Keele medical school head is awarded an OBE

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THE head of Keele Universitys medical school has paid tribute to her wonderful team of colleagues after being awarded an OBE.

Professor Val Wass has been recognised in the New Years Honours List for services to medical education.

The school of medicine at Keele has gone from strength to strength since it was launched more than a decade ago.

Val, who joined the university in 2009, is also the first woman to be elected to the executive of the UK Medical School Council.

She said:It is excellent that services to medical education are being recognised and excellent for Keele that the achievements here are also being acknowledged. I am thrilled about this.

Vals OBE was officially announced on the same day her dad celebrated his 93rd birthday.

And she said the success was down to a collective effort at Keele.

She said: Its a hugely skilled and committed team on a wonderful, friendly beautiful campus.

I am truly grateful and very appreciative of all I have learnt here at Keele.

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Keele medical school head is awarded an OBE

Medical school at UNLV could mean huge economic boost for Las Vegas

Las Vegas, NV (KTNV) -- Southern Nevada currently lacks a medical school in which students can pursue an M.D.

Leaders in the business community gathered on Monday at the Metro Chamber of Commerce, to change all of that, believing the medical school is one the key's to our region economic future.

"When you have the largest region without a medical school, and you put a medical school in that region, good things happen", says Dr. Stephen Lang.

Dr. Stephen Lang of UNLV's Lincy has been a proponent of bringing a medical school to southern Nevada ever since the organization dedicated to improving Nevada's health, education and social well-being.

Research that shows Southern Nevada is losing millions and millions of dollars every year to nearby cities like Phoenix and Los Angeles as southern Nevadans continue to go elsewhere for medical treatment.

Lang believes the mistake was putting a medical school in Reno, instead of the state's largest city.

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Medical school at UNLV could mean huge economic boost for Las Vegas

111 jobs to be created over next three years in Martinsville

MARTINSVILLE, Va. -

A grant from the Virginia Tobacco Commission is helping to create jobs in Martinsville.

On Tuesday, Martinsville City Council announced the Integrative Centers for Science and Medicine & College of Henricopolis School of Medicine were given an $800,000 Tobacco Regional Opportunity Fund grant to assist in the development of a medical school in Martinsville.

111 new jobs will be created and $3 million will be invested over the next three years in the project.

The money will also allow renovations to be done on the Shackelford building and enable the medical school to lease three floors of the Jefferson Plaza building while construction is being completed.

Heres the news release from the City of Martinsville:

The Martinsville City Council is pleased to announce that the Virginia Tobacco Commission has awarded an $800,000 Tobacco Regional Opportunity Fund grant to assist Integrative Centers for Science and Medicine & College of Henricopolis School of Medicine in proceeding with the development of a medical school in Martinsville, creating 111 new jobs and investing $3.0 million over the next three years.

The Tobacco Commission award puts the medical schools Shackelford Campaign over its $1 million fund-raising goal, and will allow environmental hazard removal and interior demolition to begin on its Shackelford Building, originally donated by Dr. and Mrs. Mervyn King of Martinsville. The award will also enable the medical school to lease three floors of the Jefferson Plaza building formerly occupied by New College Institute for faculty, instructional, and administrative offices before building renovations are completed. On behalf of the City of Martinsville, we are extremely pleased that Integrative Centers for Science and Medicine & College of Henricopolis School of Medicine are moving forward with the medical school project and in particular, staying in our Uptown area. Under Dr. Boazs leadership, this project is gaining momentum and ultimately will have a significant impact to both Martinsville and the surrounding community. We offer congratulations on the success of ICSM and CHSM and look forward to continuing our relationship for years to come, said Danny Turner, Mayor of the City of Martinsville.

The City of Martinsville has worked in partnership with Dr. Boaz and ICSM/CHSM to move the project toward implementation. The City recently donated property needed for the expansion of the Shackelford Building located at the corner of Fayette and Moss Streets and in addition to the Tobacco Regional Opportunity Fund grant, the project also qualifies for local Enterprise Zone assistance offered by the City of Martinsville.

