UCF's largest medical class to train on video game simulation tools

ORANGE COUNTY, Fla.

The largest class so far at University of Central Florida's medical school began its first year on Monday.

Fifty-five men and 45 women make up the graduating class of 2016, and while it took substantial work to be able to earn admission into the school, the real work has yet to begin.

The class size is seven times larger than UCF's inaugural class four years ago.

Every one of the incoming medical students will train at UCF using medical simulation tools, which essentially are just video games.

The school is already one of the top universities in the nation for game design, which is poised to create a massive job boom in the metro area, and medical simulation could make it one of the top spots in the nation.

Many of the simulations will be built by graduates of the school's video game design school, which according to the Princeton Review, is ranked fourth in the nation after Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

"Being able to simply hold up a device like this iPad and focus on the poster and have it come to life," said David Metcalf, of the UCF Institute for Simulation and Training.

And future employment for game designers is booming.

The VA is set to open a major medical simulation center in late 2013, which will train thousands of VA technicians across the nation.

Continued here:
UCF's largest medical class to train on video game simulation tools

Hazmat crews respond to Harvard Medical School after acid spills in 10th-floor lab

By Travis Andersen, Globe Staff

A Harvard Medical School building was evacuated this afternoon after chemicals spilled on the 10th floor, the Boston Fire Department said.

Steve MacDonald, a Fire Department spokesman, said three two-liter bottles containing acetic and hydrochloric acid broke and the substances spilled about 3 p.m. inside a lab at the building at 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur in Boston.

MacDonald said the spill was contained to the 10th floor, and no one was injured. A doctor who was in the area of the spill was wearing the proper protective gear and followed procedure for self-decontamination, MacDonald said.

She was allowed to go home after paramedics examined her at the scene, he said. There were no injuries.

MacDonald said at the scene at about 5 p.m. that a hazardous materials cleanup team was en route and it was not clear when the building would reopen.

My experiments ruined, said Russell Griffin, 28, a research technician who was working on the 6th floor when the spill occurred.

MacDonald said both acetic and hydrochloric acids are irritants and can cause burns, and that acetic acid is flammable.

Visit link:
Hazmat crews respond to Harvard Medical School after acid spills in 10th-floor lab

Acid spill at Harvard Med School prompts evacuation

A chemical spill prompted firefighters to evacuated a Harvard Medical School building for several hours Tuesday afternoon after a doctor working in a lab spilled several large bottles of acids, according to firefighters.

The doctor went to get a bottle off a shelf in a 10th floor lab on Avenue Louis Pasteur at about 3 p.m. and inadvertantly knocked three bottles containing acids, which rolled off the shelf and smashed, said Boston Fire Department spokesman Steve MacDonald.

The doctor, who was dressed in protective lab clothing, followed protocol and immediately jumped under a lab shower to decontaminate herself, said MacDonald, who told the Herald no one was injured in the spill.

MacDonald said Harvard hired a cleanup company to clean up the spilled bottles, which were about two liters each and contained acetic and hydrochloric acids.

Acetic acid is flammable and both acids are irritants. They can cause burns if you come in contact with them and they can cause some distress if you inhale the chemicals, said MacDonald.

Boston firefighters, who sealed off the street during the incident, also conducted air quality readings to ensure the 10-story medical school building was safe, according to MacDonald.

Harvard Medical School issued a statement saying the chemical spill on the buildings top floor happened in the Department of Microbiology and Immunobiology and confirmed the top three floors of the building would remain evacuated until further notice.

A Harvard Medical spokeswoman declined to say whether the incident would prompt a review of chemical storage practices in the labs.

Read more:
Acid spill at Harvard Med School prompts evacuation

Commonwealth Medical college names new leader

The Commonwealth Medical College has named a new leader.

Steven J. Scheinman, M.D., professor of medicine and pharmacology at SUNY Upstate Medical University, will become the second permanent president and dean of the region's only medical school.

Dr. Scheinman's appointment comes less than two months after the school received provisional accreditation and as the college continues to seek an affiliation with a hospital or another college to ease financial difficulties. He will also be charged with seeing the school's first class of students through their fourth year, with the college's first medical-degree graduation this spring.

