Pitt's Healthcare Advisory Group (HCAG) is charged with recommending University-wide health standards and guidelines that are needed to pursue the University's education and research mission to the fullest extent possible under pandemic conditions.  

The group’s role assures that Pitt is drawing on its world-renowned health sciences programs to guide decisions on the health and safety of students, faculty and staff alike.

“This group is composed of experts in health care and medicine, public health, occupational health and safety, infectious diseases and epidemiological modeling, emergency preparedness and the relevant legal regulations and compliance,” said HCAG Chair Anantha Shekhar, Pitt’s senior vice chancellor for the health sciences and John and Gertrude Petersen Dean of the School of Medicine.

“Its work will also be to continuously monitor the health status of the campus and align the University status to be well coordinated in our COVID-19 policies with the status of the city, county, state and beyond.”

Members of the HCAG—several of whom are both researchers and practitioners—bring their own specialized expertise as they develop detailed recommendations that are both sound and workable for the University community. They make recommendations for personal protective equipment and personal hygiene; shared spaces, distancing and density; virus monitoring, testing and tracing; safe mobility; and considerations for vulnerable populations.

Anantha ShekharAnantha Shekhar is an expert in the areas of basic and clinical research on the effects of stress, stress-induced psychiatric and medical conditions, and clinical psychopharmacology. Shekhar’s responsibilities at the University include shaping the careers of more than 6,000 faculty and staff members, as well as the academic success of approximately 5,000 students annually, all while supporting Pitt’s position as a top-ranked recipient of NIH research dollars. He also works closely with UPMC, one of the largest academic medical centers in the nation, to ensure that health care delivery, biomedical research and education continue to flourish.

Supporting Shekhar in his role as chair of the HCAG are Jay FrerotteOscar MarroquinMaggie McDonaldLeeanna McKibbenKimberly MosesAnne NewmanMark RobertsJennifer SengSally WenzelJohn Williams and Donald Yealy.

Jay FrerotteJay Frerotte, assistant vice chancellor for environmental health and safety, is an emergency preparedness expert. He chairs the University’s Environmental Health & Safety Committee; and has played a key role on Pitt’s emergency operations team as the University has navigated its COVID-19 response. Frerotte is not new to pandemic planning. He has been part of Pitt’s past pandemic preparedness working groups, including during the 2006 avian flu outbreak.


 

Oscar Marroquin

Oscar Marroquin is an associate professor of medicine, epidemology, and clinical and translational science and UPMC chief health care data and analytics officer. In this latter role, he leads UPMC’s health care data and analytics activities, overseeing a team of IT infrastructure architects, analysts, statisticians and data scientists focused on applying “big data” approaches to measure and predict clinical outcomes. Also a practicing cardiologist at the UPMC Heart and Vascular Institute, Marroquin has focused his academic career on outcomes research in interventional cardiology and heart disease in women.

Maggie McDonaldHCAG coordinator Maggie McDonald, an expert in health and risk communications, is associate vice chancellor for academic and global affairs, Health Sciences. She has served in a number of capacities across the health sciences since coming to Pitt in 1983, giving her a broad view across multiple disciplines. McDonald also is a faculty member in epidemiology in the Graduate School of Public Health, with a secondary appointment in psychiatry in the School of Medicine.

 

Leeanna McKibben

Leeanna McKibben joined the University of Pittsburgh in 2021 as chief of staff for Anantha Shekhar, senior vice chancellor for the health sciences (SVCHS) and John and Gertrude Petersen Dean, School of Medicine. As a member of the SVCHS senior leadership team and senior-most staff member in the SVCHS office, McKibben works to advance the top priorities of the health sciences. These include internal and external relationships and Pitt’s partnership with UPMC. McKibben served for 23 years at UPMC, most recently as the vice president of patient care services and chief nursing officer at UPMC Mercy.

Kimberly MosesKimberly Moses, the group’s legal counsel, is a health care attorney in the Office of University Counsel and expert in the health regulations affecting Pitt’s operations. She previously worked with UPMC’s corporate and hospital division, acting as legal counsel for several of the area’s hospitals. There, she led efforts that resulted in an international pediatric telemedicine center, the development and expansion of Children’s Express Care centers throughout the Pittsburgh area, and the development of clinical partnerships throughout the U.S.
 

Anne NewmanAnne Newman brings a deep understanding of epidemiological methods to the group and has been advising University officials on planning prior to the group’s formation. Newman is the Katherine M. Detre Professor of Population Health Sciences in the Graduate School of Public Health and an MD. Newman is Distinguished Professor and chair of Epidemiology and professor of medicine, as well as of clinical and translational science, and has been studying the aging process for decades. 

 

Mark RobertysMark Roberts, whose disease modeling efforts have been relied on by state policymakers, is a practicing physician as well as an expert in computational modeling with three decades of experience. As director of the Public Health Dynamics Laboratory, Roberts leads Pitt experts in developing simulation tools for complex diseases as well as the effects of policy on public health.

 

 

Jennifer Seng

Jennifer Seng is assistant vice chancellor and deputy chief legal officer. She has been a lawyer for the University of Pittsburgh since March 2015. Prior to coming to the University, Seng worked as senior counsel for LANXESS Corporation, as an intellectual property attorney for Bayer Corporation and as a patent attorney for Kilpatrick Stockton.

 


 

Sally WenzelSally Wenzel is a pulmonologist and environmental health expert with special expertise in asthma research. She is board certified in internal and pulmonary medicine. Wenzel studies the effects of environmental factors on lung health, bringing valuable expertise to the team that is studying COVID-19. She directs the University of Pittsburgh Asthma and Environmental Lung Health Institute, and is the chair of environmental and occupational health, and Rachel Carson Chair of Environmental Health in the Graduate School of Public Health.
 

John WilliamsJohn Williams, an international authority on the epidemiology, immunity and pathogenesis of respiratory viruses, holds the Henry L. Hillman Chair in Pediatric Immunology and is a professor of pediatrics. He has been following the COVID-19 pandemic as director of the Institute for Infection, Inflammation and Immunity in Children (i4Kids). Williams also oversees a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded pediatric virus surveillance network with Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh—one of seven national sites that seeks to determine the effectiveness of flu vaccines and describes the epidemiology of respiratory infections, including COVID-19, among children hospitalized or evaluated in the emergency department. Additionally, Williams directs Pitt's COVID-19 Medical Response Office.
 

Donald Yealy

Donald Yealy is senior vice president and chief medical officer UPMC and chair, Department of Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine. Yealy supports UPMC hospitals’ vice presidents of medical affairs, as well as the growing medical staffs of UPMC’s hospitals across Pennsylvania, Maryland and New York. He supervises the advanced practice providers and oversees physician wellness initiatives. He also assists in the growth of UPMC’s specialty centers while integrating medical services throughout UPMC’s network and ambulatory sites. As chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine, Yealy has focused most of his research on clinical decision making and the early care of many life-threatening conditions, including community-acquired pneumonia, sepsis, acute heart failure and respiratory failure.