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NIH Office of Dietary Supplements Names New Deputy Director

Stephanie M. George, PhD, MPH, MA, will advise ODS’ director on top-level issues within the organization.

The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS) named epidemiologist Stephanie M. George, PhD, MPH, MA, as the new deputy director of ODS. George will begin her new role on March 24.
 
George will advise ODS Director Stefan M. Pasiakos, PhD, on personnel, administrative, and budgetary issues for the ODS mission. She will also serve as vice chair of the NIH Dietary Supplement Research Coordinating Committee and serve on other related committees and working groups.
 
“Dr. George’s energy and demonstrated success in building effective relationships and leading complex initiatives across NIH are impressive,” said Pasiakos. “I am confident she will help us build the necessary momentum to implement our new strategic vision for ODS.”
 
George formerly served as epidemiologist and program director at the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), overseeing NIH’s largest investment in physical activity research, the Molecular Transducers of Physical Activity Consortium. She serves on many NIH-wide working groups, focused on nutrition research, dietary supplements, obesity, physical activity, medical rehabilitation, behavioral and social sciences, health disparities, social determinants of health, and health communication.
 
George participated in the federal writing team for the 2023 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report: Implementation Strategies for Older Adults and the 2018 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans. She provided subject matter expertise to both the NIH Community Engagement Alliance and Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics Underserved Populations efforts.
 
Before her role at NIAMS, George worked as a senior epidemiologist in the NIH Office of Disease Prevention from 2015−2019. In that position, she fostered wide-ranging research collaborations to study preventive health topics, especially those related to physical activity, diet, and obesity.
Dr. George received a BA and an MA in communication from the University of Maryland as well as an MPH in chronic disease epidemiology and a PhD in epidemiology from Yale University.
 
 
 

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