Stressing the humanity in medical humanities – UCI News

Stressing the humanity in medical humanities

UCI center offers compassionate perspectives on health and disease

by Jim Washburn

Suffer well may not be as inviting a salutation as Live long and prosper, but it was ideal for the title of a seminar series launched by the UCI Center for Medical Humanities in the fall of 2019. The idea around Suffer Well was to have speakers explore ways that suffering can become a portal to a more fulsome understanding of the human experience, says center director James Kyung-Jin Lee. To the extent that we can, we should alleviate suffering, but suffering can bring you a unique connectivity with other human beings. Albert Schweitzer, who himself suffered chronic illness even as he cared for other people, spoke of that as a brotherhood of those who bear the mark of pain.

Unfortunately, the series was truncated because of the pandemic. But, Lee notes, the surfeit of suffering caused by COVID-19 has brought a sense of immediacy to other topics the Center for Medical Humanities covers in its curriculum and research: How does a doctor find a positive, honest way to talk with a terminally ill patient about death? What can be learned from the journals of patients who have trod that one-way path? Do the racism and sexism of earlier medical practices echo through the pandemic response today?

Such dark tones are only part of the palette that the medical humanities bring to the study of illness, wellbeing and the states in between. Programs in medical humanities are not uncommon, but they generally exist within medical schools and are limited in scope. UCIs center, officially inaugurated in 2018 after gestating as an initiative for a few years bridges the School of Humanities, the Claire Trevor School of the Arts and the School of Medicine via a unique, interdisciplinary approach to health that encompasses research, curriculum development and community engagement. It has also offered undergraduate minor and graduate emphasis programs since 2016 and 2018, respectively.

Insofar as medicine is interested in the care of human bodies, Lee explains, the humanities and the arts also ask questions about bodies and embodiment but ask them in different ways that can shed new light on what stories our bodies tell.

Lee is an associate professor in UCIs Department of Asian American Studies. Hes also an Episcopal priest, which as much as anything spurred his passion for medical humanities. His pathway to priesthood included more than 400 hours of chaplaincy internship at a downtown Los Angeles hospital.

He recalls walking the halls of the oncology and surgery wards, talking with the patients, families and hospital workers. Im trained as a literary critic, but I was thoroughly ill-equipped to attend to the stories I witnessed there, Lee says. There was a whole other set of observational and analytical tools that I needed to develop in order to really be present for those very difficult stories that I had the privilege of hearing.

Lee became director of UCIs Center for Medical Humanities in 2019. He succeeded founding director and history professor Douglas Haynes, who along with family medicine professor Johanna Shapiro and the deans of the involved schools (Georges Van Den Abbeele and Tyrus Miller, humanities; Michael J. Stamos, medicine; and Stephen Barker, arts) were the prime movers in bringing the center into being.

While Haynes is now UCIs vice chancellor for equity, diversity & inclusion, his continuing work as a historian has included tracing the evolution and codification of the medical profession in the British Empire and the U.S.

He says the centers inception was a confluence of many things. Development of the proposal for it started around the time the Affordable Care Act was implemented, which elevated attention to healthcare in general and prompted people with research interests in health, healing and well-being to begin asking new questions.

We didnt know how large a community was forming here or how intersecting their interests were until we started having brainstorming sessions about the center, Haynes says. Its consequential when you get faculty who are very habituated to their own schools and professional disciplines to feel sufficiently open to the value of interdisciplinarity that theyre willing to step into this uncomfortable space that had never been done before.

The conditions for the center were there, he adds, but it made all the difference when Chancellor Howard Gillman, who was UCI provost at the time, launched an interschool excellence initiative. He created a very significant incentive to explore the possibilities, and thats what moved us forward, Haynes says.

The campus event announcing the center in 2018 included dramatic reenactments of scenes from Mary Shelleys Frankenstein. Since then, courses and research have varied widely, from how issues of health and medicine have been depicted on the theatrical stage from ancient Greece to the present day to how the nuclear age shaped impressions of health and medical care.

Sometimes the courses hold up an unflattering mirror to the history of medicine, in which the practices leading to medical developments were often no more advanced than the prejudices of their times. For example, Lee says, the foundations of obstetrics and gynecology in the 19th century emerged principally through the work of physician James Marion Sims, who performed experiments on enslaved women, obviously with no notion of consent. You have to wonder if history like that, Tuskegee and other events factors into the generalized skepticism toward vaccinations in Black communities today.

History professor Adria Imada, who teaches both undergraduate and graduate medical humanities courses, sometimes draws from her book An Archive of Skin, An Archive of Kin: Disability and Life-Making During Medical Incarceration, about the forced sequestration of persons with Hansens disease (leprosy) in Hawaii.

She also uses media and film in her classes, some taken from the arts, such as paintings, and others that might be framed as art, such as news footage from 1990 of people leaving their wheelchairs to crawl up the steps of the U.S. Capitol to demonstrate their lack of access. That may not have been on a theatrical stage, Imada says, but it was definitely a political stage, and it had profound outcomes in the fight for disability rights.

