Lisa A. Jackson, MD, MPH

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“Kaiser Permanente Washington gives us nearly unlimited potential to address vaccine effectiveness and safety questions of national and international importance.”

Lisa A. Jackson, MD, MPH

Senior Investigator, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute
Physician, Washington Permanente Medical Group, Internal Medicine

Biography

Lisa A. Jackson, MD, MPH, is an internist and infectious disease epidemiologist who has conducted clinical and epidemiologic studies of vaccine safety and efficacy since 1991.

Dr. Jackson is the principal investigator (PI) of KPWHRI’s Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Unit — one of 10 network sites that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) sponsors. In this role, she leads the phase 1 clinical trial of the COVID-19 vaccine co-developed by Moderna and NIH. Launched in March 2020, this trial was the first in the world to begin testing a COVID-19 vaccine. She is also leading the phase 3 clinical trials of the COVID-19 vaccines developed by Moderna and NIH and by Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies, part of Johnson & Johnson, at KPWHRI.

Additionally, Dr. Jackson serves as KPWHRI’s principal investigator in the Vaccine Safety Datalink Project (VSDP). Sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), VSDP conducts ongoing research on the safety of licensed vaccines in routine use.

Dr. Jackson has written more than 200 peer-reviewed publications and 14 book chapters. She is a past member of the Food and Drug Administration’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee and the National Vaccine Program Office’s National Vaccine Advisory Committee.

After receiving her medical degree from the University of Virginia School of Medicine, in Charlottesville, Dr. Jackson earned her Master of Public Health (MPH) degree at the University of Washington (UW) School of Public Health. She completed her internal medicine residency training at the UW School of Medicine and served as an epidemic intelligence officer and preventive medicine resident at the CDC.

Research interests and experience

Vaccines & Infectious Diseases

Vaccine  safety; COVID-19 vaccine safety and effectiveness; influenza vaccine effectiveness in the elderly; methodologic issues in  vaccine effectiveness evaluations; pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine  effectiveness; pneumococcal conjugate vaccine immunogenicity in the elderly;  epidemiology of E. coli bacteremia; epidemiology of community-acquired  pneumonia

Recent publications

Jackson LA, Wenger JD. Listeriosis: a foodborne disease. Infect Med. 1993;10(2):61-66. PubMed

Smith DK, Neal JJ, Holmberg SD and the Centers for Disease Control Idiopathic CD4+ T-Lymphocytopenia Task Force. Unexplained opportunistic infections and CD4 T-lymphocytopenia without HIV infection: an investigation of cases in the United States. N Engl J Med. 1993;328:373-379. PubMed

Jackson LA, Schuchat A. Reporting of toxic shock syndrome. J Infect Dis. 1992;166:445. PubMed

Schwartz B, Jackson LA. Invasive group B streptococcal disease in adults. JAMA. 1991;266:3284. PubMed

Jick H, Dinan BJ, Hunter JR, Stergachis A, Ronning A, Perera DR, Madsen S, Nudelman PM. Tricyclic antidepressants and convulsions. J Clin Psychopharmacol. 1983;3(3):182-5. PubMed

 

News

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Researchers begin trial for high-dose flu vaccine

KPWHRI is seeking volunteers ages 50 to 64 who have not received this season’s flu vaccine to join the trial.

News

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Vaccine program recruiting volunteers in Seattle area

KPWHRI’s vaccine registry was the first to enroll participants in a clinical trial of a COVID-19 vaccine.

News

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Clinical trial will evaluate mpox vaccine for adolescents

The NIH-sponsored trial will help inform decisions about vaccine approval for 12- to 17-year-olds.

Volunteers needed

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Researchers begin trial for mRNA flu vaccine

The investigational vaccine is in the third phase of trials and targets flu strains expected to circulate this winter.

Research

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New study confirms safety of shingles vaccine

KPWHRI researchers analyzed data from more than 640,000 vaccine doses to understand risk of severe reactions.