Dr. Steven J. Hausman
Steven J. Hausman, Ph.D. is
President of
Hausman Technology Consulting. He is also
Professional Member of the National Speakers Association,
Federation Member of the Global Speakers Federation,
Expert Panel Member at TechCast,
Planetary Community Vanguard at
Planetary Resources,
Technical Preview Program Member at
TechSmith Corporation, Member of the Board of Ethics at
Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, At-Large Board Member at
KHL Community Choir, and Guest Lecturer at
University of Maryland Baltimore County.
Following a 31 year career as a researcher, administrator, and senior
executive at the world-renowned National Institutes of Health (NIH) in
Bethesda, Maryland, Steve established Hausman Technology
Consulting.
After graduating from the 219th class of Central High School in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the city’s premier academic high school, Dr.
Hausman matriculated at the University of Pennsylvania and graduated
with an B.A. He received both his M.S. (in insect physiology) and his
Ph.D. (in the field of immunogenetics and transplantation biology)
degrees from the same institution. After completing a postdoctoral
fellowship at the Institute for Cancer Research in Philadelphia he
joined the research program of NIH’s National Institute on
Aging.
After
several years he became Special Assistant to the Associate Director for
Arthritis, Bone and Skin Diseases of the then-named National Institute
of Arthritis, Metabolism, and Digestive Diseases. He subsequently became
Director of the Arthritis Centers program in the same Institute and was
appointed Deputy Director of the Division of Arthritis and
Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. When the National Institute of
Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS) was established
in 1986 he became Deputy Director of the Extramural Program. Several
years later he was appointed Deputy Director of the Institute. He
concurrently directed the Extramural Program for seven years during this
time.
His many awards include the NIH Director’s Award (NIH’s highest award),
the Public Health Service Exceptional Achievement Award recognizing his
activities as Chair of the PHS Advisory Committee for Employment of
Persons with Disabilities, the NIH Equal Employment Opportunity Award,
an award from the Lupus Foundation of America in recognition of his
support for lupus research and the Outstanding Ethics Program Award from
the Office of Government Ethics for the quality of his stewardship of
the NIAMS Ethics Program. He is cited in American Men and Women of
Science, Who’s Who in America, Who’s Who in Science and
Engineering,
Who’s Who in Medicine and Healthcare, and is a member of
Guidepoint
Global Advisors and a Council Member of the Gerson Lehrman Group at the
Educator level.
In 1992, because of his expertise in genetic disorders, Steve was
chosen to be a member of the scientific panel that debated the
possibility of extracting DNA from President Abraham Lincoln’s remains
to determine whether he had Marfan Syndrome.
Based on his strong background in information technology, Steve was
asked to manage the NIH effort to convert all incoming paper
applications (at a level of approximately 80,000 per year) to electronic
format via an enterprise-wide scanning effort. His accomplishments were
profiled in a cover article in Integrated Solutions magazine. Following
the success of this project he assumed the role of NIH Advocate
for Advanced Technologies, organized the NIH Advanced Technologies
Scientific Interest Group and was a member of the trans-NIH
Nanotechnology Task Force.
He has been active in the field of conflict of interest ethics
and compliance for many years and in 2002 co-organized and chaired a
national NIH conference on Institutional Conflict of Interest. He led
the trans-NIH committee to develop an enterprise-wide Ethics Data System
enabling all ethics activities to be conducted online in a paperless
fashion. While at the NIH he was a Sponsoring Partner member
representative of the national Ethics and Compliance Officer
Association.
In September 2003, Steve was appointed to membership on the NIH
Diversity Council and was elected Chair the following year. He has a
special interest in advocating for individuals with disabilities and in
technological accommodations to disabilities.
His professional affiliations include the: American Association for the
Advancement of Science, American Association of Immunologists, American
Chemical Society, American Society for Cell Biology, Transplantation
Society, Society for In Vitro Biology, National Speakers Association,
and
the Global Speakers Federation.
After his retirement from federal service in January 2007 he established
Hausman Technology Consulting and accepted an appointment to the Board
of Ethics of the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, the 8th
largest water and wastewater utility in the nation and the number one
local government user of renewable energy in the United States. In
March, 2012 he completed a two-year term as Chair of the Board. He has
been a lecturer and consultant for the National Institute of Arthritis
and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, the National Institute of
Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration, and the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology.
Steve is a member of the the Audit Committee of the Foundation for
Advanced Education in the Sciences and an advisor and consultant to the:
Bank of America, Lowe’s Companies, Inc., Washington Post, Lenox Tools,
Potomac Electric Power Company, Harris Interactive, TechSmith, T. Rowe
Price, and HighTable. He was a member of the Health Sector Advisory
Board
of the National Interest Security Company. Steve was accepted as
a member of the Expert Panel of TechCast, an organization devoted to
forecasting technology for strategic planning purposes and has been
designated a Community Vanguard by Planetary Resources, Inc., a company
that has its goal mining the asteroids in nearby outer
space.
He is a skilled presenter with the ability to explain complex concepts
and technologies to both lay and professional audiences. When he is not
lecturing or conducting his ethics practice Steve enjoys opera and
musical theater, cooks enthusiastically, swims, lifts weights, sings
baritone in a community choir, and is a volunteer reader for the
Washington Ear (which provides free services for blind, visually
impaired, and physically disabled people who cannot effectively read
print). He is also a graduate of the Montgomery County Maryland Citizen
Police Academy and a member of its alumni association.
Listen to
Dr. Steven Hausman Discusses Nanotechnology And Its Many
Uses.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.