Insofar as medicine is interested in the care of human bodies, the humanities and the arts also ask questions about bodies and embodiment but ask them in different ways that can shed new light on what stories our bodies tell.

Many of the medical humanities students are looking toward careers in medicine. Dean Wong 19 pursued the medical humanities minor while majoring in psychology & social behavior. He says the course descriptions in the medical humanities syllabus were what made him choose UCI over other universities.

Wong now works at the UCI School of Medicine as a medical student coordinator, is one of the organizers of a Flying Samaritans medical clinic in Mexico and hopes to eventually earn a medical degree. He says his classes in medical humanities prepared him more than he had imagined.

Says Wong: Some of the memoirs that we read were very raw and made me realize that this is life for many people their struggles as patients dealing with the inequities of the healthcare system. It really made me want to become a voice for those people.

Originally published in UCI Magazine, Winter 2021

Images:Adria Imada teaches a Medical Humanities 1 course;UCI Center for Medical Humanities director James Kyung-Jin Lee; andFounding director and history professor Douglas Haynes. Photo credits: Steve Zylius / UCI

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Stressing the humanity in medical humanities - UCI News

What it’s like to specialize in endocrinology: Shadowing Dr. Correa – American Medical Association

As a medical student, do you ever wonder what its like to specialize in preventive medicine? Meet AMA member Ricardo Correa, MD, an endocrinologist and a featured physician in the AMAsShadow Me Specialty Series, which offers advice directly from physicians about life in their specialties. Check out his insights to help determine whether a career in endocrinology might be a good fit for you.

The AMA'sSpecialty Guidesimplifies medical students' specialty selection process, highlights major specialties, details training information, and provides access to related association information. It is produced byFREIDA, the AMA Residency & Fellowship Database, which allows you to search for a residency or fellowship from more than 12,000 programsall accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education.

Learn more with the AMA about themedical specialty of endocrinology.

Shadowing Dr. Correa (@drricardocorrea)

Specialty: Endocrinology.

Practice setting: Academic and VA hospital.

Employment type:Employed by a university and veteran hospital in Phoenix.

Years in practice:Five.

A typical day and week in my practice: My typical day starts with walking early in the morning as part of my daily exercise. Then I go to work where I divide my time into clinical, research activities and education (between staffing trainees, giving lectures to medical student and the administration of the fellowship program). Then I go back home to have some organizational meetings and spend the rest of my time with my family and relax.

In a typical week, I usually have some days where I have my own clinic and staff the fellows clinic other days. There is part of my week that I dedicate to my research and write grants and manuscripts. In addition, I dedicate between 1.52 days for the fellowship program, my activities to diversity and inclusion and an extra half day to teach medical students. During the weekend, I volunteer some hours in an underserved clinic where I worked as the medical director. One weekend a month, I also go to my military drill as per my U.S. Army Reserve responsibilities.

The most challenging and rewarding aspects of endocrinology: Endocrinology is the perfect combination between science and medicine. Many of our patients, if we find out that they have a hormonal abnormality, we are able to replace them and help the patient feel excellent. The most challenging aspect of my patient population is that we deal with chronic conditions like diabetes and sometimes patients dont like to follow our recommendation, so we need to increase medication. Another challenging thing is that diabetic medication is expensive, and some patients cannot afford them. You feel frustrated when this happens.

The most rewarding aspect of endocrinology is many things. Seeing how you can change the life of a patient because you are treating their condition has no price. Dealing with underrepresented minorities and making them feel good and providing them the best care for their chronic condition is very special for me. Discovering new ways to manage patients through research is also very rewarding in my life.

How life inendocrinology has been affected by the global pandemic: We moved to telemedicine during the COVID-19 pandemic. There has been a positive and negative aspect of this. The positive is that the patients who have a chronic condition like diabetes and obesity are more compliant with the appointment. This translates to us seeing them more frequently, plus they are compliant with the medication.

The negative side is that more complex conditions that need to be seen in person sometimes are not coming in and we dont do a full physical exam. In the area of teaching, the learning has changed because the fellows dont have the opportunity to see all the patients face-to-face.

The long-term impact the pandemic will have onendocrinology: The impact is that we are now doing telemedicine. I always see the good part of everything and for us, having telemedicine is very beneficial for the patients with diabetes and obesity because they are more compliant with the appointment and the treatment. Also, some of the social determinants of health can be addressed during the telemedicine visit and we are doing that. I see that the future will be a mix of telemedicine and face-to-face visits.

Three adjectives to describe the typical endocrinologist: Creative, passionate and caring.

How my lifestyle matches, or differs from, what I had envisioned: The life that I have as an endocrinologist, scientist and educator is what I envisioned when I was in medical school. I have time to make change not only for my patients but also to the population near my area, in the country and to the next generation of physicians. My work-life balance is fine because I have time that I dedicate to my family. I am very happy because I am doing what I really like and that makes my work very easy.

