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Cameron Knowles
Senior Vice President and Chief Medical Officer, DUHS and Chief Quality Officer, Duke Health
Richard P. Shannon, MD

Richard P. Shannon, MD serves as the Senior Vice President and Chief Medical Officer for Duke University Health System. In this role, Shannon works in partnership with our Nurse, Physician and Administrator triads to oversee governance, strategy and operational outcomes for our comprehensive centers of excellence, including Neurosciences, Heart, Oncology and Musculoskeletal.

As Chief Quality Officer for Duke Health, Shannon is responsible for the overall direction, leadership and operational management of the quality and safety programs of Duke Health, and provides leadership in strengthening a quality culture where everyone is engaged and respected.

Shannon received his BA from Princeton University and his MD from the University of Connecticut School of Medicine. He completed his training in internal medicine at Beth Israel Hospital, his cardiovascular training at Massachusetts General Hospital, and was the Francis Weld Peabody Fellow and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School before becoming the Claude R. Joyner Professor of Medicine at Drexel University College of Medicine.

Prior to joining Duke Health, he served as executive vice president for health affairs at the University of Virginia, where he worked with faculty and staff to transform the UVA Health System into the premier health care provider in Virginia. Shannon has also served as the Frank Wister Thomas Professor and Chair of the Department of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, and as Chair of the Department of Medicine at Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh. Shannon has received numerous teaching awards from Harvard Medical School, Drexel University College of Medicine and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

Shannon’s investigative interests are in the areas of myocardial metabolism and heart failure, specifically the role of energetics in the progression of heart failure. Shannon’s lab was the first to discover the beneficial CV actions of incretins which formed the basis for Ventrigen, LLC, a company designed to develop incretins for the use in treating heart failure.

Shannon's pioneering work in patient safety is chronicled in the chapter “First, Do No Harm” in Charles Kenney’s The Best Practice - How the New Quality Movement is Transforming Medicine. His innovative work also has been featured in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, on CNN and CNBC news segments, and on ABC's "20/20", and was a centerpiece for the PBS report entitled "Remaking American Medicine." 

Shannon is an elected member of honorary organizations, including the American Society for Clinical Investigation, and served as a senior fellow of the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics at the University of Pennsylvania. He currently is a teaching fellow for the Institute of Healthcare Improvement. He is a Director of the National Institutes of Health, Clinical Center Research Hospital Board; and a member of the Boards of Directors of the Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc., where he chairs the Quality Health Improvement Committee.

Vice President, Government Relations
Catherine Liao

Catherine Liao, MSPH is the vice president for Government Relations for Duke Health. She is responsible for leading and overseeing a comprehensive federal and state government relations program that aims to strengthen Duke Health’s identity and reputation on biomedical research, education, training and service.

Prior to joining Duke, she worked on Capitol Hill for six years managing health, education, labor and housing appropriations issues for a senior member of Congress. She also worked at the North Carolina Institute of Medicine reviewing federal health reform legislation and making recommendations for implementation at the state level. She also completed an administrative fellowship and served in the office of the chief of staff at the Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

Liao was selected to participate in Leadership North Carolina Class XXVI, which aims to inform, develop and engage committed leaders across the Tar Heel State. She is also one of 18 fellows in the Class of 2019 of the Carol Emmott Fellowship, a national program that develops and empowers female leaders to leave a mark on health care.

Liao holds a bachelor of arts in political science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a master of science in public health from the Gillings School of Global Public Health.

Dean, Duke University School of Nursing; Vice Chancellor for Nursing Affairs, Duke University; Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs for Nursing, DUHS
Marion Broome, PhD, RN, FAAN

Marion E. Broome, PhD, RN, FAAN, is dean and Ruby Wilson Professor of Nursing at the Duke University School of Nursing, Vice Chancellor for Nursing Affairs at Duke University, and Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs for Nursing at Duke University Health System. Prior to joining Duke, Broome was dean of the Indiana University School of Nursing, where she was awarded the rank of Distinguished Professor.

