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Penn Medicine Executive Vice Dean for Institutional Affairs: Brian Strom

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March 13, 2012, Volume 58, No. 25

Brian Strom Dr. Brian L. Strom has been appointed Executive Vice Dean for Institutional Affairs at Penn Medicine. The appointment, made by Dr. J. Larry Jameson, EVP of the University of Pennsylvania Health System and Dean of the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, took effect on March 1, 2012.

In his new role, Dr. Strom will assume the responsibilities of coordinating Penn Medicine’s efforts in comparative effectiveness research, as well as the Neuroscience of Behavior Initiative, which seeks to strengthen Penn’s programs in basic, translational, clinical, and population research in the areas of addiction, depressive disorders, and neurodegenerative disease. In consultation with Dean Jameson, Dr. Strom will also provide administrative leadership for the recruitment of department chairs, center and institute directors, and other senior faculty members. Along with other members of Penn Medicine leadership, he will also assist with implementing recommendations that emerge from the School’s current strategic planning process.

“Over more than three decades, Brian has made enormous contributions to the success of Penn Medicine,” Dr. Jameson said. “He began his career at Penn as an assistant professor in 1980, rising through the ranks of the faculty while also holding positions of increasing administrative responsibility. I have enormous respect for his skills, judgment, and temperament and am delighted that he will be expanding his role on behalf of Penn Medicine.”

Since 2007 Dr. Strom has served as vice dean for institutional affairs, with primary responsibilities as Penn Medicine’s liaison to the Philadelphia Veterans Administration Medical Center and Penn’s global health programs in Guatemala and Peru. He will continue to serve the School in these areas.

Dr. Strom is the founding chair of the department of biostatistics and epidemiology and the founding director of the Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at Penn Medicine. As the George S. Pepper Professor of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, he has served as chair and center director since 1995.

Author of more than 550 papers and principal investigator of more than 250 grants, he is an elected member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and one of the few clinical epidemiologists elected to the American Society of Clinical Investigation and American Association of Physicians. He is renowned for his work in the field of pharmacoepidemiology, and serves as editor-in-chief for Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety, the official journal of the International Society for Pharmacoepidemiology.

Almanac - March 13, 2012, Volume 58, No. 25