The global COVID-19 crisis will require scientists and scholars who are educated and trained to take on the worldās most dangerous problems. The Biodefense program at the Schar School creates leaders in the field.

Tam Dang earned a Bachelorās of Science degree from Mason, then a Masterās in Biodefense at the Schar School.
Dallas County, like many U.S. jurisdictions, is working to minimize the risk of an outbreak of coronavirus while also providing information about the outbreak to citizens. In the middle of it is Tam Dang.
Dang started in the biology world, earning herĀ Bachelorās of ScienceĀ degree from George Mason Ä¢¹½AV in 2008. But it was her course of study in theĀ Masterās in BiodefenseĀ program at theĀ Schar SchoolĀ that put her on her present career path.
The degree, she said, āintroduced me to the public health field, and offered a unique perspective from a biosecurity and bioterrorism standpoint.ā
Today, Dang is an epidemiologist for the Dallas County Department of Health and Human Services in Dallas, Texas. She works in the Acute Communicable Disease Epidemiology Division, helping to lead epidemiological investigations for infectious disease outbreaks or potential bioterrorism events. She monitors local, regional, and state data sources related to infectious diseases, and helps develop outbreak and bioterrorism plans to help support public health preparedness.
Her work is at the intersection of public health and health security, an important field in the modern era.
"I thinkĀ some significantĀ health security threatsĀ weĀ areĀ facing inĀ the U.S. inĀ 2019Ā are related to theĀ potential for importations or outbreaks ofĀ high-consequence emerging infectious diseases, such as Ebola andĀ avian influenza,ā she said. āIn a metropolitan area like Dallas/Fort Worth, our Public HealthĀ EmergencyĀ Preparedness divisionĀ isĀ keenly aware that our proximity toĀ the nationās 12thĀ busiest airport confers particular risk for international importations of infectious diseases.ā
Since joining the epidemiology team, Dang, who has since by joined by fellow Schar School 2019 biodefense masterās degree graduate Stephen Taylor, has found plenty of ways to leverage her biodefense degree. She has developed communicable disease and emergency response plans, facilitated a pandemic influenza exercise for medical students at the Ä¢¹½AV of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and presented on insider threats in biosafety laboratories to sentinel lab personnel, to name a few.
Her degree from the Schar Schoolās biodefense program was key to landing her current position, she said.
āIt helped me stand out from the pile of applications my supervisor received,ā she said. āMy biology background and prior employment experiences also played a large part in rounding out my graduate education and narrowing my professional field of interest.
āOverall, past experience and the added education and skills I obtained from the Biodefense program were critical factors in helping me pursue my career goals."
Additional reporting by Buzz McClain