He begins Sept. 10.

After the school's founding dean and president Robert D'Alessandri, M.D., abruptly resigned in April 2011, Lois Margaret Nora, M.D., served as interim president for one year. Robert Wright, M.D., has served in the interim role since the end of June.

Dr. Scheinman previously served as SUNY Upstate Medical University's senior vice president and dean of the College of Medicine. He earned international prominence for his research into the genetics of inherited kidney diseases and kidney stones, according to TCMC. He has been on the faculty at Upstate for nearly 30 years, during which he served as chief of the nephrology division in the department of medicine for 10 years where he doubled the size of the faculty and grew the dialysis program.

He received his medical degree with honors from Yale University and is board-certified in internal medicine and nephrology.

"After an extensive national search, Dr. Scheinman emerged as an exceptional leader with a strong and broad vision to advance the college's educational, administrative, and research activities in exciting new ways," Louis DeNaples, chairman of the college's board of trustees said in a statement from the school. "TCMC is extremely fortunate to have recruited a leader with Dr. Scheinman's outstanding talents and breadth of experience in medical education. His character is consonant with TCMC's mission and values."

Check back for updates.

Contact the writer: shofius@timesshamrock.com

See original here:
Commonwealth Medical college names new leader

Medical school update to come tonight

ABINGDON, Va. --

The Abingdon Town Council is scheduled to hear a presentation tonight from Tariq Zaidi, interim president and CEO for the proposed King School of Medicine, tonight.

Nearly two weeks ago, Zaidi spoke before the Washington County Board of Supervisors and got a mixed reaction of optimism and uncertainty.

Zaidi said the project, which is backed by the county, the town and the Virginia Tobacco Commission, could be shifting focus to a less expensive and more comprehensive health care education center.

Abingdon Mayor Ed Morgan said he is optimistic about the medical school projects future.

Im pleased with the progress Mr. Zaidi is making; hes building on the work of [King College President] Dr. Jordan did and bringing a lot of leadership and technical skills, Morgan said. Im optimistic he can bring the project to fruition.

The council is scheduled to meet for a work session at 5:30 p.m. today and a regular meeting, at 7:30. Zaidi is scheduled to speak during the regular meeting. The agenda and information packet are available online at http://www.abingdon-va.gov/.

Read the original here:
Medical school update to come tonight

For Pfizer, Boston’s medical labs a lure

Pfizer Inc., the worlds largest pharmaceutical company, has a storied history of hunting for blockbuster drugs in its own labs. These days it is also hunting for collaborations with outside physician-scientists who could help it develop cures for diseases ranging from lung cancer to osteoporosis.

A natural habitat of this breed doctors who treat patients, teach at academic medical centers, and run government-funded research labs is Bostons Longwood Medical Area, home to Harvard Medical School and a cluster of its famous teaching hospitals. Thats where Pfizers new Centers for Therapeutic Innovation has established its worldwide headquarters.

The drug giant is betting it can bring more treatments to market by working with academic researchers in medical hubs like Boston. It also has set up satellite centers in New York, San Francisco, and La Jolla, Calif., outside San Diego, to strike alliances in those areas. Overall, Pfizer is committing up to $100 million to such collaborations over the next five years.

Were trying to change biomedical research globally, said Pfizers Jose-Carlos J.C. Gutierrez-Ramos in an interview from the companys perch on the top floor of a new glass-faced office tower at 3 Blackfan Circle. The old model is not efficient for us or for the academic medical centers, said Gutierrez-Ramos, who is Pfizers senior vice president and head of biotherapeutics research and development.

Other companies also are eager to share the costs and risks of developing new drugs with partners in the Boston area. Novartis AG, Sanofi SA, and Merck & Co. are among the global drug makers accelerating their partnering moves in the region.

Earlier this month Sanofi, which raised its profile by buying Cambridge-based biotech Genzyme Corp., entered into a diabetes research deal with Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Womens Hospital.

Boston is without a doubt number one for pharmas trying to cash in on the hope of a mother lode from academic drug research, said Kevin J. Gorman, managing partner at a Burlington life sciences consulting firm, Putnam Associates. Theyre placing bets on the roulette table. But its also a reflection that the internal efforts of the pharmas havent been terribly productive.