Widely regarded as an expert, scholar and leader in pediatric nursing research and practice, Broome has been funded externally by the American Cancer Society and the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as well as private foundations for more than 15 years to conduct research in which she developed and tested interventions designed to assist children to cope with acute and chronic pain. In 2000, Broome extended her research into the area of research ethics related to informed consent and assent for children in research, research misconduct in clinical trials and, most recently, ethical dilemmas in publishing. Her research is published in more than 100 papers in 50 refereed nursing, medicine and interdisciplinary journals. She also has published five books and 15 chapters in books and consumer publications.

Broome served a four-year term as an appointed member of the Nursing Science Study Section at the NIH, from 2008 to 2012. Prior to that time she served as a permanent member of Study Section in the Center for Scientific Review at NIH. Broome also has served as president of the Society for Pediatric Nurses and has been on the boards of the Association for the Care of Children's Health and the Midwest Nursing Research Society. Currently, Broome is editor-in-chief of Nursing Outlook, the official journal of the American Academy of Nursing (AAN) and the Council for the Advancement of Nursing Science. Broome has been a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing since 1994. She was inducted into the Sigma Theta Tau International Researcher Hall of Fame in 2010. Selected honors include Outstanding Alumnus for Georgia Health Sciences University and the University of South Carolina. In 2012, she was selected to receive the National League of Nursing Award for Outstanding Leadership in Nursing Education. In 2014, she was awarded the President’s Medal for Excellence at Indiana University.

Broome currently consults with a variety of schools of nursing and Magnet-designated hospitals related to evidence-based practice programs, research implementation and professional development programs for nurses and faculty. In June 2014, the Friends of the National Institute of Nursing Research (FNINR) named Broome as one of 12 nursing leaders nationwide for the inaugural FNINR Ambassadors for Scientific Advancement Program.

Broome earned her BSN degree from the Medical College of Georgia, her MSN from the University of South Carolina and her PhD from the University of Georgia.

Senior Vice President and Chief Digital Officer
Jeffrey Ferranti, MD, MS

Jeffrey Ferranti, MD, MS, is the Senior Vice President and Chief Digital Officer.

Ferranti is responsible for leading a team charged with the visioning, strategic planning, and effective adoption of integrated technology and information solutions that enable high-quality clinical care, research and education. He also serves as an informatics thought leader, both internal and external to Duke, and, in partnership with our wider medical community, develops an overarching informatics strategy in support of the Duke Health mission.

As the leader of Duke's enterprise-wide Epic installation, he was responsible for deploying a single, seamless electronic health record across three hospitals and over 300 ambulatory clinics. Ferranti is passionate about leveraging advanced analytics to improve population health, implementing novel technologies to better partner with patients and promoting IT innovation to support new and emerging care models.

An active informatics researcher, Ferranti was the Duke principal investigator on two Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)-funded research projects. The first aimed at developing a model pediatric electronic health record format, and the second evaluating the use of technology to detect and prevent adverse drug events across Duke University Health System. In addition, he ran an innovations project exploring the novel use of iPad and tablet technology in the pediatric critical care. He developed several innovative applications including the Duke Enterprise Data Unified Content Explorer (DEDUCE) and the Duke Integrated Subject Cohort Enrollment Research Network (DISCERN). Both of these projects aim to empower investigators with simple yet secure access to our enterprise data stores.

Ferranti holds a master’s degree in Biomedical Engineering and Medical Informatics from the Duke Pratt School of Engineering. He is a Six Sigma Master Black Belt and is actively involved in numerous patient safety and quality improvement projects across the health system. He is also a practicing neonatologist at Duke University Hospital.

President, Duke Raleigh Hospital, a Campus of Duke University Hospital
Barbara Griffith, MD

Barbara Griffith, MD, began her tenure as President of Duke Raleigh Hospital, a Campus of Duke University Hospital in October 2021. Prior to joining Duke Raleigh, Griffith served as President and CEO of Woman’s Hospital in Baton Rouge, La.

