Dirty Dutch Electro House 2010 Mix #8 [Re-Upload] – Video

27-04-2012 08:19 ? Lady Gaga - Alejandro (Afrojack Remix) ? Nari & Milani & Cristian Marchi feat. Luciana - I Got My Eye On You (Chuckie Remix) ? Kelly Rowland Feat. David Guetta - Commander (Afrojack & Bobby Burns One Touch Bootleg) ? Sidney Samson feat. Lady Bee Bizzey - Come On Let's Go (PH Electro Remix) ? Wynter Gordon - Dirty Talk (Laidback Luke Remix) ? Michael Mind Project - Feel Your Body (Dutch Mix) ? Wallpaper: Uploading ? MP3: Uploading ? Video: Made by ElectroBootlegMusic

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Dirty Dutch Electro House 2010 Mix #8 [Re-Upload] - Video

Brent Spiner, Wil Wheaton

29-04-2012 20:54 Canon 5d2, 300/f2.8L, 2X III, good but inadequate ballhead; Any technical issues are my doing and no fault of the camera. If you were there I was at the far end of the rink, if not here is part of one of a string of videos which I need to review and maybe stitch together. Uploading them will take time too, ~100 minutes on a better connection than I have at home for this one alone. Needless to say this was a phenomenal experience for me, and I expect to be tied up for the next month processing the take from it, never mind absorbing all the lessons learned! ETA The rest is in the upload queue now that I have a better grasp on how it all works.

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Brent Spiner, Wil Wheaton

Death Note Vs Code Geass (Anime Vs for May 2012) – Video

01-05-2012 02:36 This is the Anime debate for the Month of May 2012. No need to go super hardcore or start any hating. This is all for fun and keep in mind that I WILL remove any comments that DO NOT pertain to the discussion at hand when May 10th arrives. And PLEASE try not to argue in this video; save it for May 10th. Link to the CloudVillage collaboration channel. Rules For the Debate: 1. PLEASE start Uploading videos on May 10th 2012 and videos will stop on May 14th 2012. Any Video that is uploaded after May 14 will NOT BE COUNTED!!! 2. YOU ARE ALLOWED TO UPLOAD ONLY ONE VIDEO!!!! 3. If their are any comments that do not pertain to the discussion in a video about the topic then those comments should and WILL be removed. 4. When making a video you must have considerable or equal knowledge about both series. 5. A video must be longer than 4 minuets and if it is considered "Legit" than that Video will be awarded 4 POINTS!!! 6. When posting comments on other videos pertaining to the discussion, Long Comments over 400+ Characters will be awarded 2 POINTS!!! Short Comments lower than 300- comments will be awarded 1 POINT!!! 7. YOU WILL ONLY BE ACCOUNTED FOR ONE COMMENT PRE VIDEO!! (If your going to upload a video and have problems understanding the rules than PM me and I will get to you at some point before May 10th) LETS HAVE SOME FUN!!! XD

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Death Note Vs Code Geass (Anime Vs for May 2012) - Video

Just Mind – Episode 5 – Video

02-05-2012 07:10 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? LEGGIMI - READ ? ? ? ? ? ? ? - Bella raga bentornati con questo nuovissimo episodio ! spero che sia di vostro gradimento, inoltre vi invito ad iscrivervi ea mettere mi piace ea commentare ! una buona visione a tutti voi ciao belli =) ---------------------------------------- Tempo di Editing contando anche il rendering: 6 ore e mezzo Song: Hoodie Allen - Song For An Actress Program's Used: Cinema 4D - After Effects CS4 - Sony Vegas Pro 9.0 ---------------------------------------- Extra Tags: BIG HUGE Editing Pack Edit Package Stuff Overlays Film Burns Target Lock On Special Effects Awesome Great Sick Thanks 5k YT: Quality High Dare Zebo Edits Snipin Designs Cinematic Editing Tutorial After Effects New Ideas Music Background Adobe Outro Steeze Gypzy Desktop Background Logo Download Free Not Upload Without Permission Twitter Facebook Thanks Magic Bullet Looks Blu Duncan Ninja OpTic Feral Steeze Blake Designs Sony effect transition cray designs