Skills every physician in training should have for endocrinology but wont be tested for on the board exam: The most important skill that trainees should have for this specialty is being creative. It is about always trying to find the answer to a problem as well as correlating symptoms with laboratory and imaging work, making a diagnosis and finally giving them the most appropriate treatment. Hormonal world is not an easy world. There are many things that are difficult to make a diagnosis and many symptoms that overlap. Being creative and always thinking outside the box will need to be a must for the ones that are thinking about endocrinology.

One question physicians in training should ask themselves before pursuing endocrinology: The questions that you should ask yourself if you are planning to come to endocrinology are:

If you answer yes to the questions above, you are ready to become an endocrinologist.

Books every medical student interested in endocrinology should be reading: The two most important books of endocrinology cover the basic concept of endocrinology:

The online resource students interested in endocrinology should follow: Endotextit is an online book that covers the entire endocrine world and is free. I always look for any of the common conditions in the best evidence-based medicine source which is Dynamed. Many of the answers for endocrinology can be found there. The amazing thing is that everything that comes from research has been appraised and they give you the level of evidence.

On social media, there are several accounts including @ypsendo, @endojournalclub and @medscapeendo that provide information about endocrinology. Finally, I follow the Endocrine Society, Endocrine News, American Association of Clinical Endocrinology, American Diabetes Association, American Thyroid Association, and American Society for Bone and Mineral Research on social media because they all really care about education and promote endocrine learning.

Quick insights I would give students who are considering endocrinology: Endocrinology is a fascinating world. You can achieve many goals in your life. You can be an expert clinician, an amazing scientist and an outstanding educator. You can discover things that will change the future of medicine. I really recommend everyone that has an interest in endocrinology to explore the possibility. We need a lot more people like all of you. If you have any questions, I am available to talk to all of you about this.

Mantra or song to describe life in endocrinology: Puedes llegar, (You can make it) by Gloria Stefan.

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What it's like to specialize in endocrinology: Shadowing Dr. Correa - American Medical Association

ASU ranks 6th in research among US universities without a medical school – The State Press

Photo by Mitchell Atencio | The State Press

"University officials credit the success to their transdisciplinary approach to major problems, claiming a different path of solutions than traditional research." Illustration published on Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021.

ASU has ranked 6th in the nation for research expenditures among universities without a medical school in the 2019 fiscal year.

The National Science Foundation recently released its annual Higher Education Research and Development rankings for research expenditures among universities nationwide.

In the 2019 fiscal year, ASU's expenditures totaled $639.6 million, almost $22 million more than the previous year.

A University press release said much of the funding has come from investments by federal agencies including NASA and the NSF as well as local grants and philanthropic contributions among others.

ASUs Knowledge Enterprise Executive Vice President Sally Morton said in the press release that ASU researchers are capable of solving major problems through their transdisciplinary approach. Morton began her new role Feb. 1 and is one of the successors of former lead Sethuraman Panchanathan, who is now the director of the NSF.

"I am confident we have the capabilities to discover impactful solutions to pandemics, climate change, cybersecurity and emerging health issues all of which will challenge humankind well into the future," Morton said in the release.

ASU's Biodesign Institute has also been at the forefront of COVID-19 research and testing in Arizona. The University has established over 100 testing sites across the state and developed a saliva-based test for faster results and more efficient testing.

COVID-19 research at the institute is led by Biodesign Director Joshua LaBaer. LaBaer said in the release that fast and easy testing is crucial for returning to in-person activities.

As we return to the workplace, schools and other daily activities, testing early and often is going to be the best way to help us prevent the spread of COVID-19, LaBaer said in the press release.

Another of the University's recent focal points is the Mastcam-Z. The camera system will provide visuals for Perseverance, the newest Mars rover, upon its landing this month.

The development of Mastcam-Z was led by researchers of the School of Earth and Space Exploration. The rover launched in July 2020 and will touch down on Mars later this month with Mastcam-Z at its head.

READ MORE: Mars 2020 Perseverance rover launches equipped with ASU-developed camera

The HERD rankings account for where and how much funding is spent at each university. In these rankings, ASU kept its No. 1 spot in expenditures for anthropology and rose to No. 1 in the fields of geographic and earth sciences as well as transdisciplinary sciences.

ASU also ranked fourth in social sciences and business management, 11th in psychology, 12th in electrical, electronic and communications engineering, and 14th in civil engineering.

The University also placed third among universities with NASA funding, 10th in health and human services funding, and 23rd for NSF funding.

Reach the reporter at gmlieber@asu.edu and follow @G_Mira_ on Twitter.

Like The State Press on Facebook and follow @statepress on Twitter.

Continue supporting student journalism and donate to The State Press today.