Griffith’s healthcare experience includes 20 years of clinical practice and more than 15 years in a variety of leadership roles that have spanned hospital leadership, operations, physician practice management, clinical affairs and board governance.

Griffith served as chief medical officer for Duke Regional Hospital in Durham, N.C., for seven years. In her role, she led business development and strategy for clinical programs while focusing on excellence in patient care quality and safety.

Earlier in her career, Griffith served as president and CFO of Durham Emergency Physicians, the medical practice that staffed Duke Regional Hospital’s Emergency Department. As an active leader within Duke Regional’s medical staff of more than 1,000 providers, she served as medical staff president. Her emergency medicine background brings a broad understanding of all aspects of healthcare, particularly the needs of patients and families in today’s healthcare environment.

Board Certified in emergency medicine, Griffith obtained her medical degree at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She trained in emergency medicine at Christiana Care in Newark, Del. Her business training includes healthcare executive education at the Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania. She is a member of the American College of Emergency Physicians and American College of Healthcare Executives.

Vice Chancellor, Duke-NUS and Director, Duke Global Health Institute
Michael H. Merson, MD

Michael H. Merson, M.D., is founding director of Duke Global Health Institute and the Wolfgang Joklik Professor of Global Health at Duke University. He joined the Duke faculty in November 2006. Merson was named Vice Chancellor for Duke-National University of Singapore (NUS) Affairs in March 2010. Most recently, Merson was named the Vice President and Vice Provost of Global Affairs at Duke University in June 2011.

Merson graduated from Amherst College (BA) and the State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center. After serving as a medical intern and resident at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, he worked in the Enteric Diseases Branch at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, GA and then served as the Chief Epidemiologist at the Cholera Research Laboratory in Dhaka, Bangladesh. His research focused on the etiology and epidemiology of acute diarrheal diseases, including cholera, in developing countries and on the cause of travelers’ diarrhea in persons visiting these countries.

In 1978, he joined the World Health Organization (WHO) as a Medical Officer in the Diarrheal Diseases Control Program. He served as director of that program from January 1980 until May 1990. In August 1987, he was also appointed Director of the WHO Acute Respiratory Infections Control Program. In May 1990, he was appointed as Director of the WHO Global Program on AIDS. This program was operational worldwide and responsible for mobilizing and coordinating the global response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic.

In April 1995, he joined Yale University School of Medicine as its first Dean of Public Health and as Professor and Chairman of the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, positions he held until December 2004. In 2001, he was named as the Anna M. R. Lauder Professor of Public Health in the Yale University School of Medicine. From 1999 to 2006, he also served as Director of the Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS at Yale University, which undertakes research on HIV prevention in vulnerable and underserved populations in this country and abroad. He also led a number of training programs that strengthened the capacity of scientists in Russia, China, India and South Africa to undertake HIV/AIDS prevention research.

Merson has authored more than 175 articles, primarily in the area of disease prevention. His most recent contributions concern HIV policy and prevention in developing countries and broader global health issues. He is the senior editor of Global Health: Disease, Programs, Systems, and Policies, which is a leading global health textbook in the United States.

He has served in advisory capacities for UNAIDS, WHO, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, World Bank, Doris Duke Foundation, World Economic Forum, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and on several NIH review panels and advisory committees. He is a member of the Commission for Smart Global Health Policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Merson has received two Commendation Medals from the U.S. Public Health Service, the Arthur S. Flemming Award for distinguished government service, the Surgeon General’s Exemplary Service Medal and two honorary degrees and is an elected member of the Institute of Medicine in the National Academy of Sciences.

Deputy General Counsel for Health Affairs
Christy M. Gudaitis, JD

Christy M. Gudaitis, JD, serves as Deputy General Counsel for Health Affairs for Duke University and Health System Counsel for Duke University Health System. She has practiced health care law for more than 35 years and has been a member of the Office of Counsel for Duke University and Duke University Health System since 1999. Gudaitis joined Duke as Duke Health expanded to include Duke Regional Hospital and Duke Raleigh Hospital, and she has provided legal counsel in the transactions and financings that have expanded the reach and breadth of Duke Health on its Durham campus and beyond since that time. Gudaitis’ legal expertise includes health care regulations, corporate governance, contracts, acquisition and affiliation transactions, compliance and financing. 