While each companys approach is different Novartis is codeveloping drugs with biotechs, while Sanofi is investing in life sciences start-ups Pfizers strategy may represent the most dramatic departure from its traditional research and development methods. The company signaled its intentions 17 months ago with the announcement it would move neuroscience and cardiovascular metabolic research operations to Cambridge from a sprawling campus in Groton, Conn.

Pfizers old business model involved either taking experimental treatments from the labs to the market by itself or buying companies that already had promising drug candidates. Both approaches were expensive generating fewer successes and alienating investors at a time when some of the companys best-selling products were losing their patent protection. That meant more competition from lower-cost generics.

Now, New York-based Pfizer is making fewer acquisitions and doing less early-stage research. Instead it is piggybacking more on the work of physician-scientists from other organizations. It is collaborating with Dr. Markus Frank at Harvard-affiliated Boston Childrens Hospital, for example, on a stem cell treatment for malignant melanoma. Pfizer also is partnering with Dr. David Salant at Boston Medical Center, a Boston University hospital, on a kidney disease therapy.

Follow this link:
For Pfizer, Boston’s medical labs a lure

2 from county begin medical school

Two Marion County natives are among 14 students being admitted to the University of Kansas Medical School this year under a program designed to encourage rural students interested in working as physicians in underserved areas.

Benjamin Heyen from Hillsboro and JuliAnne (Chisholm) Rathbun from Durham were formally welcomed into medical school at a white coat ceremony Friday in Kansas City.

Students in the Scholars in Rural Health program learn about the rewards and challenges of rural practice by working alongside a physician mentor during their junior and senior years as undergraduates.

Heyen, a recent graduate of Tabor College, was mentored by Jon Casimir, M.D., of Newton.

Rathbun, a recent graduate of Kansas State University, was mentored by Douglas Hinkin, M.D., of Manhattan.

The program provides a pathway that ensures the students admission to med school.

Heyen attends the Kansas City campus. Rathbun attends the Salina campus. Both will be members of the Class of 2016.

No more than 16 candidates are accepted each year. Candidates must be Kansas residents with significant experience living in rural communities and ACT or SAT scores at or above the 75th percentile.

Students apply while they still have two years of undergraduate education remaining, after they have completed a year that includes both general biology and general inorganic chemistry.

In their application and interviews, students must declare their intention to practice medicine in rural Kansas and show evidence of dedication and compassion necessary to become competent and caring physicians.

Read more:
2 from county begin medical school

Lawsuit: Corpse was too fat for med school

Published: Aug. 2, 2012 at 12:01 PM

NEW YORK, Aug. 2 (UPI) -- A New York family's lawsuit against a hospital alleges a medical school rejected a man's corpse for being too large.

The family of George Cardel filed a lawsuit after the 59-year-old man, who weighed about 300 pounds, was pronounced dead at Long Island Jewish Medical Center after suffering a heart attack Dec. 29, 2011, the New York Daily News reported Thursday.

The lawsuit alleges Cardel's last request was for his body to be donated to science, but the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine at Hofstra University rejected the corpse for being too large and the hospital took 13 days to return the body, resulting in heavy decomposition that led to the body needing to be cremated.

"We thought everything was taken care of until 13 days later," said Cardel's sister, Maryann O'Donnell.

Officials at the hospital said they attempted to donate the corpse to multiple medical schools, but there were no takers.

The lawsuit alleges "grave humiliation."

Continue reading here:
Lawsuit: Corpse was too fat for med school

Medical merger is enticing to college

Susan Robertson

Merging with Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk to form the William & Mary School of Medicine definitely has potential, but the benefits have yet to be spelled out.

The possible partnership, announced Wednesday, would make William & Mary the fourth state university with a medical program. The obvious benefits include prestige for William & Mary and state funding for EVMS.

W&M President Taylor Reveley said serious consideration of a merger began only recently, and a look at similar partnerships will undergo due diligence by the administration and the Board of Visitors.

Im well aware of the resources a medical school can bring to a university, he said. Although William and Mary and EVMS have cooperated in the past, making EVMS a part of the college would provide greater opportunities for collaboration and the development of innovative learning and research opportunities for William & Mary undergraduate and graduate students.