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ASU ranks 6th in research among US universities without a medical school - The State Press

The media falsely claims schools are safe: What the science actually says (Part two) – WSWS

This is the second part of a two-part article rebutting a commentary published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Viewpoint, which claims school reopenings are safe. Part One can be read here.

The authors of the JAMA article could have also referenced recent news reports from Austin, Texas, that found positivity rates in schools had climbed over 20 percent. A study conducted by researchers in Michigan and Washington state found that when community infections were low, reopening schools did not seem to make the outbreaks worse. However, when infection rates climbed, schools did contribute to community spread.

A physician and public health professor at George Washington University, Dr. Leana Wen, offered a candid assessment, So, there are two issues: One is that we dont have enough contact tracers all across the country. The second problem is that the community prevalence is just so high that its going to be very difficult to sort out where the infections are originating from.

The CDC has acknowledged that most COVID-19 cases are caused by people who are either presymptomatic or asymptomatic but has deliberately failed to connect these findings to the dangers posed by such transmissions in schools.

Part of the answer to this important question was found in a study funded by the US military and published in the New England Journal of Medicine in December involving Marine recruits during quarantine .

A total of 1,848 recruits volunteered to participate in the study. The average age of these recruits was between 18 and 21, which is just older than high school students, making the results relevant to the question of the pandemics course in schools.

Before entering boot camp, the recruits quarantined for two weeks at home and then two additional weeks on a closed college campus. This involved wearing masks, socially distancing and undergoing daily monitoring of symptoms that included temperature checks.

The volunteers had SARS-Cov-2 PCR testing conducted within two days of their arrival, and again on day 7 and day 14, their last day of supervised quarantine. In the first two days, 16 recruits tested positive, but only one had developed symptoms. By the end of the second week, 35 more participants were found to be infected. Of the 51 volunteers that tested positive, only five had symptoms in the week before their test. That means that less than 10 percent of young adults in this well-controlled study presented with any symptoms.

Additionally, no SARS-CoV-2 infections were identified as a result of daily symptom monitoring. These findings have significant relevance to school openings and highlight that even under the best circumstances, identifying cases among young people will be challenging.

One essential factor that the Democrats, the CDC and the bourgeois press keep silent on is that school closures are a crucial mitigating measure to aid in curtailing community transmission. Teachers and students must have safe environments to conduct classes without fear of becoming infected. But the principal reason for school closures is to suppress the transmission of the virus to protect health systems and avoid further loss of life and spread of disease among the population as a whole.

President Biden and his nominee for education secretary, Miguel Cardona, have gone on record to say that school closures would not help mitigate the pandemic. But it is precisely here that the CDC and proponents of school reopening have avoided referencing the following studies delineating the public health benefit of closing educational institutions:

In a JAMA study published last July 29, the authors had found that statewide school closures in the first wave of the pandemic led to a decline in the incidence of COVID-19 of 62 percent per week. Similarly, mortality saw a 58 percent decrease per week. States that closed earlier saw the most significant relative change per week.

According to a study published in Science , looking at various government interventions used against COVID-19, the combination of the closure of schools and universities, limiting gatherings to 10 people or less, and closing most nonessential businesses reduced the reproductive number, R0, to below one. In other words, it led to an overall reduction in the number of infections in the community. Among the interventions listed, school closures and limiting gatherings to 10 people had the highest impact on mitigating the pandemic.

In a Nature study published in November that ranked the effectiveness of worldwide COVID-19 interventions, the cancellation of small gatherings, closure of educational institutions, border restrictions, increased availability of PPE and individual restrictions were statistically significant in reducing the reproductive number, R0.

A German discussion paper published last July that evaluated the effectiveness of school closures and other pre-lockdown COVID-19 mitigations across three countries, Argentina, Italy and South Korea, found that early interventions that included school closures reduced the total number of COVID-19 deaths and helped flatten the epidemic curve. The authors write, Our preferred estimatesthose that in the main analysis are obtained with the smallest root mean squared prediction errorindicate that the interventions prevented 84%, 29%, and 91% COVID-19 deaths in Argentina, Italy and South Korea, respectively, in comparison to a counterfactual projection. These results are robust across different specifications and show that the effectiveness increases the earlier interventions are enacted. ... The later schools were closed nationwide during the course of the pandemic, the lower the effectiveness of this measure.

The argument being put forth by the Biden administration and the Democrats is a deliberately misleading one. When they assert that school closures do little to halt the pandemic, they mean that without all other aspects of non-pharmaceutical interventions in place, school closures will do little to control community spread of the virus. The study published in Science corroborates that by itself, schools are insufficient to bring the reproductive number under one.

That is not an argument for reopening schools, but for making the closure of schools part of a whole-society effort to control the coronaviruss spread. The fight to prevent school reopenings must be conducted with the struggle to implement a lockdown of nonessential businesses, with full income support for all the workers and small business owners affected.