"Because of this financial commitment by the Tobacco Commission, Dr. Boaz's vision to create a medical school in Southside that will train primary care physicians who will treat people who live in underserved and underprivileged areas in Virginia, can now become a reality. This medical school will be a critical component of our ongoing efforts to ensure that all Virginians in both the rural and urban areas of our region have access to quality primary healthcare. As an ardent supporter of both Dr. Boaz and the Henricopolis School of Medicine, I know that this investment by the Tobacco Commission will greatly benefit the citizens of Southside for generations to come, noted Senator Bill Stanley and Virginia Tobacco Commissioner.

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111 jobs to be created over next three years in Martinsville

Medical Students And The M Word

Among all the pressures of being a medical student, the biggest challenge can be our own mental well-being.

Most of us probably thought wed finally made it when we secured a place at medical school, or at least I thought I had. However, its becoming more apparent that keeping our place can be even harder.

Friends and family begin assigning us with labels once weve achieved a place; were now the smart ones, the perfect and the elite. Its easy to talk about the benefits of medical school and were grateful to be on such a respected course, a course that many people unfortunately fail to get into every year.

So why is it that sometimes we are eager to brush the subject of mental health under the carpet?

While there is a lack of research into medical students suffering from mental health conditions, existing studies do suggest that medical students are occasionally more likely to suffer from depression compared to students on other degree courses.

But does this possibly suggest that medical students are less likely to come forward with any problems regarding their mental health? And why might this be the case?

The healthcare system is built on a cycle of competition. From the minute we click send on our UCAS applications, we willingly insert ourselves into a lifelong trajectory. It all starts with the race for a place at medical school. Eventually this evolves into a race for the best possible class ranking at the end of our five year degree. This only further progresses into the race for a spot at our desired hospitals to work as junior doctors. The competitive nature never ends. So is it therefore hard to seek support from our fellow classmates when in reality, theyre also competitors? Does revealing the most intimate parts of our lives only arm them with more ammunition against us?

Were now the smart ones, the perfect and the elite

Or do we keep our problems in the dark because of the constant striving for perfection? We might have left secondary school as the brightest and smartest. In a class of A/A* students however, it is incredibly easy to feel average. So we begin to compare ourselves to each other. We try to outdo each other with more revision and clocking more hours in the lab. The self-doubt inevitably starts to trickle in and we wonder whether weve made the right decision in picking a rigorous degree.

However, Tessa Davies, one of the pastoral tutors within the faculty, reiterates that this is perfectly normal,

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Medical Students And The M Word

Allen-Medical Campus rail station to be closed for a month

Metro Rails Allen-Medical Campus Station, soon to be integrated into the new University at Buffalo Medical School, will be closed for about a month, tentatively beginning Feb. 16 as construction proceeds on the new $375 million complex.

Thomas George, director of public transit for the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority, said planners decided to close one of the Buffalo subways busiest stations for an extended period rather than on an occasional basis to ensure the safety of commuters while heavy equipment erects structural steel and major construction continues.

The biggest reason for this is personal safety, he said. As theyre putting up structural steel, we just wont have the ability to have passengers in there.

And rather than closing it on and off during the spring, we said lets just get it done all in one period, he added. Were much happier moving in this direction.

In the meantime, George said, shuttle buses sponsored by UB as part of the project will transport the Medical Campus workers using the subway from Summer-Best Station, just north of the closed facility. Buses will pick up passengers arriving on Metro Rail trains at Summer-Best and take them throughout the Medical Campus, he said, as well as passengers boarding outside the shuttered Allen-Medical Campus Station.

Trains will continue to operate through Allen-Medical Campus, George said, but nobody will be able to enter or exit.

Already, much of the old subway station has been demolished to make way for its inclusion into the ground floor of the new medical school, resembling similar stations integrated into large buildings like those in New York City or Washington. While the below-ground boarding platforms at Allen-Medical Campus will be largely unaffected, the above-ground section will be drastically altered as it serves as the first floor of the new seven-floor medical school.

The station serves about 2,700 passengers daily, but Medical Campus officials project that ridership will grow significantly as employment there grows to levels approaching 20,000. New housing also has been sprouting around Metro Rail stations, with city officials attributing much of that growth to Medical Campus workers seeking a true urban lifestyle that does not require cars.