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Just Mind - Episode 5 - Video

Main Show Only – Artificial Intelligence – Video

02-05-2012 11:19 Aerospace and defense systems developer Sir Charles Shults(1) revealed the latest advancements in Artificial Intelligence and virtual reality. Artificial brains that combine biological and computer elements are being developed, as well as 'robotic animals' such as live rats that can be remote controlled to search wreckage, he reported. Under development by Honda and GM are "self-driving" cars capable of maintaining speeds while driving between the road lines, he said. By 2025, Shults expects that humans will no longer be involved in warfare as their battles will be conducted exclusively by machines. Within five years, he believes fighter jets will be remotely piloted. The jacked-in reality of The Matrix is not far off, with electrodes and implants able to create virtual sensations and environments, said Shults. And as these interfaces become linked the Internet, even more possibilities will open up, including "on demand" virtual sexual experiences. Further down the road, he foresees "mind uploading" where a duplicate copy can be made of a person's brain, that will act and feel as we do. These minds might also be merged together for communal experiences, he suggested. WATCH THE LATEST VIDEO THAT CAME OUT TODAY HERE FAIR USE NOTICE: These Videos may contain copyrighted (©) material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available to advance understanding of ecological, political, human ...

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Main Show Only - Artificial Intelligence - Video

Two Winners Take Grand Prize in Penn Medicine's MyHeartMap Challenge

PHILADELPHIA Two Philadelphia-area residents have been named the winners of Penn Medicine's MyHeartMap Challenge, the citywide crowdsourcing contest aimed at locating and mapping all of the lifesaving automated external defibrillators in Philadelphia. Following a race the Challenge's directors described as "too close to call," Jennifer Yuan, an IT communications analyst, and Jack Creighton, an athletic director at Frankford High School, will each be awarded $9,000. Each winning competitor located more than 400 AEDs during the eight-week contest in February and March.

More than 300 individuals and teams participated in the Challenge. Together, they found, photographed, and submitted information about more than 1,500 AEDs in more than 800 unique buildings throughout Philadelphia County. Each one of the AEDs found represents fresh chances to save lives from sudden cardiac arrest, which kills more than 300,000 Americans each year.

The MyHeartMap Challenge research team congratulates each of the contest participants, who served as incredible informants in the effort to create a smart phone app and AED map to help 911 operators and bystanders locate the devices to use along with CPR while waiting for EMS to arrive during cardiac arrests in public places.

"Finding AEDs during this contest was a very hard task many AEDs, we found, are in places people wouldn't think to look during an emergency," says MyHeartMap Challenge director Raina Merchant, MD, an assistant professor of Emergency Medicine in the Perelman School of Medicine. "We're so impressed with the creative ways people sought out devices and provided us with information that we'll now be able to ensure that these devices are in the right place to save lives."

Merchant and her colleagues are now at work analyzing the data submitted by contest participants, and they hope to soon publish the results of the nation's first effort using crowdsourcing to save lives.

Among their goals, both in Philadelphia and in other cities where future MyHeartMap Challenges will be held: To help business owners make the devices more visible and accessible many found were stashed away in basements or closets and push for consistency in where the devices can be found during the emergency, much as fire extinguishers are placed in standardized locations.

In addition to the Challenge's individual winners, three Philadelphia schools -- McCall Elementary, Frankford High School, and Douglas High School will be awarded an AED by the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Youth Heart Watch for being the top three schools to find AEDs.

A special awards ceremony this summer will recognize all MyHeartMap Challenge awardees and businesses that were found to have exemplary practices in AED availability and staff training, and honor cardiac arrest survivors and bystanders who stepped in save them. Although the contest is over, contestants and other community members may continue submitting AEDs photos and locations at myheartmap.org to help the research team build the database and map.

The Perelman School of Medicine is currently ranked #2 in U.S. News & World Report's survey of research-oriented medical schools. The School is consistently among the nation's top recipients of funding from the National Institutes of Health, with $479.3 million awarded in the 2011 fiscal year.