Prior to joining Duke, Gudaitis worked in the legal department of Atrium (formerly Carolinas HealthCare System), which operates a multi-hospital system that includes Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, NC. Before joining Atrium, Gudaitis was a partner in the law firm of Smith Helms Mulliss & Moore (now McGuire Woods) and specialized in health care, business transactions and corporate law.

Gudaitis has served on boards of numerous non-profit corporations and bar committees. Gudaitis currently serves on the Eno River Association Board of Directors and as its Secretary. She is a Deacon at First Presbyterian Church in Durham, serving on the Personnel Committee. Gudaitis served for almost 20 years as an exam preparer and grader for the North Carolina Board of Law Examiners. She has also served on the Board and as Chair of the Health Law Section of the North Carolina Bar Association.

Originally from Louisville, Kentucky, Gudaitis earned her law degree and undergraduate degree (Public Policy Studies with a Healthcare concentration and History) from Duke University. She is married to Jim Gudaitis and has two grown children.

Vice President of Compliance and Administration, Duke University Health System
Colleen Shannon

Colleen Shannon is the Vice President of Compliance and Administration at Duke University Health System (DUHS). She is responsible for implementing and overseeing the Health System’s compliance and privacy programs and facilitating the DUHS enterprise risk management process. Shannon also coordinates activities with the Duke Health Integrated Practice (DHIP) and School of Medicine leadership to advance our collaboration and prioritize services. Shannon reports to the DUHS Compliance/Audit Committee of the Board of Directors and Health Affairs Chancellor and DUHS President and CEO. Shannon co-chairs the DUHS Privacy and Security Steering Committee and administers various facilities’ compliance committees. 

Shannon joined DUHS in July 2007 and has 26 years of health care regulatory experience. Prior to joining DUHS, Shannon was the Chief Compliance and Privacy Officer for OhioHealth, an integrated multi-hospital health system in Columbus, Ohio. Shannon served as a Regulatory and Licensing Attorney for Cole Managed Vision, a 50 state vision benefit administrator, developing its privacy program at the inception of HIPAA privacy regulations. She also served in multiple positions within The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, including staff counsel, Chief Operating Officer of Lakewood Hospital and Chief Integration Officer, Western Region, Cleveland Clinic. 

Shannon is a graduate of the University of Virginia Law School. Shannon served as Chair of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Compliance Officers’ Forum (COF) and established the AAMC COF, Privacy Committee. Shannon serves as a member of American Association Hospital, Chief Compliance Officer Forum and is a member of the American Health Lawyers Association and Association of American Medical Colleges Compliance Officers’ Forum.

Senior Vice President and Chief Marketing and Communications Officer (CMCO)
Trudy Sullivan Stoudamire, MBA

Trudy Sullivan Stoudamire is the Senior Vice President and Chief Marketing and Communications Officer at Duke University Health System. In her role, Sullivan Stoudamire leads an integrated marketing and communications strategy, focusing on reputation management, brand-enhancement, digital innovation, and stakeholder engagement. She plays a critical role in aligning DUHS’s strategic priorities with innovative marketing approaches, ensuring that our message reaches patients, providers, team members, and the broader community.

Prior to this role, Sullivan Stoudamire held executive leadership roles at Health Catalyst, Raytheon, Micron Technology, and the American Red Cross, demonstrating her ability to build high-performing teams, execute strategic marketing initiatives, and elevate organizational presence in competitive landscapes. With an impressive background spanning healthcare, technology, and defense industries, Trudy has a proven track record of enhancing brand equity, leading transformative communication strategies, and driving measurable business growth.

Sullivan Stoudamire earned her Bachelor of Arts from the University of Portland and her Master of Business Administration from Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Northwestern University. She is very active in her community, serving on a number of boards focused on advancing education, healthcare and inclusion.

