Stuart Tedder's Picture

Associate Professor
Epidemiology

Director, Office of Public Health Practice/Community Service
Cone Hall, Suite 1010F
Post Office Box 8015
912.478.1922
stedders@georgiasouthern.edu

Links:
Personal Web Site


 

Biography:

Stuart H. Tedders is an Associate Professor in the Jiann-Ping Hsu College of Public Health at Georgia Southern University. He is a native of Georgia and finished high school in Perry located approximately 125 miles south of Atlanta.

Dr. Tedders attended Georgia Southern College where he majored in Biology. After graduating in 1987, he enrolled at Clemson University and received a Masters degree in Medical Entomology. In 1994, he earned a Ph.D. in Public Health from the University of South Carolina. During his time at USC, Dr. Tedders studied the epidemiology, ecology, and control of vector-borne diseases. Specific areas of research included the surveillance and control of tick populations as vectors of Lyme disease in coastal South Carolina. Additional research experience included assistance with laboratory and field bioassays of vector susceptibility and improved methods of vector control.

From 1994 to 2000, Dr. Tedders was employed as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Community Medicine at Mercer University School of Medicine (MUSM). Duties at MUSM included the management of all aspects of the community based medical curriculum. This curriculum was designed to introduce students to an evidence-based approach to medicine by emphasizing the basic principles of prevention, public health practice, epidemiology, biostatistics, research design, rural medicine, and health care delivery.

After leaving MUSM, Dr. Tedders accepted a position at Georgia Southern University where he currently serves as the Director of the Office of Public Health Practice/Community Service. Dr. Tedders has taught courses in the MPH-Epidemiology program and Dr.P.H. core curriculum. Dr. Tedders' research interests involve many elements of population-based health research, and his experience in this area includes the surveillance of health related outcomes, community health assessments, health planning and evaluation, and rural health. Recent scholarly endeavors have involved epidemiological investigations of cancer and perinatal health outcomes in rural Georgia.

In 1998, he was awarded the Rural Health Researcher of the Year in Georgia by the Georgia Rural Health Association. He is currently the board chair of the Magnolia Coastlands Area Health Education Center and he serves as the secretary for the State Office of Rural Health Advisory Council.

Dr. Tedders also enjoys spending time with his family, reading, racquetball, and outdoor sporting activities.

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Last Modified 01/7/09 rew