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The rapid developments of new variants of the coronavirus, such as the B.1.1.7 (also known as the UK variant), circulating widely in the US and many other nations, raises significant new problems for fighting the pandemic. The N501Y mutation in the spike protein of the variants has not only made them more contagious, but it also seems it makes the virus more lethal. There is some evidence that they may also be impacting younger people more severely.

Dr. David Strain, a British physician treating COVID-19 patients and an instructor at the University of Exeters medical school, has seen a rise in admissions to hospitals among younger people and women. He found that the average age of admission to the ICUs has declined from December to January.

After many months of genomic stability in the virus, suddenly, three distinct versions of the SARS-CoV-2 virus on three separate continents have independently acquired similar mutations involving their spike protein. According to a new report published in Wired, that pattern is what scientists refer to as convergent evolution, and its a sign of trouble ahead. This means that separate SARS-CoV-2 viruses have acquired similar mutations that help them evade the human immune response. Examples of convergent evolution in nature include such concurrent and independent phenomena as the evolution of flight by bats, birds and insects.

Dr. Stephen Goldstein, an evolutionary virologist, explained that the variants becoming more infectious is a real benefit to them, from the standpoint of their survivability. They have arrived at the same solution to their dilemma at the same time. If random chance created these mutations, it would improve their odds to acquire the ability to invade as many people as possible. However, it appears that there are selective pressures to these mutations which aid the virus to evade a persons immune system. Vaccines could create these selective pressures as well, but they have been introduced too recently in the course of the pandemic to be the dominant factor presently. (See the link to the study: mRNA vaccine-elicited antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 and circulating variants .)

According to Dr. Goldstein, The convergent evolution of wilier versions of the virus might just be a consequence of so many poorly managed government pandemic responses, which didnt marshal sufficient resources or inspire the kind of collective action required to not just crush the initial curve, but keep it crushed.

However, as the virus runs rampant and governments attempt to vaccinate the population quickly in ways that violate protocols without containing the epidemic and looking to force schools open, the consequences could well be additional convergent evolutions that produce an extremely virulent strain of the coronavirus.

This danger was stated most succinctly last week by Dr. Katherine OBrien, director for Immunizations, Vaccines and Biologicals at the World Health Organization:

Risk of variants relative to the vaccines is ever greater when the transmission is very high in the communities. Not only because of variants that have occurred but because of the possibility of additional variants emerging under the pressure of vaccines. We have these amazing tools, and the urgency is to deploy them. But we risk something about those tools if we are also not suppressing transmission to the maximum degree possible where those tools can be effective is setting when there is limited transmission. We have to emphasize about the importance of really crushing transmission now while we are rolling out these new vaccines.

The ruling classes see school openings as necessary to maximize surplus value extraction out of the population. As Bidens top economic aide Brian Deese told a Reuters conference last month, We need to get the schools open so that parents can get back to work. The Biden administration and the Democratic Party, backed by the teachers unions and the Republicans, are playing with fire.

The well-being of the community cannot be left in the hands of any government that places the enrichment of the financial oligarchs over its populations well-being. The concerns being raised by teachers and workers worldwide are validated by the science that must guide humanitys struggle to rid itself of an economic system that not only is a dead weight on social progress, but threatens mass extermination on an unprecedented scale. The pandemic is such a scourge, with the contradictions of capitalism blocking a serious, science-driven response that prioritizes saving lives, not corporate profit.

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The media falsely claims schools are safe: What the science actually says (Part two) - WSWS

‘We’re in a storm’: medical students on the Covid frontline – The Guardian

Abbi Bow, a second-year medical student at the University of Bristol, was just 19 when she began working at one of the citys hospitals on the Covid frontline.

I realise it is a young age to see and work with people on the edge of life, she said. And I do think a lot about the patients I looked after who didnt make it. I remember their names and faces. I dont know if that will ever leave me. Sometimes I see a person in the street who looks like a patient that died and it hits you youre back there with them.

But Bow turns this into a positive. After I become a doctor I will have already been exposed to so much. Learning how to cope with this now will be a benefit in the long term.

When they worked for their A-levels and dreamed of medical school, young people like Bow could not have imagined they would be caught up in a coronavirus crisis.

But more than 500 students from the University of Bristols medical school have donned PPE and worked alongside doctors and nurses in hospitals and GP practices during placements, as volunteers or as healthcare assistants. Many thousands more across the county have done the same.

Bow, now 20, took on a post as a healthcare assistant in April last year and juggles the job with her studies. She works intimately with patients, helping them wash, dress, eat and drink. Some cases stick in her mind.

Quite recently I was helping care for a patient with Covid, said Bow. He was talking but clearly exhausted. His body was tired from fighting Covid. He didnt make it. Its heartbreaking, a very weird experience. Its almost as if the person disappears but the body is still there. His wife is now a widow, his child doesnt have a parent any more.

She helped another patient say goodbye to loved ones via a computer screen because they could not visit. I sat there most of the day holding his hand and playing his favourite music. I was this stranger in full PPE holding his hand but I like to think I brought some comfort.