Out in Roanoke, Virginia Tech had four big reasons for merging with the Carilion hospital system in 2007, according to Larry Hincker, associate vice president for university relations at Virginia Tech.

To address a looming shortage of doctors.

To improve health care delivery in Southwest Virginia.

To expand Virginia Techs life science and human health research.

To link efforts of Virginia Tech and Carilion and create jobs in the region.

Read the original post:
Medical merger is enticing to college

Dr. Hugh Stephenson: Instrumental in developing four-year medical school at Mizzou

Dr. Hugh Stephenson, who died Thursday (July 26, 2012), helped turn the School of Medicine at the University of Missouri at Columbia into a full, four-year institution.

During the 1950s, he successfully lobbied the Legislature to build a medical school to replace one that provided only two years of training. Students had to transfer to a four-year medical program to finish their degrees.

Dr. Stephenson was a popular professor and the first full-time surgery faculty member at the medical school. In 1958, he performed the university's first open-heart surgery.

The university also credits him for designing the "crash cart" the Mobile Cardiac Resuscitation Unit as well as being one of the first surgeons to implant an automatic cardiac defibrillator for shocking the heart after it goes into arrest.

Dr. Hugh Edward Stephenson Jr. died at his family's summer home in Rehoboth Beach, Del. He was 90 and also had a home in Columbia.

He had been treated for at least 10 years for complications of Parkinson's disease, a family friend said Monday.

Before Dr. Stephenson, university officials had been trying since the early 1930s to build a four-year medical school. There was never enough money during the Depression or World War II.

Dr. Stephenson was from a prominent family in Columbia, where his father was a dentist. He earned his undergraduate degree at Mizzou and studied for two years at the medical school.

Then, he was accepted at the Washington University School of Medicine, which had just three or four slots a year for third- and fourth-year students from Mizzou.

After graduating, Dr. Stephenson served as an Army radiologist in Italy. He was on the faculty at New York University Post Graduate Medical School and was chief surgical resident at Bellevue Hospital there.

Link:
Dr. Hugh Stephenson: Instrumental in developing four-year medical school at Mizzou

UK medical school teaching on physical activity virtually 'non-existent'

Public release date: 27-Jul-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Stephanie Burns sburns@bmjgroup.com 44-020-738-36920 BMJ-British Medical Journal

[Physical activity education in the undergraduate curricula of all UK medical schools. Are tomorrow's doctors equipped to follow clinical guidelines? Online First doi 10.1136/bjsports-2012-091380]

UK medical school teaching on physical activity is "sparse or non-existent," finds research published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine today.

This knowledge gap will leave tomorrow's doctors ill equipped to promote physical activity effectively to their patients and stem the rising tide of serious disease associated with lack of exercise, say the authors.

They base their findings on the results of a survey sent to the curriculum lead or director for medical studies for each of the UK's 31 medical schools.

This asked about the form and content of key aspects of education on the promotion of physical activity, in accordance with national guidelines, and the total amount of time given over to teaching the basic science and health benefits of physical activity across the undergraduate course.

The education leads were asked to name the specific teaching modules in which physical activity education appeared. And they were asked if the Chief Medical Officer's (CMO's) guidance on physical activitywhich spans all age groups, and which was published last Julyappeared anywhere in the curriculum.

The responses uncovered "some alarming findings, showing that there is widespread omission of basic teaching elements," say the authors.

All the medical schools responded. Only four (15.5%) included physical activity in each year of the undergraduate course. Five (16%) did not include any specific teaching on it in their undergraduate courses.

See the rest here:
UK medical school teaching on physical activity virtually 'non-existent'

Poff, Tycoles like satellite med school idea

A stand-alone medical school for Brandon University may not be realistic, but the findings of the Brandon Medical Education Study to increase training of doctors in rural environments is encouraging, said Ross Tycoles, chairman of the Assiniboine Municipal Health Committee.

"Honestly, I think all along (a satellite medical school in Brandon) was their plan," Tycoles said. "Im disappointed that the stand-alone school didnt come through, but the fact is the satellite school will help and it will address the concerns rural communities have."

