As an intern, he worked at the Staten Island Public Health Service Hospital, including a stint in the venereal disease unit during World War II alongside John Friend Mahoney.
[2] After studying public health at Columbia University under a Rockefeller fellowship, Anderson worked on tuberculosis control.
[2] After the CDC, Anderson returned to Washington, DC and worked on environmental health, including as Chief of the Bureau of State Services.
[4][2] Anderson died of an aortic aneurysm on July 24, 1999, at his home in Arlington, Virginia, at the age of 85.
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