GAA
Mary Horgan currently serves as the Chief Medical Officer-interim for the Department of Health in Ireland and is a UCD Professor of Infectious Diseases as well as an Infectious Diseases Physician at Mater University Hospital. Additionally, Mary Horgan holds the position of ESCMID Education Director and is a member of the Medical, Scientific and Welfare Committee for GAA. Previous roles include Chairperson of the National Research Ethics Committee COVID-19 for the Health Research Board and President of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland. Mary Horgan has extensive experience in infectious diseases, having served as a Consultant Physician at Cork University Hospital for over two decades. Education includes a Doctor of Medicine degree from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and a medical degree from University College Dublin.
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GAA
The Gaelic Athletic Association / Cumann Lúthchleas Gael is an Irish sporting and cultural organisation that has a presence on all five continents. It is a volunteer led, community based organisation that administers Gaelic games (Irish indigenous sports) of hurling and Gaelic football and promotes Irish language and culture worldwide along with related Gaelic games of ladies football, camogie, handball and rounders. The Association has its headquarters at Croke Park in Dublin, Ireland, where it has been based on a full time basis since 1908. The stadium, which was redeveloped between 1993 and 2003, has a capacity of 82,300 and hosts some of the highest profile events in the Irish sporting calendar. The GAA is underpinned by a democratic elective structure that sees members at various different levels elect officers to serving positions on a variety of tiers up to and including the position of Uachtarán (President). The GAA’s internal management structure is multi-layered with the vast majority of all serving officers beginning their administrative involvement at club level. All administrators, regardless of rank or their level of involvement, are members of one of the Association’s 2,300 plus clubs spread across 60+ countries.