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Richard Will  
   

Marcus Martin

Violence as a Public Health Concern and the Relationship to Gender, Ethnicity/Race and Age
November 9, 2007
Fairfax, VA



About the speaker

Marcus Martin
Assistant Dean School of Medicine
Associate Vice President for Diversity and Equity

Dr. Marcus L. Martin is Professor and immediate past chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Virginia. He held the chair position from July 1996 to December 2006. Dr. Martin’s Emergency Medicine responsibilities included the adult and pediatric emergency departments, chest pain unit, express care, Pegasus air ambulance, the Blue Ridge Poison Center, paramedic training program, emergency medicine residency program and several emergency medicine fellowship programs. Dr. Martin is also Assistant Dean, School of Medicine and in July 2006 he was appointed interim Assistant Vice President for Diversity and Equity at the University of Virginia. Subsequently, Dr. Martin was appointed to Associate Vice President for Diversity and Equity July 2007.

A native of Covington, Virginia, he earned bachelor’s degrees in pulp and paper technology (1970) and chemical engineering (1971) from North Carolina State University. Following graduation from college, Dr. Martin worked as a production chemical engineer for WESTVACO in Covington, Virginia. A member of the charter class of Eastern Virginia Medical School and the first African American graduate, he earned his medical degree in 1976.

Dr. Martin was commissioned by the US Public Health Service and later served as general medical officer of the Gallup Indian Medical Center in New Mexico. He completed his emergency medicine residency training at the University of Cincinnati in 1981 and held a series of staff and administrative/teaching posts at Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh. He is a founding member of the Board of Visitors of North Carolina State University. Dr. Martin was the first African American to play varsity football at NC State.

A clinical director of the summer program for underrepresented pre-med students, the Summer Medical Dental Education Program, formerly MAAP, Martin has been involved in some aspect of diversity for many years. He was the first African-American to head a clinical department at UVa He co-chaired the Health System Diversity Council in 2000 and was an inaugural member of the Women’s Leadership Council.

With a team of UVa health care providers, Martin traveled to Louisiana in September 2005 and February 2006 to serve the disadvantaged populations – black and white – through medical relief efforts subsequent to hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

He was a Board Member for 12 years and past-president of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. He is past president of the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors. He received the 1994 Emergency Medicine Residents’ Joseph F. Waeckerle Founders Award. He established EMCERT (Emergency Medicine Center for Education, Research and Technology) and the Life Saving Techniques course for medical students at UVA using computerized human patient simulation. Dr. Martin has published widely in journals and has contributed textbook and book chapters in his area of medical expertise. He was recently selected as one of “the top 100 most influential black graduates of NC State University”.

Dr. Martin and his wife, Donna, have four adult children (three graduates of UVa).

On the web

The University of Virginia serves over one million people every year through more than 400 public service and outreach programs. For more information about outreach at UVa, visit http://www.virginia.edu/outreachvirginia/, an interactive web-based listing of public service programs searchable by region, interest, audience, or type of program.

Some programs you can find in OutreachVirginia database include the following:

Prehospital Emergency Medicine Education
The Division of Prehospital Care provides extensive educational and medical resources to volunteers in the region.

Institute on Violence and Survival
The Institute on Violence and Survival studies the long term effects of violence and violent systems, publishes materials on related topics for the public and local service providers that work with victims of violence, offers workshops and conferences, and provides fellowships to victims of violence.

Sexual and Domestic Violence Services Women's Center
Sexual and Domestic Violence Services (SDVS) educates students, staff, and faculty at the University of Virginia about intimate violence and its impact on our community. We provide support to survivors of these crimes, work to strengthen the University’s responses and policies so that all victims are treated fairly and appropriately, empower women to resist abuse, and empower men to embrace their role as allies in this work, so that the violence comes to an end.

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