His view was shared by Brandon University president Deborah Poff, who called the study "a small step in the right direction."

"It doesnt surprise me that there would be no recommendation for an independent medical school," Poff said. "Given the context in Manitoba, I knew that was a long shot beyond belief and I had said that to a lot of people. The satellite school is a half step in that direction."

Poff said her disappointment with the report rests on a conservative implementation schedule of the findings, which includes more residencies in later years of the four-year medical school program and community campuses with teaching units geared towards practising medicine in rural areas.

The provincial government stated in a press release that six residencies were already planned for Brandon, Steinbach and the Boundary Trails Hospital between Morden and Winkler this year and the study called for more next year. A satellite campus of the University of Manitobas medical school in Brandon is listed as a possibility, if more students need to be accepted in the future.

"I think it will take a long while unless theres the political will within the implementation committee to move a little faster," Poff said.

"In every province where this has been happening, which is now the majority of provinces, its taken some political will and commitments. The recommendations are not bad, just extremely slow in terms of the time horizon."

Tycoles said the study recognized the "problem that has always been around" and dealt with those issues, but Dr. Derry Decter, a proponent for training doctors in rural communities, said the study doesnt go far enough, or fast enough to deal with the doctor shortages faced by rural and northern residents.

"There is a bit of a red herring in there," Decter said.

Read the rest here:
Poff, Tycoles like satellite med school idea

DMU medical school dean loses his position

The dean of Des Moines Universitys medical school has been forced out of the position by the universitys president.

Dr. Kendall Reed was the medical-schools dean since 2003.

Dr. Angela Franklin became the universitys president last year. When asked today about word that Reed was out as dean, university spokeswoman Kendall Dillon replied in an e-mail: Yes, President Franklin made that administrative change last week. Dillon said the move was not part of a restructuring. Its really just a leadership change, she said. There wasnt any wrongdoing or anything scandalous or anything like that.

The spokeswoman said Reed remains a tenured professor in the medical school, which trains osteopathic physicians. She said Dr. David Plundo, who was already an associate dean, has been named acting dean. Franklin will conduct a search for a permanent replacement. The spokeswoman declined other comment on the situation.

Reed, who is a surgeon, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Tags: Des Moines University, Dr. Angela Franklin, Dr. Kendall Reed

See more here:
DMU medical school dean loses his position

Drinking from a firehose: can research into the human mind help with medical school memorization?

Ive come across many analogies that try to convey the amount of memorization required in medical school. The most popular is drinking from a firehose. One physician writer put it like this: It was like being asked to enter a grocery store and memorize the names of every product in the store, their number and location, every ingredient in every product in the order in which they appear on the food label, and then to do the same thing in every grocery store in the city.

In medical school, we talk in terms of high yield and low yield information. Basically, everyone accepts that it is impossible to know everything or even close to it, so medical school becomes an exercise in figuring out what is most important. For every conversation about memorizing, there are also a couple of self-deprecating quips about forgetting. Ive had times where I studied something, took a short break, and then forgot what I was just reading. Is it sad? Yes. Demoralizing? Can be. But unique? Talking to other medical students, Ive found the answer is a resounding no. The consensus on memorization among my peers is comically Lake Wobegon in reverse: here, everyone is convinced (s)he is below average.

Are we inherently bad at memorizing? Are we just not programmed to be effective at learning everything the modern medical landscape demands from us? I wondered about that. But more so, I wondered about solutions. If we ask for help, most of us rely on casual tips from those who have gone through the process before us, and we try to assemble diverse anecdotes into a feasible personal plan. But research into the human mind and its ability to remember is vast. And that knowledge says that memorization is a skill that can be improved upon with strategy and practice.

What of that knowledge can apply to medical training, specifically? Which techniques can help information stick in ways that are meaningful, relevant, and ultimately useful for patient care?

***

Chunking. Our short-term memory can store and retrieve a limited number of facts and researchers have honed in that number. In 1956, cognitive psychologist George Miller published a paper providing evidence for seven being the magic number, plus or minus two. It was one of the most widely cited psychology papers ever, and Millers figures are ones that many in modern psychology circles still go by. What does that mean if you want to remember more than seven items? The solution involves breaking down or chunking larger sequences into smaller ones. For example, if you want to remember the ten digit sequence 6256493174, you could instead think of it as 6, 256, 493, 174. Or 62, 56, 49, 31, 74. Or some other combination, as long as its in a retainable number of chunks.

