Ronald E. Blanton
Professor- School of Public Health & Tropical Medicine
Biography
Dr. Ronald Blanton is a physician-scientist who began his career in studies on the molecular biology of parasitic diseases. He returned to the classroom to obtain a master’s degree in genetic epidemiology. Throughout his career, his work has integrated basic laboratory science with field epidemiology to uncover useful epidemiologic relationships and identities. This includes 30 years of experience in Brazil. For schistosomiasis and the flaviviruses dengue and hepatitis C, he identified human genetic determinants of diseases by microsatellite and SNP markers. He identified new microsatellite markers for the dengue vector Aedes aegypti and the parasite Schistosoma mansoni. Dr. Blanton sees an extraordinary opportunity for placing population genetics at the service of public health by tracing patterns of pathogen and vector distribution, the current dynamics and influences on these patterns and projecting their future directions. By developing new approaches to analyze the geographic distribution and dynamics of populations in the presence of control measures, this allows for another level for evaluation of the impact of the control measures themselves and a better understanding of how these measures might be modified. He comes to Tulane from Case Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine where he has served as a professor of international health in the Center for Global Health and Diseases and an adjunct professor in Population Health and Quantitative Sciences (formerly Epidemiology and Biostatistics). Prior to joining the faculty at Tulane, Dr. Blanton spent 40 years at Case Western Reserve University not only as a professor but also as an advisory board member for PubMed and a special visiting researcher at the Nation Council for Scientific and Technological Development in Brazil. An English and Spanish Literature alumnus of Harvard University, Dr. Blanton later received both his MD and MS from Case Western Reserve University.
Courses
Research
Population Genetics, Community-based Microbial Resistance, Parasitic Diseases, Schistosomiasis
Degrees
- M.S., Case Western Reserve University, Genetic Epidemiology, 2003
- M.D., Case Western Reserve University, Medicine, 1979
- B.A., Harvard University, English, 1974
Academic Experience
- Professor and Chair, Department of Tropical Medicine, Tulane University, 2019-
- Adjunct Professor, Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, 2019-
- Secondary Appointment, Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, 2004-2019
- Adjunct Professor, Department of Biology, Cleveland State University, 1996-2019
- Acting Head of the Division of Geographic Medicine, 1996-1997
Distinctions
- Special Visiting Professor, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico, Brazil, 2014
- Fulbright Scholar, Federal University of Bahia/Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Brazil, 2014
Languages
- Portuguese
- Spanish
Overseas Experience
- Brazil
- Peru
- Côte d'Ivoire
- Senegal
- Kenya
- Egypt