The new station also will feature a concession area a first for the Metro Rail system that George envisions as a grab and go food service and newsstand or possibly something more elaborate.

Once we issue a request for proposals, well see who wants to have a presence there, he said.

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Allen-Medical Campus rail station to be closed for a month

Dr. Rick Sacra Returning to Liberia to Help Rebuild

By Chelsea Rice

Boston.com Staff | 01.12.15 | 7:24 PM

Its been almost five months since Dr. Richard Sacra was released from Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha after a 20-day battle with the deadly Ebola virus. But hes ready to get back to work. Sacra contracted Ebola in Liberia at the end of August after working in a hospital clinic for medical missionaries under SIM. On Thursday, Jan. 15, Sacra will return again to Liberia.

This time though, it will be different.

When Sacra decided to return to Liberia in August (he had lived and worked there off and on for 15 years previously), he was answering the call of a struggling hospital clinic in crisis. Dr. Kent Brantly had fallen ill after contracting the deadly virus, and nurse Nancy Writebol was being evacuated the day Sacra landed in Monrovia, the district at the center of the outbreak where their ELWA Hospital was located. The hospital was closed because of the lack of doctors, so Sacra was flying to Liberia to fill the vacuum needed to keep the hospital open.

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It was a crisis momentthe hospital was closed and we were trying to get it reopened, Sacra said in an interview at UMass Medical School on Monday in Worcester. Now its more like there are already people running with the ball, and Im just hopping in to try to give it all a little push.

Its a little less stressful this time, to say the least. Sacra is there to lend a hand and help relieve some of SIMs overburdened staff who have been working around the clock to address all of the patient needs. You see, this isnt even an Ebola clinic. This is your typical hospital. But because of Ebola and a fractured health care system, people havent been able to receive care for other illnesses and issues such as diabetes or high blood pressure. Sick children and pregnant women havent been able to see a doctor in months because of the daunting and overwhelming Ebola crisis.

Sacra said hes hoping to do some work with the medical school there as well. Unfortunately, many of the faculty in the area medical school have left the country or lost their lives treating Ebola patients. While the threat of contracting Ebola itself presented a stressful element to Sacras first trip in August, this time Sacra is preparing himself for the absences--the faces he wont see, the colleagues who have lost their lives battling for the lives of their patients, and their own.

I know its going to be difficult seeing friends who have lost loved ones, said Sacra. But I need to give them support for what theyve been through. For instance, theres a doctor who passed away in October, and Im going to see his wifethats going to be heavy.

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Dr. Rick Sacra Returning to Liberia to Help Rebuild

U. of South Dakota medical school names new assistant dean

Posted: Sunday, January 11, 2015 9:05 am | Updated: 1:01 pm, Sun Jan 11, 2015.

U. of South Dakota medical school names new assistant dean Associated Press |

VERMILLION, S.D. (AP) The medical school at the University of South Dakota has named a new assistant dean of medical student affairs.

The Sanford School of Medicine has appointed Dr. John Wempe to the position. His duties include career counselling for medical students at the school's four teaching campuses and assisting students as they progress through their medical training to graduation.

He will also participate in the medical school's admissions process and recruitment programs.

Wempe is a native of Parkston. He comes to the University of South Dakota after a more than 30-year career in the military. He most recently served as the CEO of the Department of Defense Medical Examination Review Board at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Posted in State ap sd on Sunday, January 11, 2015 9:05 am. Updated: 1:01 pm.

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U. of South Dakota medical school names new assistant dean

AmScope 40X-2500X LED Lab Binocular Compound Microscope with Double Layer Mechanical St Quick Review – Video


AmScope 40X-2500X LED Lab Binocular Compound Microscope with Double Layer Mechanical St Quick Review
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By: Maynard Schuma

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AmScope 40X-2500X LED Lab Binocular Compound Microscope with Double Layer Mechanical St Quick Review - Video

NTU medical school kicks off move to new state-of-the-art premises

SINGAPORE: State-of-the-art classrooms and research centres are some of the facilities that can be found at two new buildings forming the dual campus of the Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine at Nanyang Technological University (NTU).

