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Michael
O'Donnell Ph.D., MBA, MPH
Chair, Advocacy Strategy Committee
Chair, Executive Committee |
Michael O'Donnell is founder and Editor in Chief of the American
Journal of Health Promotion, Inc. Founded in 1986, the American Journal
of Health Promotion was the first scientific journal to address the
health promotion field. It remains the most widely read scientific
publication devoted exclusively to health promotion with subscribers in
50 countries:. The Journal also sponsors the annual Art and Science of
Health Promotion Conference which attracts over 500 people each year. As
editor-in-chief, Dr. O'Donnell has completed composite editorial reviews
of over 1600 manuscripts. As President, he has organized 17 national
conferences. Dr. O'Donnell is also founder and president of the Health
Promotion Research Foundation.
Dr. O’Donnell is also Chief Wellness Officer at the UPMC Health Plan.
Previously, he was Director of Health and Wellness at the Cleveland
Clinic. Prior to starting the Journal, Dr. O'Donnell worked in hospital
management for seven years, and in management consulting for four years.
He has served on the faculty of three universities.
During the 1998-1999 academic year, Dr. O'Donnell moved to Seoul,
Korea with his family to serve as a Senior Fulbright Scholar and
visiting professor in the department of preventive medicine at Catholic
University and the Graduate School of Health Sciences at Yonsei
University. While in Korea, he was involved in a wide range of strategic
planning, organization development, fund raising and research projects.
He continues to be involved in a longitudinal study on the relationship
between health risk factors and medical care costs in Korea.
After returning from Korea, he organized Health Promotion Advocates,
a non-profit advocacy group committed to integrating health promotion
concepts into national health policy. Health Promotion Advocates has
worked with members of Congress to introduce bills that will enhance
health promotion research and planning (S866 &HR5835: Health Promotion
Funding Integrated Research, Synthesis and Training (FIRST) Act and
provide tax credits to employers who provide comprehensive workplace
health promotion programs (S1753&HR3717: Healthy Workforce Act)
Dr. O'Donnell earned a PhD in Health Behavior and Health Education
from the School of Public Health at the University of Michigan, an MBA
in Entrepreneurship and General Management and an MPH in Hospital
Administration from the University of California, Berkeley. He completed
his undergraduate work in Psychobiology at Oberlin College. During high
school, he lived in Seoul, Korea with seven brothers and sisters while
his father served in the Peace Corps.
Dr. O'Donnell's publications include over 100 articles, book chapters
and columns, books and workbooks. His first book, Health Promotion in
the Workplace (John Wiley and Sons, 1984) was the first
reference/textbook on workplace health promotion, and was nominated for
Books of the Year Award by the American Journal of Nursing in 1985. The
second edition (Delmar, 1994) was translated into Korean. The third
edition (Delmar, 2002) remains a standard text in colleges and
universities around the United States and has been translated into
Chinese.
Dr. O'Donnell's awards include Alumni of the Year from Seoul Foreign
School (1999), Distinguished Leadership and Service Lifetime Achievement
Award from the Association for Worksite Health Promotion (1997), Young
Professional Award from the Society for Public Health Education, Great
Lakes Chapter (1990), selection as a Fellow by the Association for
Fitness in Business (1985), and the Bausch Lomb Award in Science from
the University of Rochester (1970).
Dr. O'Donnell has presented over 200 keynote, breakout, and workshop
presentations on six continents, provided consulting services to almost
100 employers, health care organizations, government agencies and
foundations and served on boards and committees for 36 profit and
non-profit organizations.
He is an avid swimmer and hiker, and has been a vegetarian for more
30 years. He strives to achieve the model of health promotion espoused
by the American Journal of Health Promotion: a balance of physical,
emotional, intellectual, social and spiritual health.
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