Sr. Director of Clinical Communications for DUHS
Darcel Walker, MA, APR

Darcel F. Walker is a seasoned marketing and communications professional with a proven track record in strategic leadership and cross-functional communication. With extensive experience in healthcare marketing, Darcel has led initiatives that enhance brand visibility, optimize media strategies, and drive organizational growth.

In previous roles at CaroMont Health, Darcel managed multimillion-dollar budgets, led brand campaigns, and executed integrated marketing strategies. Her experience includes oversight of digital platforms, corporate communications, and media production, with a strong focus on maximizing brand impact and supporting organizational priorities. Additionally, Darcel has contributed to academic institutions as an adjunct instructor and held leadership roles in community service organizations, including the Junior League of Gaston County and Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Incorporated.

Darcel holds a Master of Arts in Communication Studies from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and a Bachelor of Science in Mass Communication from the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. She is Accredited in Public Relations (APR) by the Public Relations Society of America. In her free time, Darcel enjoys traveling and is learning to play golf.


 

Media Relations
Matt Talhelm
Interim Chief Medical Officer, Duke Regional Hospital
Brian Burrows, MD

Dr. Brian Burrows, MD, is the interim Chief Medical Officer for Duke Regional Hospital. He was appointed to this role in November, 2024.

Dr. Burrows has spent the past 14 years with Duke University Health System, most recently serving as the ED Medical Director and Chair for Duke Regional Hospital, since 2019. 

Dr. Burrows is known for his exceptional leadership, and for developing key continuous improvement initiatives. He has spearheaded numerous patient flow processes in the Emergency Department (ED), and during the COVID-19 pandemic he co-led the development and operational structure of the new Behavioral Health ED adjacent to the hospital. 

Dr. Burrows earned his medical degree from East Carolina University in 2010, and completed his residency at Duke University Medical Center in 2013.

Chief Strategy Officer
Morgan Jones, MSPH, FACHE

Morgan Jones, MSPH, FACHE is the Chief Strategy Officer at Duke University Health System. In her role, she is responsible for leading clinical enterprise strategic planning, business development and growth, strategic intelligence, project management, and consumer insights.

Jones has focused her career on expanding access to high quality healthcare. In her prior work she crafted legislation to create a High-Risk Insurance Pool for the state of North Carolina which provided insurance to uninsured and underinsured North Carolinians; at the Department of Veterans Affairs she led creation of a Regional Crisis Call Center, was instrumental in establishing the Office of Rural Health, and also served as a key strategic and administrative leader in VA hospitals. Over the past decade she has provided strategic leadership and guidance to Duke, through development of an Ambulatory Network and partnerships which resulted in servicing new geographies and a doubling of patients across broader geographies.

Jones also serves on the Academy Chief Strategy Officer Forum, as past President Elect with the Southeast Society for Healthcare Strategy and Market Development, as a Fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives, and Fellow and Board Member of the Carol Emmott Foundation. She has been recognized as a Triangle Business Journal “40 Under 40”, Modern Healthcare “Emerging Leader”, North Carolina State Impact award winner, Bernstein Scholar, and Carol Emmott awardee.

Jones holds a Master of Science in Public Health in Hospital Administration and Health Policy from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Senior Vice President, Ambulatory Services and Physician Practices, DUHS; President of Duke Health Integrated Practice (DHIP); and Vice Dean for Clinical Affairs in the Duke School of Medicine
Matthew Barber, MD, MHS, MSOD

Matthew Barber, MD, MHS, MSOD is the Senior Vice President for Ambulatory Services and Physician Practices of DUHS, President of Duke Health Integrated Practice (DHIP), and Vice Dean for Clinical Affairs in the Duke School of Medicine. Barber oversees the ambulatory enterprise and physician practices across DHIP, Duke Primary Care, hospital-based clinics, and Duke’s Population Health Management Organization, with responsibility for systemwide ambulatory strategy and operations, integrated governance, and aligned practice standards. Across these entities, Duke Health’s ambulatory platform includes more than 3,000 clinicians and 18 clinical departments practicing in DUHS hospitals and more than 250 primary and specialty clinics across North Carolina.