On Thursday (Jan 8), the school unveiled blueprints of the future facilities at a foundation stone laying ceremony that was attended by President Tony Tan Keng Yam, who is also the university's Chancellor.

Of the two buildings, the seven-storey Experimental Medicine Building, located next to the School of Biological Sciences on the NTU campus, will be the first to be completed by July this year in time to welcome students for the upcoming academic year.

Facilities at the Experimental Medicine Building will feature an expanded learning studio that is four times bigger than the existing facility, and can accommodate up to 200 students at one sitting.

Currently, students are using a similar but smaller learning studio located at the Research Techno Plaza within the NTU campus which can house around 50 students at one time. Lecturers can also teach from the centre rather than at the front of the classroom.

The aim is to encourage a more group-based and interactive learning environment, between students and faculty. The school said such a learning environment will also equip them with effective communication skills.

Said Professor James Best, Dean of the Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine: "Our medical education takes into account the way modern medicine is practised. Doctors work more and more in teams, learning (not only) with other doctors but also other health professionals. And so, communication is one of the most important aspects of medical training."

He added: "Medicine is also about addressing problems and problem solving, not just regurgitating facts. So, while all of our students need a good, basic knowledge of the principles of medicine, they also need to know how to apply that knowledge, how to work in teams and how to solve problems. And that's all part of our new pedagogy."

The 20-storey Clinical Sciences Building, which will be located at the university's Novena campus, will open its doors next year. It will have simulation wards as well as a laboratory where students can perform tasks such as stitching of prosthetic wounds on "patients".The Novena campus will house recreational and student facilities, such as a roof-top medical library.

Said NTU President Bertil Andersson at Thursday's ceremony: "Coupled with our strong links with Imperial College London, we are creating a multidisciplinary hotbed for innovative new ideas and approaches to solve tomorrow's healthcare issues.

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NTU medical school kicks off move to new state-of-the-art premises

Globe photos of the month, December 2014

Globe photos of the month, December 2014 Print

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Medical students wearing white coats held a die-in at Harvard Medical Schools Medical Education Center in Boston on International Human Rights Day. Demonstrations were also held at medical schools in New York, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere to protest the lack of indictments for police killings and to spotlight racial bias as a public health issue . (David L. Ryan/Globe Staff)

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As thousands marched through the streets of Boston to protest recent police killings of black men, a Boston police officer grabbed a protester who had knocked him off his bike on Tremont Street. (John Tlumacki/Globe Staff)

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Despite the cold temperatures, Alexander Pires, 5, walked with his dad, Eder Pires, and grandfather, Ahmad Darvesh, on the beach at Red Rock Park on the Lynn Shore Reservation in Lynn. (Lane Turner/Globe Staff)

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A man dressed as Darth Vader drew looks from a group of children at Park Street Station on Boston Common.. (Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff)

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Globe photos of the month, December 2014

New medical academy to open in Rancho Viejo

As UTRGV prepares for a new medical school multiple school districts across the Valley are providing their own students with educational opportunities in the medical field.

If you've driven on Expressway 77 through Rancho Viejo recently, you've probably noticed the new school rising from the brush.

It's South Texas Independent School District's new Medical Academy.

The 181,000 foot campus will serve more than 650 students in the fall.

"We want to improve the quality of life in the valley, that is our focus," Superintendent Dr. Marla Guerra said.

Guerra says classrooms are designed to mimic real life work before they send students off campus to learn.

"What we want to do is send our students to the medical school to shadow doctors," Guerra said.

In fact, the Medical Academy is the first high school in the country to provide a phlebotomy certification.

"Our kids are able to draw blood, and they use that training to work themselves through college. It's not an end in itself but a means to an end and that's a college degree, Guerra said.

South Texas ISD is not the only district placing an emphasis on medicine.

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New medical academy to open in Rancho Viejo

Key lawmaker's proposal: medical pot shops without dried pot

Originally published January 6, 2015 at 3:37 PM | Page modified January 7, 2015 at 2:03 AM

A leading Republican lawmaker has a novel proposal for reining in Washington's uncontrolled medical marijuana industry: medical pot shops that don't sell what most people think of as pot.

