Harvey Rubin, MD, PhD

Harvey Rubin, MD, PhD

3400 Civic Center Boulevard South Pavilion, 4th Floor , Philadelphia, 19104 (215) 316-5151 Website

Opening hours (11 Nov - 17 Nov)

  • This week| Next week

  • Monday

    closed
  • Tuesday

    closed
  • Wednesday

    closed
  • Thursday

    closed
  • Friday

    closed
  • Saturday

    closed
  • Sunday

    closed

Late night shopping

Late night shopping unknown

Late night shopping

Sunday shopping unknown


Company description

Meet Dr. Harvery Rubin           Dr. Rubin is a Professor of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania with secondary appointments as Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, and as Professor of Computer and Information Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. His research in infectious diseases has been funded by the NIH, NSF, DARPA, the Global Alliance for TB Drug Discovery, and the Department of Defense.  In addition to his work on the basic biology of bacterial pathogenesis, he has extended the investigations to mathematical modeling of complex biological systems. His research has resulted in more than 100 peer-reviewed papers chapters or reviews. His clinical practice is limited to infectious diseases and he sees patients at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.            Dr. Rubin has served on a number of national and international scientific review panels including the NIH, NSF, NASA Intelligent Systems Program, DARPA, and The Medical Research Council, South Africa. He was a member of the United States National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB), and the Department of Defense/National Academy of Sciences Biological Cooperative Threat Reduction Program.  He has published and lectured extensively on policy issues that relate to infectious diseases            Dr. Rubin is the founder of Energize the Chain, a non-profit organization that ensures the delivery of vaccines to people in the most remote regions of the world by utilizing power and connectivity in the private sector, such as that available at cell tower sites to power the refrigeration systems that are necessary to keep vaccines at the proper temperature.