Barber was the W. Allen Addison Distinguished Professor and the Chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Duke University Medical Center from 2017-2025. From 2018-2022, he also served as the Chief of the Medical Staff of Duke University Hospital. Known for his dedication to connecting faculty and staff to mission, Barber recently served as an executive sponsor of Duke Health’s culture transformation work to become “Better Together,” and spearheads change through action in his daily interactions.

Barber earned his medical degree from Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, a master’s degree in Health Science in Clinical Research from Duke University School of Medicine, and a master’s degree in Positive Organizational Development and Change from Case Weatherhead School of Management. Barber completed his residency training in obstetrics and gynecology and a fellowship in urogynecology and pelvic reconstructive surgery at Duke University. Before rejoining Duke, Barber spent 16 years at the Cleveland Clinic in various leadership roles.

Barber's clinical practice encompasses the full spectrum of diagnosis, prevention and medical, behavioral, and surgical treatments for women with pelvic floor disorders (PFDs). His research focuses on conducting randomized clinical trials for the treatment of gynecologic conditions, particularly surgical trials for PFDs. He is an internationally recognized expert in developing, validating, and assessing research outcomes in PFDs, particularly health-related quality of life and patient-reported outcomes. Barber has served on the Board of Directors of the American Urogynecologic Society from 2008-2013 and as its President from 2011-2012. He is a Director of the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology (2021-2024; 2025- 2028) and the co-editor of the 5th and 6th editions of Walter & Karram Urogynecology and Reconstructive Pelvic Surgery.

Vice President of Duke Health Development and Alumni Affairs
Stacy L. Waters, MBA

Stacy L. Waters, MBA is the vice president of Duke Health Development and Alumni Affairs, leading the philanthropic, engagement, and strategic advancement programs across Duke University School of Medicine, Duke University Health System, and key connected centers, institutes, and initiatives. She also serves as an advisor to support university leadership as it relates to philanthropy in healthcare, education, and research, including the Duke University School of Nursing.

With her years of experience in academic medicine, complex health systems and organizational consulting, Waters expertise is focused in the areas of building and leading best in class teams; executing campaigns; securing transformational gifts; designing grateful patient programs; and enhancing the alumni and volunteer experience.

Waters joined Duke in November 2024 from Roper St. Francis Healthcare in Charleston, South Carolina, where she served as the inaugural president of the Roper St. Francis Foundation and vice president of Roper St. Francis Healthcare. In this role, she created the health system’s first strategic plan and campaign strategy for philanthropy, significantly increasing fundraising and securing the largest gift in the institution’s history.

Prior to her tenure at Roper St. Francis Healthcare, Waters held senior leadership positions as the first Associate Vice President of Development for the Dell Medical School and UT Health at The University of Texas at Austin and as Associate Vice President of Development at UChicago Medicine and the Pritzker School of Medicine at the University of Chicago. In these roles, she demonstrated her ability to build and scale comprehensive development programs; cultivate alumni, donor, and patient relationships; and lead successful fundraising campaigns.

Waters reports to Duke University Health System CEO Craig Albanese, MD, MBA and Duke University Executive Vice President for Health Affairs and School of Medicine Dean Mary E. Klotman, MD.

She attended the University of Chicago and received her MBA from the Booth School of Business.

Director, Duke Global Health Institute and Professor of Medicine, Duke University
Chris Beyrer, MD, MPH

Chris Beyrer, MD, MPH, an internationally recognized epidemiologist who has worked on the front lines of HIV/AIDS and COVID-19 treatment and research, is the director of the Duke Global Health Institute.