A third patient Bow worked with was in a coma and looking extremely ill. Then I went in for a shift and she was sat up in bed eating yoghurt. I thought: That cant be the same person. She went over and chatted about the bright pink nail polish the patient was wearing, which her granddaughter had applied before she went into hospital. Its great to think the intervention from us worked and helped her body to fight back. Thats a sweet memory.

Bow remains optimistic. Its sometimes difficult. You wake up and its Groundhog Day. Were not seeing friends and family or going out for dinner or the gym, doing the things we love. Its good to hold on to the idea we will be able to do these things in the future. Once we can, I think well cherish them more.

Luke Ottewell, a 22-year-old fifth year student, has been placed at Gloucestershire Royal hospital helping junior doctors by carrying out tasks such as taking blood samples, inserting cannulas and ordering X-rays.

He was sent home to Spain from university during the first lockdown last spring. But I realised Id rather be here helping out. Ottewell returned in the summer and got stuck in.

Like his fellow fifth years, he has had to balance revision and caring for ill people. His routine as he prepared for his finals was to begin revising at 6.30am, work a 9am-5pm shift at the hospital and then get back to the revision from 5pm-9pm. It has been easier to get out of bed in the morning because of the desire to help out during a national emergency, he said.

Andrew Blythe, the director of the universitys medical programme and a part-time GP, said the students had been exposed to more trauma and stress than most of their predecessors.

Undoubtedly, they are seeing more sicker patients, he said. When they experience death for the first time it is a very powerful and moving experience.

A few have paused their studies because of physical or mental health issues but nobody has dropped out. Their experiences are going to have a profound effect on their whole understanding of medicine. I think for a lot of them the pandemic has motivated them.

Chanelle Smith, another fifth year student aged 22 working with critically ill patients at the Gloucestershire Royal, said her duties ranged from taking bloods to writing discharge summaries. She is about to begin working on the vaccination programme.

Were in a storm, she said. Its hard to remain positive but if we can come through this tunnel well all be so proud. Working in such challenging times makes you stronger. I think its increased my resilience. Its been nerve-racking, humbling, exciting but I feel Im more prepared to be a doctor.

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'We're in a storm': medical students on the Covid frontline - The Guardian

‘A Lot Of Stress’: Medical Student Shares Her Experience Through The Pandemic – 90.5 WESA

Breanna Ngyuen, 27, a medical student at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, had just finished her second year of medical school coursework when the coronavirus pandemic took hold last spring.

Nguyen, of Orlando, FL, had been preparing to enter what many consider one of the most challenging and important years of the medical school journey, when students have several exams and complete clinical work in order to graduate.Instead, Nguyen decided to take a year off and conduct outside research because all in-person instruction and testing centers closed.

I know this caused a lot of stress for me and many of my classmates, and this was definitely one of the biggest challenges as a medical school student during the pandemic, Nguyen said.

Ngyuen says one of the things she misses most about in-person instruction was getting to interact with patients and classmates. Because Ngyuen is taking a year off, shes no longer in the same graduating class as when she began her medical school career.

With COVID and rotations together, it can get really isolating," Ngyuen said.

Ngyuen has been able to conduct in-person research at the Biomedical Science Tower in Oakland since the facilitys reopening in June, but the work requires physical distancing, temperature checks upon entering the building, and lots of sanitization.

Despite the hardships so many medical students have faced through the pandemic, Ngyuen said she's optimistic.

Overall Im extremely impressed with how adaptable everyone has been and how well people have been adhering to guidelines and so that we can keep each other safe," she said. "And progress our research at the same time. My research year has been really rewarding thus far, and Im looking forward to continuing out the year in the lab and returning to rotations in the late spring and summer."

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'A Lot Of Stress': Medical Student Shares Her Experience Through The Pandemic - 90.5 WESA

Premed in a pandemic: The student perspective of applying to medical school in the age of COVID-19 – Arizona Daily Wildcat

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the healthcare system has been strained to its limits as it attempts to accommodate a rapid influx of patients. Many hospitals are at or near capacity and facing issues related to understaffing. Meanwhile, a record number of pre-medical students submitted applications this year, hoping to one day join the medical field.

Medical school applications require both a rigorous course load as well as a slew of extracurriculars that often include research, clinical shadowing and volunteering. Additionally, and perhaps most importantly, students are required to take the Medical College Admissions Test, a seven-and-a-half-hour standardized test on science fundamentals.

The COVID-19 pandemic greatly disrupted every part of the application process with classes and volunteer opportunities shifting online. MCAT exams were canceled and the format of the exam was shortened to accommodate these circumstances.

In order to learn more about how the pandemic impacted pre-medical students, the Daily Wildcat spoke with junior physiology major and Alpha Epsilon Delta social chair Nadia Clarke about her experience navigating both a competitive application process and a global pandemic.

Daily Wildcat: Can you tell me a bit about where you are in your pre-med journey so far?

