Atlanta, Ga. (October 21, 2024) – Piedmont has made three new appointments to the organization’s Board of Directors. They are Bonita Dozier, M.D., FACOG, who chairs Piedmont’s OB-GYN Clinical Governing Council; Teresa Wynn Roseborough, The Home Depot’s Executive Vice President – General Counsel & Corporate Secretary; and William E. Roundtree, M.D., a Columbus-based family medicine physician who practices and is a former team physician with the U.S. Olympic Committee.
“We are excited to welcome this accomplished trio of individuals to the Board of Directors, as they each bring a wealth of leadership experience, wisdom and talent to our organization,” said Piedmont Healthcare President and CEO Kevin Brown. “They possess great expertise regarding areas that are critical to Piedmont and to our patients, including clinical quality, a wide spectrum of legal areas, and our community.”
An Atlanta native, Dr. Dozier has practiced locally within the Piedmont Clinic and at Piedmont Atlanta Hospital as an OB-GYN since 1997. As leader of Piedmont’s OB-GYN Clinical Governing Council, she is charged with achieving improved quality and patient outcomes, providing systemwide oversight for clinical quality measures and for focusing on protocols and evidence-based guidelines to improve performance that impact system quality and safety priorities. She also chairs the OB-GYN Department at Piedmont Atlanta and serves as Medical Director for Women’s and Newborn Services at the hospital. In 2002, she was the recipient of Piedmont’s William Waters, M.D., Award for clinical excellence. She has held many leadership positions at Piedmont Atlanta Hospital. She served as President of the Atlanta Obstetrical and Gynecological Society from 2006-2007.
Dr. Dozier earned a degree in Zoology from the University of Texas. She graduated from Morehouse School of Medicine, and received a number of awards including the Lange Award for Outstanding Academic Achievement, and membership in Alpha Omega Alpha Medical Honors Society. She completed her residency at Emory University’s Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, where she was selected as Chief Administrative Resident, awarded First Place in Residential Research Day and named Emory University School of Medicine’s Best OB-GYN Teaching Resident.
At The Home Depot, Roseborough is responsible for the company’s legal functions, government relations and external communications. She is responsible for securities, litigation, employment, mergers and acquisitions, real estate, store operations, risk management and intellectual property. In addition, as corporate secretary, she serves as a liaison between the board of directors and the company and is responsible for all corporate governance matters.
Roseborough was named one of 25 Influential Black Women in Business by The Network Journal and as one of America’s top black attorneys by Black Enterprise. Her civic involvements include serving as a public member of the Administrative Conference of the U.S., co-chair of the board of directors of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and a member of the Board of Overseers of the RAND Corporation Institute for Civil Justice. She earned a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Virginia, a master’s degree in education from Boston University, and a juris doctor with high honors from the University of North Carolina School of Law.
Dr. Roundtree has practiced medicine in Columbus for more than 30 years. He serves as an adjunct assistant clinical professor at Morehouse School of Medicine and at Mercer School of Medicine and as an adjunct clinical professor at Emory University. In 2005, he was named an Outstanding Clinical Preceptor by Emory University’s Physician Assistant Program. Previously, he served as chief of staff of The Medical Center in Columbus (the former name of Piedmont Columbus Regional – Midtown Campus before it joined the Piedmont system in 2018). He also has served as a board member of the Georgia Composite Medical Board.
He has served as a U.S. Olympic Committee Team Physician at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Summer Olympic Games. He also served as U.S. track and field team physician for the 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympic Games. He earned his undergraduate degree at North Carolina A&T University and graduated from Wake Forest University’s Bowman Gray School of Medicine. He completed his internship and his residency at Martin Army Hospital at Fort Moore (formerly Fort Benning).