Beyrer, who has worked on COVID-19 vaccine trials since 2020, currently serves as senior scientific liaison to the COVID-19 Vaccine Prevention Network. He is past president of the International AIDS Society, the world’s largest body of HIV professionals and has served as advisor to the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the HIV Vaccine Trials Network, the National Institutes of Health’s Office of AIDS Research, the U.S. Military HIV Research Program, the World Bank, the World Health Organization, and the Open Society Foundations, among numerous other organizations. The author of “War in the Blood: Sex, Politics and AIDS in Southeast Asia,” he has conducted collaborative research in Thailand for 30 years.

Before coming to Duke, Beyrer was the inaugural Desmond M. Tutu Professor of Public Health and Human Rights at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, where he also was a professor of epidemiology, international health, nursing and medicine. At Johns Hopkins, he directed the T32 Training Program in HIV Epidemiology and Prevention Science and served as associate director of the JHU Center for AIDS Research and the Center for Global Health. He was the founding director of the Center for Public Health and Human Rights.

Beyrer received his medical degree from SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University and holds a Master of Public Health from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He was elected to the National Academy of Medicine in 2014 and serves on the Academy’s Board for Global Health, and on the Committee for Human Rights.

Assistant Vice President, Community Hospitals HR
Megan Haymaker, MHA

Megan Haymaker was named Assistant Vice President, Community Hospitals HR, Duke University Health System, in October 2025. Before that she served as the Chief Human Resources Officer for Duke Raleigh Hospital, a Campus of Duke University Hospital, and Interim Chief Human Resources Officer for the Duke University Health System Clinical Labs group.

Haymaker brings more than 18 years of healthcare experience to the team, with a strong background in healthcare, having previously served in a variety of HR leadership roles with Indiana University (IU) Health for over 15 years.

Haymaker is a tremendous asset to Duke Health and has participated in a number of key strategic HR initiatives to continue enhancing the value HR brings. She is a compassionate people-first leader who always seeks to understand the needs of our team members and holds a deep appreciation for the care they provide.

Chief Medical Officer, Duke Raleigh Hospital, a Campus of Duke University Hospital
Ted Boyse, MD

Dr. Ted Boyse, MD, is the Chief Medical Officer for Duke Raleigh Hospital, a Campus of Duke University Hospital. He was appointed as chief in July, 2022. Prior to this, Dr. Boyse served as Associate Chief Medical Officer for one year.

Over the past 18 years, Dr. Boyse has made important and varied contributions to Duke Health System. He has held multiple leadership roles at Duke Raleigh Hospital, including eleven years as part of the hospital’s medical executive committee, holding the roles of department chair, president elect, and president.

Dr. Boyse is known and recognized for his commitment to valuing and developing people while creating effective care environments through process improvements. He brings unique insight into how Duke Raleigh can best grow and support its medical staff, expand services, and further Duke Health’s commitment to delivering the best patient care.

Dr. Boyse earned his medical degree from Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, completed his Radiology Residency at the University of Michigan and his Musculoskeletal Radiology Fellowship at the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology in St. Louis.

Chief Employee Experience Officer and Vice President, DUHS
Ian Lee Brown

Ian Lee Brown is the Vice-President and Chief Employee Experience Officer at Duke University Health System.

In his role, Brown leads the organization’s belonging and well-being initiatives. He ensures these elements are embedded within the system’s culture, so team members can thrive and deliver exceptional care to our all patients that come to us for hope, health and healing.

Prior to this role, Brown served in various senior-level roles in national healthcare, senior living and educational organizations, leading culture, diversity, talent, community outreach and operations. In these roles he had responsibility for leading over 1,200 employees and managing budgets in excess of $200 million.

Brown has served as a board member for numerous charitable organizations whose missions have included higher education, advocacy for the older adult population, including LGBTQ+ elders, youth, healthcare, affordable housing and hunger.

Brown completed undergraduate studies at Brooklyn College in New York City. He earned a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies at Chicago’s Lake Forest College and both a Master of Science in Applied Behavioral Science/Organizational Development and Graduate Certificate in Senior Housing and Healthcare from the Johns Hopkins University Carey Business School in Baltimore. At Hopkins, he also spent a year in the Mid-Atlantic Health Leadership Institute at the Bloomberg School of Public Health.