Jefferey L Burgess

Jefferey L Burgess

Professor, Public Health
Adjunct Professor, Mining and Geological Engineering
Professor, BIO5 Institute
Member of the General Faculty
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Primary Department
Contact
(520) 626-4918

Research Interest

Jefferey L. Burgess, MD, MS, MPH is a Professor and Division Director of Community, Environment and Policy within the University of Arizona Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. Dr. Burgess’ research focuses on improving occupational health and safety, with a special focus on firefighters, other public safety personnel and miners. Areas of current and past research include: reduction of occupational exposures, illnesses and injuries; respiratory toxicology; environmental arsenic exposure; and hazardous materials exposures including methamphetamine laboratories. In addition to multiple research grants, Dr. Burgess is the Principal Investigator (PI) for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded Mountain West Preparedness and Emergency Response Learning Center and a joint PI for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health-funded Western Mining Safety and Health Resource Center. Dr. Burgess is internationally recognized for his research evaluating the health effects of firefighting and methods for reducing firefighter exposures and other hazards, including but not limited to improved respiratory protection and injury prevention. He is also internationally known for his work on mining health and safety, and is a co-PI on a large Science Foundation Arizona grant supporting mining risk management, exposure assessment and control and economic analysis of health and safety systems. A separate ongoing grant is focused on comparing exposures and health effects associated with the use of diesel and biodiesel blend fuels in underground mining. He also has carried out multiple research projects on the adverse effects of low-level arsenic exposure in drinking water and more recently has begun to evaluate exposures from dietary arsenic sources.

Publications

Burgess, J. L., & Dart, R. C. (1991). Snake venom coagulopathy: use and abuse of blood products in the treatment of pit viper envenomation. Annals of emergency medicine, 20(7), 795-801.

Coagulopathies are commonly encountered in victims of pit viper envenomation. In the majority of patients these defects improve with administration of antivenin. However, blood products are often transfused based on arbitrary criteria and with significant risk to the patient. This article documents the effectiveness and risks of antivenin administration and the risks of blood product transfusion. We recommend that blood products not be used except for clearly defined clinical indications.

Burgess, J. L., Keifer, M. C., Barnhart, S., Richardson, M., & Robertson, W. O. (1997). Hazardous materials exposure information service: Development, analysis, and medical implications. Annals of Emergency Medicine, 29(2), 248-254.
Lisle S. Hites, ., Brenda S. Granillo, ., Edward R. Garrison, ., Adriana D. Cimetta, ., Verena J. Serafin, ., Ralph F. Renger, ., Jessica F. Wakelee, ., & Jefferey L. Burgess, . (2012). Emergency preparedness training of tribal Community Health Representatives. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, 14(2), 323-329.
Derby, M. P., McNally, J., Ranger-Moore, J., Hulette, L., Villar, R., Hysong, T., MacNeill, E., Lebowitz, M., & Burgess, J. (2005). Poison Control Center--based syndromic surveillance for foodborne illness. MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report, 54 Suppl, 35-40.

This retrospective study evaluated the usefulness of a poison control center (PCC) data collection system in Tucson, Arizona for early detection of foodborne disease outbreaks.

Poplin, G. S., Miller, H. B., Ranger-Moore, J., Bofinger, C. M., Kurzius-Spencer, M., Harris, R. B., & Burgess, J. L. (2008). International evaluation of injury rates in coal mining: A comparison of risk and compliance-based regulatory approaches. Safety Science, 46(8), 1196-1204.