Holly Hagan | |
Education: | BA, Russian Studies, Evergreen State College MPH, Epidemiology, University of Massachusetts Amherst PhD, University of Washington |
Workplaces: | New York University |
Holly C. Hagan is an American infectious disease epidemiologist and nurse. She is a full professor in the College of Global Public Health at New York University and director of the Center for Drug Use and HIV/HCV Research.
Hagan earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Evergreen State College, her Master's degree from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and PhD from the University of Washington.[1]
Upon completing her PhD, Hagan accepted a faculty position at New York University (NYU) College of Global Public Health. As a senior research scientist, Hagan and Sherry Deren were appointed co-editors of the Substance Use & Misuse special issue on "The New York HIV-Drug Use Epidemic: Lessons Learned and Unresolved Issues."[2] Throughout her tenure at NYU, she studied epidemiology, prevention, natural history and treatment of hepatitis C virus infection in people who use drugs as co-director of the Center for Drug Use and HIV/HCV Research.[1] In 2018, Hagan was appointed chair of the Executive Steering Committee for the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Rural Opioid Initiative.[3] She was also named to the National Academy of Medicine's Committee on the Examination of the Integration of Opioid and Infectious Disease Prevention Efforts in Select Programs.[4]
During the COVID-19 pandemic in North America, Hagan and Vincent Guilamo-Ramos were the principal investigators of a National Institutes of Health study aimed at providing personalized health care to those in public housing. The funds were used to implement and evaluate a household-centered service-delivery that sent nurses and community health workers door-to-door in public housing to prevent the spread of coronavirus.[5]