These stories are based on confidential interviews conducted as part of the CDC Listening Project. Participants review and approve written summaries describing their work, their contributions, and the circumstances surrounding their separation. Stories are published without names or identifying details.
Developing Advanced Lab Tests to Inform Polio Eradication Strategy
This CDC scientist spent more than three decades helping protect children from paralysis. Work advancing PCR testing, genetic sequencing, and global laboratory training informed vaccination strategy in 131 countries and helped drive wild poliovirus to the brink of eradication.
Preserving and Cataloging CDC’s Artifacts and Key Memories
Before there were smartphones, before smallpox was eradicated, before vaccine safety systems were formalized—there were people making decisions in real time. This CDC historian and collections manager worked to preserve those moments. By restoring artifacts, cataloging decades of materials, and building a public oral history archive, this historian helped safeguard the human stories behind the science so future generations could learn from them.
Building Capacity to Detect Health Threats and Manage a Strategic Response
This public health leader built systems that strengthened outbreak response, workforce training, and strategic planning nationwide. During COVID-19, this CDC professional helped streamline emergency grant distribution—processing hundreds of awards in days instead of months—to ensure states, tribes, and communities received critical resources when they needed them most.
From Peace Corps to Organizing Community Health Workers During Covid
From Peace Corps service in South Africa to organizing community health workers during the COVID-19 pandemic and supporting youth overdose prevention coalitions nationwide, this CDC public health professional built a career grounded in service, partnership, and prevention. Their work strengthened community-based responses in some of the country’s hardest hit areas.