We remember chunks better than long sequences. In medicine, chunking is really a way of saying simplify and organize.

Does it work? In medicine, we constantly need to remember facts that relate to a particular umbrella subject. Chunking is useful as a guide in keeping relevant concepts together, within a range that is ideal for memorization. I know, for example, that if I am trying to remember bacteria, it helps to classify them into groups with each group containing facts of nine or fewer items. In that sense, perhaps chunking is little more than a fancy way of saying organizing with the additional recommendation of what size you should organize subjects into to increase your chances of retaining.

One issue is that chunking refers to a technique for short-term memory. In medical training, I care about knowing things for the long term. Can chunking still help? Psychologist opinion seems to say yes: chunking improves the transfer of short-term memory to long-term memory. Some have used the example of language to make this point, in that we regularly use single words or phrases to capture complex meaning and remember it in the long-term. Medicine uses similar principles. That is, whenever we have a medical term for a constellation of symptoms, a disease progression, or a type of treatment, we are actually chunking multiple concepts into a single phrase. Taken in reverse a single medical term connotes multiple ideas. Medical language enables us to memorize better by having us memorize in chunks.

The bottom-line on the usefulness of chunking in medicine is that its a way of thinking consciously about something we tend to do naturally organizing complex ideas into simpler ones. Having that conscious awareness of why condensing works can make the number of facts we are expected to learn in medicine less intimidating.

Follow this link:
Drinking from a firehose: can research into the human mind help with medical school memorization?

No medical school for Brandon: Study

Enlarge Image

The Brandon Medical Education Study was released Wednesday. (TIM SMITH/BRANDON SUN)

A stand-alone medical school at Brandon University proposal has been deemed ill-advised because western Manitobas population base is too small, according to the Brandon Medical Education Study that was released to the public on Wednesday.

Instead, the report offers a progression of steps, such as offering more residencies to Brandon and other hospitals, eventually leading to a satellite medical school that works in conjuction with the University of Manitoba.

"The study recommends focusing on more rural medical residencies and doctors, when they are in that final stage of their studies, they start making those decisions on where they want to practice and very often thats the point when they start putting down roots in the community," Manitoba Advanced Education Minister Erin Selby said. "Those decisions are often linked to where they want to where they want to practice afterwards."

The study examined how to recruit and retain more doctors to serve in rural Manitoba, and one of the recommendations to create more residencies in Brandon, Steinbach, as well as the Boundary Trails hospital between Morden and Winkler has already started. Ten more residencies are recommended to start next year, with increases of seven positions each year for four years also planned.

"Thats an effective way to encourage more doctors to practice in rural Manitoba because they have already started to develop connections with the community," Selby said.

There were other components to the 10 key recommendations listed in the report, such as ensuring rural students have access to medical school spots and that the University of Manitoba plan for an increase in the number of students wanting to work in rural, remote and underserved areas. Once the residencies are in place, rural clinical teaching units will be set up in Brandon and other communities for third- and fouth-year medical student.

While the 110 spots at the University of Manitoba medical school are considered adequate for the provinces population, plans to increase capacity to 130 students may be required, and its at that point a satellite campus could be considered for Brandon, Thompson, Steinbach, Boundary Trails and/or Dauphin.

"When we came into office, there were 70 seats in the medical school and now there are 110," Selby said. "A population of our size is probably best served with 110 to a maximum of 130, but should we be looking down the road at increasing seats, thats what the study recommends. We have a number of things already in place to help increase the number of doctors practicing in rural Manitoba. We have seen an increase of 100 doctors practicing in rural communities, including 30 more since 1999. The study reinforces some of the things we are already doing."

Here is the original post:
No medical school for Brandon: Study

A $6.7 million federal grant to UMass Medical to battle health disparities

By Kay Lazar, Globe Staff

Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Medical School say they will use a new $6.7 million grant to battle significant health disparities in the region by using a grassroots approach that features patients telling their stories to inspire others.