The University of Pennsylvania Health System's patient care facilities include: The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania -- recognized as one of the nation's top 10 hospitals by U.S. News & World Report; Penn Presbyterian Medical Center; and Pennsylvania Hospital the nation's first hospital, founded in 1751. Penn Medicine also includes additional patient care facilities and services throughout the Philadelphia region.

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Two Winners Take Grand Prize in Penn Medicine's MyHeartMap Challenge

National Herbal Medicine Week Established to Celebrate the Safe and Effective Practice of Herbal Therapies for …

National Herbal Medicine Week is a chance for the public to find out more about this effective and safe form of medicine that has benefited patients for thousands of years.Jacksonville, FL and Bethesda, MD (PRWEB) May 02, 2012 The National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (NCCAOM®) and the American Association for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (AAAOM) are ...

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National Herbal Medicine Week Established to Celebrate the Safe and Effective Practice of Herbal Therapies for ...

University of Miami’s Interdisciplinary Stem Cell Institute Awarded $10 Million Grant from Starr Foundation

MIAMI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The University of Miami Miller School of Medicines Interdisciplinary Stem Cell Institute (ISCI) today announced that it received a $10 million grant from The Starr Foundation, one of the largest private foundations in the United States. The grant will support ISCI in broadening its preclinical and clinical research on stem cells, and help accelerate its pipeline of translational research and programs for a wide range of debilitating conditions including cardiac disease, cancer, wound healing, stroke, glaucoma and chronic kidney and gastrointestinal diseases.

This is a momentous and transformative gift for the Interdisciplinary Stem Cell Institute, said Joshua M. Hare, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.A.H.A., Louis Lemberg Professor of Medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and director of ISCI. We are so gratified that the level of science being conducted here was recognized by this very generous grant from The Starr Foundation. With this award, we join the ranks of the other major top-tier universities funded by The Starr Foundation. This support, along with our growing NIH funding, technology transfer, and other philanthropic efforts guarantees the stability of ISCI through the end of the decade, and will allow us to continue to push the boundaries of regenerative medicine with the goal of improving human health.

Stem cells and regenerative medicine are poised to transform the way we practice medicine, cure disease and treat injuries. To realize this potential, the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine is performing world-leading research at ISCI, said Pascal J. Goldschmidt, M.D., Senior Vice President for Medical Affairs and Dean of the Miller School of Medicine, and Chief Executive Officer of the University of Miami Health System. We are extremely proud of this recognition by The Starr Foundation that ISCI, and the Miller School of Medicine, are leading the way for stem cell and regenerative medicine breakthroughs.

Donna E. Shalala, President of the University of Miami, said the grant from the foundation will have long-reaching implications for future medicine. The team at ISCI is making new discoveries on a number of fronts and this substantial support from The Starr Foundation propels that work forward, both in the laboratory and in clinical trials.

For more on the grant, click here.

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University of Miami’s Interdisciplinary Stem Cell Institute Awarded $10 Million Grant from Starr Foundation

Bio-Matrix Subsidiary "First in Class" Approach to Stem Cell Medicine

SAN DIEGO, CA--(Marketwire -05/03/12)- Regen BioPharma (Regen), Inc. a newly-formed subsidiary of Bio-Matrix Scientific Group, Inc. (BMSN.PK - News) (BMSN.PK - News), unveiled today its operational plan for its "Super-Incubator" stem cell company.

Month 1-2: Assembly of Team. Regen intends to assemble a team of world-class leaders in the spheres of Technology, Intellectual Property assessment, valuation and Clinical development. Regen will seek to compile a team of Physician-Scientists with experience in the area of clinical trials for regenerative medicine/stem cell products, Regulatory experts who have successfully taken products through the FDA and corresponding agencies internationally, and Biotech Entrepreneurs who have track records of excellence in business formation and value optimization.

Month 1-4: In-licensing of Intellectual Property. The Company having already assessed over 20,000 issued patents and having compiled a shortlist of 30 targets; Regen will seek to execute licensing deals on an initial core of 3 technologies. Regen focuses on issued patents that have already passed preclinical studies but are not under clinical development.

