biowarfare by preventing attacks, characterizing agents, and
minimizing aftermaths.
(d) Facilitating work on
human genetics and molecular medicine especially in predicting cancers,
diagnosing diseases, and tailoring medications.
Organizers: Kumar Patel; Tony Beugelsdijk; and Scott Layne.
Co-sponsors:
Association for Laboratory Automation; Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention; Department of Health and Human Resources, Office of
Emergency Preparedness; Los Alamos National Laboratory; Institute of
Medicine; National Academy of Engineering; and University of
California, Los Angeles.
Book: The colloquium proceedings were published by the
National Academy Press / Joseph Henry Press in 2001 (http://books.nap.edu/catalog/9749.html).
NEWS
- Nature 2001 (download)
- Emerging Infectious Diseases 1999 (download)
- Nature 1999 (download)
- ASM News 1999 (download #1)
- ASM News 1999 (download #2)
|