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Carol J.
Rowland Hogue, Ph.D., M.P.H. was
appointed Professor of Epidemiology and Jules & Deen
Terry Professor of Maternal and Child Health at the
Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University
in 1992. For a decade before that, she was at the federal
Centers for Disease Control, Division of Reproductive
Health, where she was chief of the Pregnancy Epidemiology
Branch (originally the Abortion Surveillance Branch)
and then Director of the Division. Prior to her government
service, she was on the Biometry faculty of Arkansas
medical school (1977-82) and the Biostatistics faculty
of UNC-CH School of Public Health (1974-77). Her research
interests include the long-term effects of induced
abortion, epidemiology of preterm delivery – especially
among African American women, and minority health.
She is lead editor of the book, Minority Health
in America (Johns Hopkins U. Press, 2000). She
and her husband, L. Lynn Hogue, have one daughter,
Elizabeth.
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