Nadia Clarke: Im a physiology major and a biochemistry and public health minor, so I do have a majority of my credits done. I plan to take the MCAT in March, so Im currently studying for that. After that, Ill be applying, and the deadline for applications is towards the end of June, so I have to have everything completed like my applications, my rec letters, my MCAT scores before then. Im currently volunteering. Im currently doing research, all that good stuff.

DW: How would you describe how COVID-19 has impacted your ability to build an application for med school?

NC: A lot of the things I participated in were canceled. For example, all the undergrads were kicked out of the lab I was working with. So that was a little hard to hear. Then, I know Banner [Hospital] shut down. Ive been volunteering at the hospital since I was a junior in high school.

Im currently volunteering at a clinic in South Tucson. Its called Clinica Amistad, and theres a lot more precautions, obviously. We have to separate appointment times a lot more, and were doing temperature checks, and now everyone does a COVID-19 questionnaire prior to coming in to check for symptoms.

Im also a volunteer at another Tucson organization called Tu Nidito. I work with kids who are either grieving the loss of a loved one or are trying to make sense of a diagnosis. We would go in and sit with these kids and give them an environment where they feel comfortable to be able to talk about death and the permanence of death. But now, with everything happening and since they are so high risk, we have to do it over Zoom.

That can be extremely difficult because they are kids. As college students its been difficult enough for us to sit in front of a classroom for an hour-and-a-half, but to make a three-to-six-year-old try to sit in front of a Zoom and talk about subjects such as death; thats been especially difficult and heartbreaking overall.

DW: Schools across the nation have transitioned to mostly online learning. Do you feel like this has affected your academic experience?

NC: Its been weird because there have been pros and cons to being on Zoom. For example, I can be in multiple places at once. I can be writing an email, and I can be in a Zoom meeting. That has actually helped greatly because Im taking 26 credits. So its been a lot easier to focus on multiple things at once. Especially being a premed, that was one of the biggest difficulties being in person like you cant be at multiple places at once.

But while it has been nice being flexible, it has also been difficult because Im not getting in-person instruction. To even go as far to how the medical school process has changed for applications, a lot of times if youre getting interviewed, we would have MMIs which are Multiple Mini Interviews.

We would go and you would act out scenarios with the person interviewing you. Besides your MCAT score and extracurriculars, the interview is such a huge factor in you actually getting into med school. So not being able to have that emotional connection does make it a little bit more difficult. Its not the same as being in person.

DW: Being in a pandemic, we are seeing a bit more of the perspective and struggles of health care workers. Do you think this has impacted your attitude towards health care professions and what you want to do?

NC: Its really opened my eyes to how little people care about the actual health of health care workers even though frontline workers are praised at the moment.

You go on social media, you go on all these platforms and you see people partying one moment, and then you see a healthcare worker crying that they have to hold the hands of someone dying. Its such a weird dichotomy.

I think its been really tough to see people who are premeds just also not care. Thats the weirdest part for me. You will see some people just blatantly not care about the fact that theres a pandemic despite them wanting to go into a healthcare field which is so contradictory.

DW: What has your quarantine experience been like?

NC: I currently live alone. Its been really hard to be in a constant environment where I have to keep focusing. Ive been here for the last year just stuck in one place.

What Ive found helpful is going to the medical library on campus. Obviously, theyre really following the strict CDC [Center for Disease Control and Prevention] guidelines. I think just changing up my environment every so often has really helped.

DW: Do you have any advice for pre-medical students that are feeling lost?

NC: Its been great how dynamic the healthcare field has actually been. I know over the summer, I participated in a few Zoom shadowing opportunities where you can go in and watch a health professional do their surgery. Coursera was offering courses for free, so you could go in and get a certificate regarding healthcare or public health.

Just finding those online resources and definitely being in contact with your advisors is helpful. Academically, if you want to do [a] small thing like declaring a minor, theres so many options, and that kind of gives you a bit of an edge.

Doing those small things really adds to your resume. One of the biggest things going into this cycle is [that] you cant just go in there and say, Well, it was the pandemic, so I couldnt do this.

Medical schools are flexible to a certain extent, but theyre not going to take that excuse. Theyre looking for the people who were able to adjust because thats what medicine is: learning to adjust and be flexible to whatever situation youre faced with.

For example, one thing that I did to counter the fact that I was not able to do research is I ran for social chair at AED. It has given me a level of leadership. All these things can accumulate into your application as examples of characteristics that schools want: hard work, drive and dedication. Thats what youre trying to portray, and theres so many ways you can do that. Yes, theres been a hindrance to the ability to do so, but theres always a way to work around that.

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Black History Month: Monumental moments at the WSU School of Medicine – The South End

Jaila Campbell, seen here as part of the Warrior Strong campaign, is a Wayne State University medical student and a graduate of the Post-Baccalaureate Program.

