Our Narratives
September 1, 2022
![Kameron Sheats standing by the wall sign at Johnson C. Smith University](/hbcu/images/our-narratives/Kameron-Sheats_JCSU_456x294.png?_=22113)
In her freshman year at Mt. Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts, Kameron Sheats was thriving. She was making good grades and adjusting to being one a few young Black women in a predominately White academic environment —just as she always had. But as she thought about the future, she realized that the time to experience the world in the context of a nurturing, Black academic setting would not come again. So she made a plan: She would apply to an HBCU in the South.
Kameron, a behavioral scientist in NCIPC’s Division of Violence Prevention, boarded a Greyhound bus to Charlotte, North Carolina, to visit Johnson C. Smith University (JCSU). She didn’t know anyone, and she hadn’t booked a hotel room, so she planned to meet with the admissions team and get back on a bus headed back to South Hadley. That plan went awry—in the best possible way.
August 11, 2022
![Melinda Jordan with a background of green trees](/hbcu/images/our-narratives/Melinda-Jordan-green_456x294.png?_=22115)
Melinda Jordan, CPH, began her decades-long public health career as a way to make ends meet. A recent college graduate with a newly purchased car, Jordan simply needed a stable income to make that car note. To that end, she was hired by CDC in 1991 and started working as a disease intervention specialist (DIS) in Lauderhill, FL.
While her short-term goal of paying the bills was met, the longer-term trajectory of her life was changed as Jordan fell in love with public health and helping people stay safe and healthy. She is now the deputy director of the Division of Adolescent and School Health (DASH) within the National Center for HIV, Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (NCHHSTP).
June 16, 2022
![Dr. Leonard Jack](/hbcu/images/spotlights/Dr-Leonard-Jack_457x477.png?_=19718)
The Director of CDC’s National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (NCCDPHP), Dr. Karen Hacker, announced on June 13, 2022, that Leonard Jack, Jr., PhD, MSc, was awarded the 2022 Jeffrey P. Koplan Award. This award is the highest honor that NCCDPHP bestows on one of its employees. Jeffrey P. Koplan, MD, MPH, is a distinguished leader in public health, disease prevention, and health promotion whose career has spanned four decades, including 26 years at CDC. Dr. Koplan served as Assistant Surgeon General and the first Director of NCCDPHP before serving as CDC Director from 1998 to 2002. He worked on many major public health issues, including infectious diseases, environmental health issues, tobacco, and chronic diseases around the globe, with more than 230 papers to his credit.