Month 3-6: Interaction with Regulatory Agencies. Regen intends to develop data packages for each of the technologies and initiate interaction with Regulatory Agencies such as the FDA for initiation of trials.

Month 6-18: Clinical Implementation. Regen intends to launch clinical trials with world-leading institutions to obtain human safety data and "signal" of therapeutic efficacy.

Month 18-24: Exit. It is intended that technologies "incubated" by Regen will be spun off either as separate companies, or sold to Large Pharma companies seeking to enhance their therapeutic pipeline.

"At present there exists a wealth of intellectual property that is 'collecting dust' in the corridors of Academia. Given the field of regenerative medicine and stem cell therapy is so young, and the business models are fuzzy at best in terms of valuation, we see this space as a unique opportunity for acceleration of clinical development/value optimization," said Bio-Matrix Chairman & CEO David Koos about its Regen BioPharma. "Valuations for stem cell companies that have passed the threshold of clinical safety, with signals of efficacy are astronomical. The $1.8 billion Mesoblast-Cephalon deal, as well as recent financings of private companies with as little as 3 patient data such as Promethera ($31 million) or Allocure with 16 patients ($23 million), is testimony to the extremely high valuations that are characteristic of this space."

About Bio-Matrix Scientific Group, Inc.:

Bio-Matrix Scientific Group, Inc. (BMSN.PK - News) is a biotechnology company focused on the development of regenerative medicine therapies and tools. The Company is specifically focused on human therapies that address unmet medical needs. Specifically, Bio-Matrix Scientific Group Inc. is looking to increase the quality of life through therapies involving stem cell treatments. These treatments are focused in areas relating to lung, heart, circulatory system and other internal organs.

Through Its wholly owned subsidiary, Regen BioPharma, it is the Company's goal to develop translational medicine platforms for the rapid commercialization of stem cell therapies. The Company is looking to use these translational medicine platforms to advance intellectual property licensed from entities, institutions and universities that show promise towards fulfilling the Company's goal of increased quality of life.

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Bio-Matrix Subsidiary "First in Class" Approach to Stem Cell Medicine

Stimulus best medicine for UK, says BoE's Bean – FT

LONDON (Reuters) - A highly stimulatory monetary stance is the "the best medicine" to help rebalance Britain's economy, Bank of England deputy governor Charles Bean said in an opinion piece in the Financial Times on Friday. Bean defended the bank's stimulatory policy stance, which has come under renewed criticism as Britain slid into its second recession since the financial crisis. "The present ...

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Stimulus best medicine for UK, says BoE's Bean - FT

The New England Journal of Medicine Releases Documentary Film, Getting Better: 200 Years of Medicine

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) announces the release of a documentary film, now available on the NEJM 200th Anniversary website, in celebration of 200 years of continuous publication. Getting Better is a three-part, 45-minute documentary that explores the evolution of knowledge in medicine and some of the remarkable advances reported in NEJM, including the use of anesthesia in surgery, successful cancer therapies, and treatments for HIV/AIDS.

Weve made so many advances in the field of medicine over the last 200 years, and peoples lives have greatly improved as a result, says Dr. Jeffrey Drazen, editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine. As a journal, the New England Journal of Medicine has played a role as an observer and an informer, and this film is a reflection of what weve seen. As patients, we have all benefited.

NEJM was founded in 1812 when surgery was unsanitary and performed without anesthesia, cancer went undiagnosed, and there was no understanding of infectious disease.

The first part of the film, From Rough to Refined: The Rise of Surgery, takes the viewer from the first public demonstration of ether anesthesia in 1846 to a modern-day operating room, where Dr. Atul Gawande performs a thyroidectomy. A segment on leukemia, Targeting Cancer: The Story of Leukemia, covers Dr. Sidney Farbers first successes in the treatment of early childhood leukemia in 1948 through the development of the first targeted therapy in 2001, the beginning of personalized medicine. In The Plague of our Time: HIV/AIDS Epidemic, Drs. Tony Fauci and Paul Farmer recall the first cases of HIV/AIDS, how doctors came to understand and treat the disease, and how the epidemic has been part of a revolution in access to care and knowledge.

