Dr. Paul J. Lioy |
Dr. Paul J. Lioy is a professor of Environmental and Community Medicine at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, N.J. He is Deputy Director for Governmental Relations at the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute (EOHSI) a joint program of Rutgers University and UMDNJ and also directs the Institute's program in Exposure Measurement and Assessment. Dr. Lioy was the 1998 Recipient of the International Society of Exposure Analysis Jerome Wesolowski Award for Lifetime Achievement in Exposure Analysis and in 2003 he was the recipient of the Frank Chambers Award in Air Pollution from the Air and Waste Management Association.
Dr. Lioy has been a member of the Science Advisory Board (SAB) of the US EPA (1991-2003), and was a member of its Advisory Council of Clean Air Compliance Analysis and Chair of the Health and Ecological Effects Committee. Currently, he is a consultant to the SAB on the CASAC. He was elected to the International Academy of Indoor Air Sciences in 1999 and is a Fellow of the Colleaguim Ramazzini (1999). Dr. Lioy is a member of the US-Canada International Joint Commission Air Quality Advisory Board. He was the Program Chair for the 1997 and 2000 Annual Conference of the International Society for Exposure Analysis (ISEA). He is one of the founders of ISEA and was President from 1993-94. Dr. Lioy has been a member of the National Academy of Sciences Board of Toxicology and Environmental Studies, and was chair of their first committee devoted to Exposure Assessment and a member of various committees including Ozone, Particulate Matter, DOE Waste Sites, and Epidemiology.
He has been an academic councilor to the New Jersey Legislature, and a member or chair of state councils and committees. He has been an executive editor or associate editor of a number of journals that deal with environmental science and/or air pollution, and has over 200 peer-reviewed publications. His research focuses on major human exposure and Environmental Health problems, which include basic research on the measurement and modeling of exposure and dose derived for environmental agents that reach individuals, and those that can be derived from single or multiple routes of exposure (e.g., pesticides, metals ozone). He has completed research on exposure-health effects of the aftermath of the World Trade Center disaster and is currently working on biological and chemical warfare agent related exposure research for homeland security.
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