Mental health biostatistics expert to be new SPH dean

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The next dean of the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health will be F. DuBois Bowman, a distinguished researcher whose scholarship focuses on improving mental health and neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease and depression.

Bowman, whose appointment was appoved by the Board of Regents on July 19, will become the school’s 12th dean. He will begin a five-year renewable term as dean and professor of biostatistics, with tenure, effective Oct. 15. Bowman follows Cathleen Connell, who has served as the school’s interim dean since September 2017.

F. Dubois Bowman

“Professor Bowman has a clear vision for public health — robust research, innovative interdisciplinary problem-solving and immersive education for the next generation of practitioners,” said Provost Martin Philbert, who served as SPH dean before being named provost and executive vice president for academic affairs. “We look forward to the many ways in which his leadership will enrich the school, the university, and work in public health around the world.”

“I am honored to have the opportunity to work with the school’s students, faculty and staff toward our collective commitment to improve health for populations and individuals worldwide,” Bowman said.

“We live in a time when public health concerns about environmental threats, substance misuse, emerging infections, obesity, aging, mental health, non-communicable diseases and health care coverage all loom large.

“As one of the world’s pre-eminent schools of public health, U-M is poised to play a leading role in providing solutions by generating evidence through science, driving policy, education and engagement at local community, national and global levels.”

Currently, Bowman is the chair and the Cynthia and Robert Citrone-Roslyn and Leslie Goldstein Professor of Biostatistics at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. Under his leadership, the department has expanded and refined its education programs, increased grant revenue, and made significant gains in philanthropy.

Bowman also is a member of the executive committee of the Columbia University Data Science Institute.

He began his academic career as an assistant professor in the Department of Biostatistics in the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University. As he rose through the ranks at Emory, becoming a professor in the Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics in 2013, he was also a visiting scholar at Carnegie Mellon University in 2000 and a visiting assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University in 2005.

From 2007-2013, he was the founding director of the Center for Biomedical Imaging Statistics at the Rollins School at Emory, the first center of its kind internationally. Bowman was president of the Eastern North American Region of the International Biometric Society and is an elected fellow of the American Statistical Association.

Bowman’s research has helped to reveal brain patterns that reflect disruption from psychiatric diseases and detect biomarkers for neurological diseases. Additionally, his research seeks to determine threats to brain health from environmental exposures, to determine more individualized therapeutic treatments, and to optimize brain health in aging populations.

As a principal investigator, Bowman has received seven National Institutes of Health grants. Additionally, he is the co-investigator on an even greater number of federally sponsored grants.

Recently, he led research under the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Parkinson’s Disease Biomarker Program, which may have major implications for early detection of Parkinson’s disease and for forecasting disease progression. He also has been an integral collaborator on an international research project led by the Michael J. Fox Foundation.

Bowman recognizes the critical need for diversity and has worked to foster it within biostatistics; public health; science, technology, engineering and math fields; and in research careers more generally. He has mentored minority undergraduate and graduate students, postdoctoral fellows and faculty.

He also served on advisory boards of NIH programs that target underrepresented minority undergraduate students at historically black colleges and universities, and currently leads two NIH diversity pipeline training programs at Columbia University as a co- principal investigator.

Bowman earned a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics in 1992 from Morehouse College, where he was a member of the Phi Beta Kappa honor society. He earned a Master of Science degree in biostatistics from U-M in 1995, and a Ph.D. degree in biostatistics from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, in 2000.

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