Each segment of the film traces the connection between research discoveries and current practice, telling the story through the voices of prominent experts, practicing clinicians, patients, and advocates. The documentary illustrates the importance of medical research in shaping clinical practice and patient care; and, how technological advances have changed the speed and trajectory of information sharing, transforming knowledge into action.

A Nancy Porter Production, the film was written and directed by Nancy Porter, an Emmy award-winning filmmaker who has made numerous documentaries for PBS including several for NOVA andAmerican Experience, and produced by Kathryn Dietz, who has produced films for Frontlineand American Experience.

About The New England Journal of Medicine

The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM.org) is the worlds leading medical journal and website. In 2012, NEJM celebrates 200 years of advancing medical science, practice and patient care. Each week, NEJM publishes peer-reviewed research and clinical content for physicians, educators and the global medical community. The New England Journal of Medicine is owned and published by the Massachusetts Medical Society.

Photos/MultimediaGallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=50261616&lang=en

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The New England Journal of Medicine Releases Documentary Film, Getting Better: 200 Years of Medicine

UT Regents Approve Austin Med School

The doctor isn't in, but he's on the way. Thursday, the UT Board of Regents gave the green light to creating a medical school on the Austin campus. The plan, if and when completed, will give the UT system a total of seven medical schools in the state.

With spring semester wrapping up, UT students are already signing up for summer school.

Zohaib Momin will be taking a full load to lock down a degree in chemistry. He plans to work in health care but if a medical school is built soon, a return to campus becomes a new option to consider.

"I was looking to a medical career, becoming a doctor, going to med school before and if a medical school opens up at UT that would be convenient because I live here in Austin. So I could apply for it and hopped to get in it," said Momin.

Thursday, the UT Board of Regents voted to make an annual $25 million commitment to establishing a medical school in Austin. An additional $40 million over the next 8 years will help fast track the process.

"This is something that was a wish and a desire not too long ago and now I think its something that we can see that w can get done, said UT Provost Steve Leslie.

The decision follows Seton Healthcare's multi-million dollar promise to help rebuild UMC Brackenridge Hospital. Keeping the medical school close to the new hospital complex will be the goal. The UT Tennis Center could be a possible site. But finding a location is just one of many steps that must be completed.

Legislative and state regulatory approval must be given. A search for faculty members launched. Plus, its estimated that an additional $35 million will be needed, every year to keep the school open. The extra money may come through a tax by the Central Health Care District, state appropriations, donations, and or federal funding.

"We have a great opportunity here I think what happens from here as a result of the approval form the board of regents sets the stage for what can be an great accomplishment for Austin, Central Texas and for Texas" said Leslie.

Within the year, administrators may have an idea when enrollment can begin for the first class of medical students. That could be anywhere from four to 10 years from now

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UT Regents Approve Austin Med School

Stanford professors propose 'lecture-less' medical school classes

Public release date: 2-May-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Ruthann Richter richter1@stanford.edu 650-725-8047 Stanford University Medical Center

STANFORD, Calif. Dramatic changes are needed in medical student education, including a substantial reduction in the number of traditional lectures, according to a perspective piece to be published May 3 in the New England Journal of Medicine by two Stanford University professors.

Medical education has changed little in the past 100 years despite dramatic changes in the world of medicine, the explosion in biomedical information and the ever-growing complexity of the health-care system. The traditional lecture format persists even as class attendance is plummeting and as many complain that the current system is failing to produce compassionate, well-trained physicians.

"Students are being taught roughly the same way they were taught when the Wright brothers were tinkering at Kitty Hawk," write co-authors Charles Prober, MD, senior associate dean for medical education at the Stanford School of Medicine, and Chip Heath, PhD, professor of organizational behavior at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. (Heath and his brother, Dan, also authored a bestselling book, Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die.) In contemplating medical education reform, Prober reached out to Heath because a critical goal of any educational effort is to optimize the retention of lessons to increase their "stickiness."