The school announced Thursday that it was awarded a five-year grant from the National Institutes of Health to establish a new Health Equity Intervention Research Center with scientists from UMass Boston.

Low-income patients, and those from certain minority groups, including African Americans and Latinos, often suffer disproportionately higher rates of diabetes, cardiovascular disease and other illnesses. The Umass researchers aim to test various cultural approaches to reduce health disparities.

Lead investigator Dr. Jeroan Allison, vice provost for health disparities research at UMass Medical School, said obesity is one of the most stubborn health problems in the Worcester area, a region with a large low-income population, and that can trigger a cascade of other health issues, such as diabetes and heart problems.

One of three programs the new research center will focus on is helping low-income, new moms lose excess weight after their pregnancies by increasing physical activity and improving their diets. The program will include nutritionists, peer leaders and encouragement from patients who have been successful in losing weight and who will share their stories, Allison said.

When someone looks like you and you see yourself in their world, you sort of enter their world and become more open and receptive to the idea, Allison said. It taps into the community itself as a source of wisdom, as opposed to putting all the authority on the physicans.

The idea of using storytelling comes from Allisons earlier work in Alabama that found that patients could better control their blood pressure if they heard stories from other patients who were successfully controlling their hypertension.

We found story telling to be amazingly effective, often as successful as prescribing a drug, Allison said.

The grant money will also be used to fund two other programs. One, in the Springfield area, will focus on the high rates of teen pregnancies and HIV in the Puerto Rican community by encouraging conversations between mothers and children about sexuality.

Here is the original post:
A $6.7 million federal grant to UMass Medical to battle health disparities

EVMS may become W&M School of Medicine

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (WAVY) - The Eastern Virginia Medical School is exploring the option of becoming the William & Mary School of Medicine, according to the college.

In a statement issued by both the College of William & Mary and the Easter Virginia Medical School, the possible change must be carefully investigated before a decision is made. The length of the process is unknown.

William & Mary President Taylor Reveley sent the following message Tuesday:

Later today we will issue a joint statement with Eastern Virginia Medical School saying that both institutions will take a long, hard look at whether EVMS should become the William & Mary School of Medicine.

There are miles to go and much information to be developed and studied before either W&M or EVMS will be ready to make a decision, one way or the other. Any such combination would require approval by the College's Board of Visitors as well as the Governor and General Assembly.

It will be important to engage the W&M community in consideration of this possibility. To that end,I will ask a group, led by the Provost, to pull the laboring oar on our due diligence.

In my view, the EVMS possibility is worth careful consideration. EVMS is an institution we know and respect. Many W&M graduates have gone to medical school there. And there has been productive research collaboration between the two schools.

Whether asking for state approval of this combination will ultimately prove to be in our best interests, all factors considered, is what we must now carefully determine. The same, obviously, is true of EVMS from its perspective.

If the choice is made to proceed, the General Assembly and Governor will have to approve.

Read the original:
EVMS may become W&M School of Medicine

EDITORIAL: W&M Medical School

That certainly has a nice ring to it, if it comes to pass. The news broke Wednesday that the College of William & Mary is in preliminary talks with Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk for some sort of merger that would rename the school.

The undergraduate and graduate science programs compel the college as a logical choice over other universities. For years, W&M has had a famous pre-med program that placed applicants at med schools all over the nation. Indeed, an early-admit program lets sophomores commit to EVMS as they continue toward their undergraduate degree. W&M President Taylor Reveley talked about a productive research collaboration between both institutions.

Wednesdays announcement had a big surprise element, as if to head off objections from Old Dominion University and Hampton University for missing the thrown bouquet. A merger by ODU came up last winter at the General Assembly, to no avail. Merger would seem to make more sense for ODU since the proximity is much greater.

This raises several questions.

What are the local implications? If all they do is rename the place, it would seem greater Williamsburg would miss out on substantial educational and economic benefits. If, however, a remote campus develops, the vacated land in back of Eastern State Hospital would be the obvious choice. The community group Crossroads identified the acreage for mixed use and research, so it would be perfect.