A bill being filed this week by Sen. Ann Rivers would create licenses for medical marijuana dispensaries and require product testing that's at least as strict as what the state requires in its recreational marijuana stores. But the medical stores could only sell edibles and marijuana concentrates, such as oil -- no dried bud. The products would be sales-tax-free.

"Recognizing the health concerns relating to smoking marijuana, the legislature intends to prohibit the sale of products that must be smoked at medical marijuana retail outlets," says a draft of the measure provided to The Associated Press.

Voters approved the medical use of marijuana -- although not its commercial sale -- in 1998, and in the last few years, the number of legally questionable medical marijuana dispensaries has skyrocketed. Officials worry they're undermining sales at the state's heavily taxed, recreational pot stores.

That's made reconciling the two systems a priority for lawmakers in the upcoming session in Olympia.

Rivers' bill is one of at least two major proposals. Another, being drawn up by Democratic Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles of Seattle, contemplates getting rid of medical dispensaries altogether. Instead, any shop that meet requirements could be licensed to sell pot for either purpose, with tax breaks offered on marijuana products targeted toward medical use.

Kohl-Welles would also eliminate collective gardens, allow home growing of up to six plants, and reduce excise taxes on recreational pot -- from a 25 percent tax applied up to three times, to a 25 percent tax applied once -- in hopes of making state-sanctioned marijuana more competitive with the black market.

But Rivers, of La Center, is in the majority leadership, which could give her measure, called the Cannabis Patient Protection Act, the inside track.

The bill makes a wide array of changes. Among them: creating a registry of medical marijuana patients and providers, and tightening restrictions on health professionals who authorize medical use. It would have the state Health Department determine what levels of THC, marijuana's main psychoactive compound, and what ratio of THC to other compounds would be OK for products sold in medical outlets.

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Key lawmaker's proposal: medical pot shops without dried pot

Winnecke, Pence meet about medical school

INDIANAPOLIS - Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke met privately with Gov. Mike Pence on Wednesday where the mayor said he reiterated the importance of the regional medical school project.

Supporters of the medical school campus proposed for Downtown Evansville are vying for nearly $50 million in state funding during this session of the Indiana General Assembly where lawmakers are writing a new, biennial state budget. The meeting between Winnecke and Pence, which took place in the governors office at the Indiana Statehouse, lasted approximately 20 minutes.

The governor is totally supportive, Winnecke said. He understands my position and why Im advocating for it to the extent that I am.

A key moment will come for the project on Thursday when the public will learn if Pence included funding for the medical school in his proposed budget.

Again based on my conversations with the governor, I understand he supports the project 100 percent, Winnecke said, and Im very hopeful that well have some good news to see in his budget on Thursday.

Even if the project isnt included in Pences budget, the push for funding is hardly over. The Indiana House typically uses a governors proposal as a starting point for discussion and often makes a series of changes before sending the measure over to the Senate.

I dont know what we are going to see (Thursday) but I feel good about what we are going to see. Is it the final product? Probably not. But I think everyone needs to remember this is a four-month process and ultimately its the Legislature that decides the budget, Winnecke said.

The Courier & Press is the only local media outlet with a reporter covering the Indiana Legislature every day in Indianapolis. Follow Chelsea Schneider's work each day in the Courier & Press, on courierpress.com, the Courier & Press mobile app and on Twitter, @ECP_ChelseaS.

For the medical school, the universities involved in the project made funding requests in relation to the space they intend to use. The Indiana University School of Medicine is requesting $19.2 million, while Ivy Tech and University of Southern Indiana are requesting $22.9 million and $7.3 million respectively. University of Evansville, a private university, also is planning programs in the school.

The campus would be located within the boundaries of Locust, Cherry, Southeast Fourth and Southeast Sixth streets. The campus would have a five-story tower connected to a two-story wing and house research labs, teaching labs and a simulation center, among other features, according to IUs state budget request.

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Winnecke, Pence meet about medical school