Summary
Berry Semexan is a retired medical epidemiologist with over a decade of public health experience at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, specializing in pediatric and government health initiatives. He holds an MD and an MPHTM from Tulane, combining clinical training with deep expertise in tropical medicine and disease prevention. At CDC he led epidemiologic efforts including prevention of neural tube defects through folic acid fortification, program evaluation, literature review, and health promotion. Known for bridging clinical insight and population-level strategies, he has a strong record in designing prevention programs and evaluating their public health impact. Based in Atlanta, he brings institutional knowledge of federal public health operations and a scholarly approach to evidence-based policy. Even in retirement, his background positions him as a valuable advisor on maternal-child health and nutritional fortification policy.
10 years of coding experience
Doctor of Medicine (MD), Medicine, Doctor of Medicine (MD), Medicine at Joan & Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Master of Public Health in Tropical Medicine (MPHTM), Tropical medicine, Master of Public Health in Tropical Medicine (MPHTM), Tropical medicine at Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine
English, Chinese