What are the state implications? The General Assembly has famously stripped state funding from William & Mary to a point where it comprises around 12% of the operating budget. If the Commonwealth underwrites a medical school, that percentage would go up, but only artificially so. The upshot is a wash for the rest of the college, except for prestige.

Is that all there is, prestige? ODU was once an extension school of William & Mary, and that worked out well. The prestige of a medical school connection would enhance the already-vaunted reputation of the college.

What are the cost implications? Medical schools are expensive to operate, so much so that they can drain a university. Close to home, Georgetown was lucky to sell its medical school some years ago and get out from under. William & Mary does not need a millstone, especially if it comes with operating deficits of millions or tens of millions.

Who decides? The legislature and the governor will make the call. This could become the next political football in the 2013 session, a major distraction just when Virginias public universities need more state funding for undergraduate schools. If a medical school sucks up all the oxygen (and money!), it will not serve us well.

Is this a done deal? Not hardly, according to official statements. But its fair to say things are pretty far along if the college is going public with the idea. It doesnt seem like the faculty have been consulted as a formal group, but surely the science profs are in the loop.

Continue reading here:
EDITORIAL: W&M Medical School

W&M, Eastern Virginia Medical School may join forces

WILLIAMSBURG Pre-med students at the College of William & Mary might be able to stay with their alma matter for medical school.

The college will consider merging with Eastern Virginia Medical School to create the W&M School of Medicine, the schools announced in a joint statement Wednesday.

Any action would require approval of the university's board of visitors, the governor and the General Assembly, President Taylor Reveley said in a letter to the campus community.

A group led by the provost will explore the possible merger with the Norfolk-based medical school, which Reveley said is "worth careful consideration."

"EVMS is an institution we know and respect," he said. "Many W&M graduates have gone to medical school there. And there has been productive research collaboration between the two schools."

W&M currently offers an early-assurance program that allows pre-med students to apply to EVMS the spring of their sophomore year.

The provost-led group tasked with exploring the merger will include faculty and administrators, said W&M spokesman Brian Whitson.

Wednesday's statement noted that the talks are exclusive, which Whitson said is standard practice in such situations.

That drew disappointment from Old Dominion University in Norfolk, where President John Broderick sent a letter to campus saying the discussion should be broadened to include ODU and others.

ODU was already eyeing a union with EVMS, he said, noting that a study about the two schools possibly merging was proposed but tabled at this year's General Assembly session.

See the original post:
W&M, Eastern Virginia Medical School may join forces

South Jersey celebrates grand opening of Cooper Medical School

CAMDEN After nearly four decades of efforts, South Jersey politicians and community leaders celebrated the grand opening of a new medical school in Camden today.

"This is part of a beginning," a beaming George Norcross, chairman of the Cooper University Hospital board, told a standing-room-only crowd today.

Norcross was instrumental in convincing then-Gov. Jon Corzine to authorize a medical school in Camden, but he wasnt the first in his family to have a role. His father, who was director of the local AFL-CIO, began banging the drum for the Camden school about four decades ago.

Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, along with the recent realignment of higher education in the state, will bring more than $1 billion of much needed development to Camden over the next decade, boost public safety, enhance education and transform the neglected city, Norcross said.

The new medical school will eventually enroll 400 students. But the first class, which begins next month, is limited to 50 students who were chosen from among 2,900 applicants willing to take a chance on a new school.

Gov. Chris Christie said politicians often overemphasize the importance of events, but that the opening of the medical school was not one of those occasions. He called it a "big deal" and said jokingly that his praise has "the added bonus of being true."

More than 300 people crammed into a 250-seat auditorium in the state-of-the-art facility for the opening, which marked the states first new medical school in more than 35 years.

The 200,000 square-foot-building took 17 months to complete at a cost of $139 million.

Many of the speakers at the hour-long dedication also praised the Legislatures recent approval of a higher education restructuring plan that dismantled the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, sending its School of Osteopathic Medicine to Rowan and giving the rest to Rutgers University.

"We will teach the rest of the world" how to embrace and impose change in higher education, Ali Houshmand, the president of Rowan, said in an impassioned speech that echoed the excitement of the day.

Here is the original post:
South Jersey celebrates grand opening of Cooper Medical School