In their perspective, titled "Lecture halls without lectures," Prober and Heath propose a new approach to teaching to make better use of the fixed amount of educational time available to train doctors.

"That's the vision that we want to chase: education that wrings more value out of the unyielding asset of time," the authors write. "Why would anyone waste precious class time on a lecture?"

Prober also has been working closely with Salman "Sal" Khan, the Silicon Valley-based online learning pioneer whose nonprofit effort, Khan Academy, is widely credited, in the words of Bill Gates, for having "turned the classroom and the world of education on its head." Prober and Heath's perspective piece proposes a Khan Academy-styled "flipped-classroom" model of teaching. Lecture content is packaged in 10- to 15-minute videos that are watched by the students at their own pace and as often as necessary to learn the material. Class time is then freed up for more interactive education, with greater emphasis on patients' clinical stories as a way to increase the relevance of the necessary scientific and medical knowledge.

"Teachers would be able to actually teach, rather than merely make speeches," the authors write.

The core biochemistry class at Stanford medical school was redesigned this year to follow this model. The instructors replaced the lecture-based format with short online videos made available to students. "Class time was used for interactive discussions of clinical vignettes that highlighted the biochemical bases of various diseases," the article said. "Student reviews of the course improved substantially from the previous year, and class attendance increased from 30 to 80 percent, even though class attendance was optional."

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Stanford professors propose 'lecture-less' medical school classes

New Projections Show Medical School Enrollment on Pace to Reach Thirty Percent Increase by 2016

Newswise Washington, D.C., May 3, 2012New data released today show that enrollment at U.S. medical schools is on target to reach an increase of 30 percent by 2016, according to the annual Medical School Enrollment Survey conducted by the AAMC (Association of American Medical Colleges) Center for Workforce Studies.

U.S. medical schools are doing all that they can to address a serious future physician shortage in this country. Were pleased to see that enrollment continues to grow, both through the expansion of existing medical schools and the establishment of new ones, said AAMC President and CEO Darrell G. Kirch, M.D. But this wont amount to a single new doctor in practice without an expansion of residency positions.

Released during the centers 8th Annual Physician Workforce Research Conference, results of the survey show that first-year medical school enrollment is projected to reach 21,376 in 2016-17, a 29.6 percent increase above first-year enrollment in 2002-03. This puts projections on track to meet the 30 percent increase by 2015 that the AAMC called for in 2006.

Of the projected 2002-2016 growth in medical school enrollment, the survey found that 58 percent will occur in the 125 medical schools that were accredited as of 2002, 25 percent will occur in schools accredited since 2002, and 17 percent will come from schools that are currently applicant or candidate schools, according to the LCME (Liaison Committee on Medical Education). While some of these increases happened during the economic downturn of the past few years, more than half of the institutions responding to the 2011 survey (52 percent) indicated concern with their ability to maintain or increase enrollment due to the economic environment.

With the United States facing a shortage of more than 90,000 primary care and specialty doctors by 2020, according to AAMC estimates, an increase in federal funding to expand the number of residency training positionswhich prepare new doctors for independent practiceis essential to expand the overall supply of U.S. physicians.

Otherwise, it may become more difficult for medical students to complete their training and for patients to get the care they needas our population continues to grow and age, more doctors retire, and 32 million Americans enter the health care system as a result of the Affordable Care Act, said Kirch.

Resources for Media

To view the complete 2011 Medical School Enrollment Survey results: http://www.aamc.org/enrollmentsurvey

To download the AAMC Physician Workforce Research Conference agenda (May 34): https://members.aamc.org/eweb/DynamicPage.aspx?webcode=MeetingProfile&evt_key=D0BA2946-50C5-41DA-BAC1-1700782F5BBB

For more information on the physician workforce and the AAMC Center for Workforce Studies: https://www.aamc.org/initiatives/workforce/cfws/

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New Projections Show Medical School Enrollment on Pace to Reach Thirty Percent Increase by 2016