Eric E. Harrison, MD

CEO, Founder Mr. Eddie DeBartolo International Cardio-Orthopaedics Society ®

USA Camostat/Bromhexine COVID-19 Public Health Research Group

Sector Strategist, Prevention & Health Research, Biomedical Science,

Patient-Centered Ecosystems, Harrison Cognitive Lab, Cardio-Oncology , PrivaCors Inc ®

Cardiology, Advanced Cardiac Imaging, Collaborative Professor of Medicine

Repurposing Optinose and Camostat for COVID 19

Dr. Harrison attended Vanderbilt University on a Founder’s Scholarship as a National Merit Semi-Finalist and received his Bachelor of Science Degree from Rollins College after completing an accelerated three-year program. He spent a year in medical research at the University of Kentucky Medical School where he then attended medical school. While in medical school at the University of Kentucky, he studied law at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. He received his medical degree from the University of Kentucky and completed internship, Internal Medicine residency and Cardiology Fellowship at the University of South Florida where he was a Special Fellow of the Florida Heart Association. He was acting Director of the Cath Lab at the VA Hospital for 3 months prior to finishing his training. He is a founding physician of the University of South Florida Medical School. He was co-director of the Cardiology Center at Tampa General Hospital for thirteen years and directed noninvasive cardiology for seven years where he started echocardiography and nuclear cardiology. At Tampa General he performed over 14,000 heart catheterizations, numerous coronary angioplasties, cardiac electrophysiologic studies and myocardial biopsies and was a transplant cardiologist on the transplant team for three years. He and his colleagues started the first outpatient cardiovascular health center in Tampa at Memorial Hospital where he is currently the Medical Director and where he has directed the cardiac rehabilitation program. His non-invasive cardiology interests are 3D echo, multi-slice CAT scan imaging of the coronaries, Cardiac PET/CT, Cardiac MRI, and hybrid imaging. Dr. Harrison received the Founder’s Scholarship to Vanderbilt University, a grant from the Florida Heart Association as a special cardiac Fellow and a grant from the Florida Regional Medical Program to study sudden death. He and his associates originated the paramedic services of Tampa Fire Rescue and Hillsborough County Medical Services and he served as Medical Director for each service for many years. He was also given the key to the City of Tampa by Tampa Mayor Dick Greco for his work with the Fire Rescue paramedics and was honored by Hillsborough County EMS for his founding work when he was a cardiac fellow. He has served in many administrative positions, voluntary groups and government organizations. Among his administrative responsibilities, he was the managing partner of an 11-physician cardiology group and medical service organization for several years. Dr. Harrison is currently the National Director of Advanced Cardiac Imaging of Iasi Healthcare Inc .  which owns and operates 15 acute care hospitals in Florida, Texas, Louisiana, Utah, Arizona, and Nevada. Dr. Harrison was one of first to use the therapeutic hypothermia for Cardiac Arrest patients. He began to use this treatment clinically shortly after the landmark articles were published in February 2002. He is currently integrating hypothermic medicine into the IASIS healthcare system. He has served as a consultant for many national companies associated with cardiac imaging. Dr. Harrison started and directs the Joint Memorial Hospital / University of South Florida Medical School Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program for practicing physicians, cardiac fellows, and medical student training. He is a preceptor for the University of South Florida Medical School, Saba University Medical School of the Netherland Antilles, CSU College of Pharmacy in Chicago, and Midwestern University College of Pharmacy.

Nghia Ho, MD

USA Camostat/Bromhexine COVID-19 Public Health Research Group

Executive Technical Medical Director, Mr. Eddie DeBartolo International Cardio-Orthopaedics Society ®

Dr. Nghia (Nick) Ho graduated from UCI before travelling the world and starting his medical background in Germany and the Ukraine before transferring to the Caribbean and finishing his clinical education in the USA. Having graduated from St. Matthews University in Grand Cayman, he has the last decade in medical informatics and clinical information research before heading back into the clinical realm. He is currently co-editing Cardio-Orthopaedics with Dr. Eric E. Harrison and group as well as helping to integrate his skills and background with Harrison’s COVID-19 Research Group. He is also associate adjunct professor (preceptor) for Midwestern University College of Pharmacy and CSU College of Pharmacy.

Daniel Lenihan, MD

Director, Cardio-Oncology Program and Heart Failure Clinic Cape Cardiology

Dr Lenihan has been active in Cardio-Oncology and Heart Failure, for over 27 years. The main focus of these efforts includes the exploration of novel cardiac biomarkers as well as innovative therapies and methods to prevent or detect heart failure at the earliest stage possible in patients undergoing treatment for cancer. His current research projects include early phase clinical trials in cardio-oncology, heart failure and amyloidosis. He has held leadership positions at MD Anderson Cancer Center, Vanderbilt University, and Washington University in St Louis. He is the Founder of the International Cardio-Oncology Society (ICOS), www.IC-OS.org, which is an international professional association whose primary goal is to eliminate cardiac disease as a barrier to effective cancer therapy. He is actively involved in patient care the Director of the Cardio-Oncology Program, Cardiac Rehabilitation, and the Heart Failure clinic at St. Francis Healthcare System in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. He is at the forefront of concerted efforts to develop a viable Cardio-Oncology fellowship training program and continues to foster collaboration among a host of colleagues both regionally, nationally, and throughout the world.