Dr. Paul Blanc, chief of occupational and environmental medicine, is an expert in occupational medicine, internal medicine and medical toxicology (a specialty that focuses on sickness or injury from harmful chemicals). Blanc’s research addresses asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in relation to the workplace and environmental factors, as well as other issues in occupational and environmental toxicology, particularly in regards to the lung. Blanc earned his medical degree at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. He completed a master of science in public health degree in industrial hygiene at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. He is a former Robert Wood Johnson clinical scholar and a Fulbright senior research fellow. Blanc also serves as a consulting physician with the San Francisco division of the California Poison Control System. He is the author of How Everyday Products Make People Sick .
His clinical expertise encompasses Beryllium Disease, Byssinosis, Pulmonary Fibrosis, and Silicosis.
Dr. Blanc is board certified in American Board Of Preventive Medicine, Medical Toxicology, American Board Of Preventive Medicine, Occupational Medicine, and American Board Of Internal Medicine, Internal Medicine. He is actively involved in clinical research, co-authoring 153 peer reviewed articles.
Yeshiva University Albert Einstein College Of Medicine, MD
Cook County Hospital / John H Stroger Jr Hospital, Occupational Medicine
American Board Of Preventive Medicine, Medical Toxicology
American Board Of Preventive Medicine, Occupational Medicine
American Board Of Internal Medicine, Internal Medicine
Ben Gurion University
UCSF Graduate Medical Education