At its most recent meeting, ĂÛÌÒAPPâs Board of Trustees elected a longtime member and history-making leader as its next chair.
Julie Gerberding, MD (WRC â77, MED â81)âa renowned infectious diseases specialist who is now chief executive officer of the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health (FNIH)âwill become chair of the board in June 2025 for a four-year term.
âIn her 13 years on the board so far, Julie has been an invaluable resource for Case Western Reserve,â said Board Chair Fred DiSanto (WRC â85, MGT â86), who has led the board since 2020. âSheâs been an insightful partner, an impassioned advocate and a transformative leader. I look forward to seeing her expertise in action as I continue on as a trustee.â
A lifetime of leadership
Gerberdingâs work in the 1990s at the University of California, San Francisco and San Francisco General Hospital pioneered new methods for preventing infections in healthcare workers and their patients and drew the attention of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She joined the agency in 1998 and gained national recognition in 2001 as a prominent CDC representative in front of Congress and the media during the anthrax attacks.
In 2002, Gerberding made history when she became the first woman to direct the CDC, overseeing a $10 billion budget with a workforce of 15,000 people in more than 45 countries, and leading the agency through a strategic restructuring to expand research as well as preparedness and response to bioterrorism, pandemics, and other global health threats.
She then went on to lead the vaccines division at multinational pharmaceutical company Merck before being tapped in spring 2022 as chief executive officer of FNIH, a nonprofit chartered by Congress to support the mission of the National Institutes of Health.
Gerberding has served as a Case Western Reserve trustee since February 2011, gaining insights on committees related to finance, compensation, and research and technology transfer, the latter of which sheâs chaired since 2016. She also has been the boardâs vice chair since 2019.
âI am honored to be elected chair of my alma materâs Board of Trustees and help guide this illustrious institution into its next century,â said Gerberding. âThroughout my careerâwhether in hospitals, government, or industryâthe key to my success has been interdisciplinary teamwork, and Iâm eager to see how we can work to enhance the exceptional academics and research happening across this campus each day.â
Interdisciplinary action
Gerberdingâs focus on interdisciplinarity comes at an opportune time for Case Western Reserve: The university recently began work to construct the Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Buildingâa five-story, 189,000-square-foot, $300 million research building aimed at bolstering its research enterprise and fueling team-based discoveries.
âThatâs my comfort zone,â Gerberding told CWRU Medicine, âbringing in diverse points of view, disciplines, and interests to create a âwise crowdâ that can solve really hard problems.â
Leading the Board of Trusteesâa group of more than 40 individuals with expertise ranging from finance to technologyâwill allow Gerberding to exercise such skills as the trustees work to enhance the long-term well-being of the university.
Sheâll also help guide Case Western Reserve into its bicentennial celebration in 2026.
âThis is a historic moment for CWRU, marking 200 years of research breakthroughs and academic excellence,â said Joe Mandato (MGT â04), DBA, chair of the Committee on Trustees and Governance. âAs a history maker herself and, more importantly, an exceptional, intelligent leader, Julie is an ideal person to chair the board at this moment.â
Gerberding has earned more than 50 awards and honors throughout her trailblazing career, including the United States Department of Health and Human Services Distinguished Service Award, placement on TIMEâs 100 Most Influential People in the World list, and repeated spots on Forbesâ 100 Most Powerful Women in the World list.
In 2021, that list of accolades grew when ĂÛÌÒAPP School of Medicine named its newest academic societyâsmall cohorts to which matriculating students are randomly assignedâin her honor. She is one of six critical figures in the history of the medical school to have a society named after them.
âAs a double alumna, Julie is an outstanding representation of the exceptional quality of leaders that Case Western Reserve produces,â said President Eric W. Kaler, PhD. âJulie has a proven track record of making incredible impacts on organizations, and Iâm confident sheâll bring that same level of ingenuity to her new role leading our board.â