February is Black History Month through the United States. The Wayne State University School of Medicine has a storied history of African Americans of its own that dates back to a mere year after the medical school was founded. Joseph Ferguson, M.D., graduated from what was then Detroit Medical College, in 1869. He became the first Black man in Detroit and most likely in Michigan to earn a medical degree.

Fast forward more than 150 years, and the school hit another milestone in 2019 the 50th anniversary of the Post-Baccalaureate Program, founded in 1969 to ensure that qualified minorities continued to have the opportunity to enter medical school. It was the first of its kind in the nation. Initially launched to address the dearth of Black students entering medical schools, the free program immerses students into a year-long education in biochemistry, embryology, gross anatomy, histology and physiology. Many who graduated from the program were accepted into the WSU School of Medicine, but the program also served as a major pipeline for Black students into medical schools across the nation. Today, the program accepts students from a category deemed underrepresented in medicine, which includes African Americans, Hispanic/Latino, Native American and students from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds.

In between, the school continued to play a major role in addressing the physician workforce in America and bridging the gap in health disparities and health outcomes.

The WSU School of Medicine was founded in 1868 by four Civil War veteran physicians. At the same time, the first medical school in the county that was open to all people, Howard University Medical Department, opened in Washington, D.C., under the direction of Civil War veteran and Commissioner of the Freedmens Bureau, Gen. Oliver Howard. One year later, in 1869, the Detroit College of Medicine and Howard University graduated their first Black physicians.

Albert Henry Johnson, M.D., became the third Black graduate of the Detroit College of Medicine, in 1893. Dr. Johnson was one of the founders of Dunbar Hospital, the first Black non-profit hospital in Detroit.

In 1926, Chester Cole Ames, M.D., graduated from the Detroit College of Medicine and Surgery. He was the first Black physician to obtain an internship in Urology at a white hospital in Detroit, but he was never allowed to join staff. Dr. Ames was Detroit's first Black intern, resident and member of the Wayne University medical faculty. He cofounded three Black hospitals in Detroit, but was never granted privileges to practice his specialty in white hospitals.

Some 17 years later, Marjorie Peebles-Meyers, M.D., graduated from the Wayne University College of Medicine, the schools first Black female graduate. She was also the first Black female resident at Detroit Receiving Hospital, the first Black chief resident at Detroit Receiving Hospital, the first Black female appointed to the WSU medical faculty and the first Black female to join a private white medical practice in Detroit. After retiring, she began a second career as the first Black female medical officer at Ford Motor Co. World Headquarters. Dr. Peebles-Meyers received many awards and honors, including induction into the Michigan Womens Hall of Fame.

The same amount of time elapsed before Black physicians Thomas Flake Sr., M.D., Class of 1951; Addison Prince, M.D.; William Gibson, M.D.; and James Collins, M.D., were appointed to the staff at Harper Hospital, thereby integrating the Detroit Medical Center hospital staff.

Only five years later, Charles Whitten, M.D.,became the first Black physician to head a department in a Detroit hospital when he was selected clinical director of Pediatrics at Detroit Receiving Hospital. He was also a founder of the aforementioned Post-Baccalaureate Program.

In 1981, Alexa Canady, M.D., became the first Black neurosurgeon in the United States. Dr. Canady went on to serve as professor in the WSU Department of Neurosurgery. She was named one of the countrys most outstanding doctors by Child magazine in 2001.

Around 1988, two School of Medicine students Don Tynes, M.D. 95, and Carolyn King, M.D. 93, -- established Reach Out to Youth to introduce children 7 to 11 in underrepresented populations to the possibility of careers in science and medicine. Since then, the hands-on, workshop- and activity-focused program has been presented annually by the School of Medicines Black Medical Association, a chapter of the Student National Medical Association.

In 1995, Professor of Pediatrics and Sickle Cell Detection and Information Center Founder Charles Vincent, M.D., was appointed to the Membership Committee of the American Medical Association, making him the first Black doctor appointed to the committee in the AMAs 147-year history.

In 2017, Cheryl Gibson Fountain, M.D., F.A.C.O.G., a 1987 graduate, was named the president of the Michigan State Medical Society. The obstetrician/gynecologist served a one-year term as the societys first Black female president.

Last November, an anti-racism educational effort led by School of Medicine Class of 2024 medical student Cedric Mutebi and third-year Internal Medicine-Pediatrics resident Selena Rodriguez, M.D., aimed at stopping racial disparities through reimagined medical education won a $10,000 grant from the Association of American Medical Colleges. The grant allowed the team to develop Healing Between the Lines, a sub-curriculum targeting upstream structural inequities that drive downstream disparities.

Today, the push for more diversity, more inclusion and the elimination of health disparities continue to shape the future of the School of Medicine, from student-led efforts to longitudinal research projects dedicated to the health of Black Americans.

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Black History Month: Monumental moments at the WSU School of Medicine - The South End

Lodge named inaugural Blasingame professor – Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

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Professorship supports research into development of antifungal drugs, vaccines

Jennifer Lodge, PhD, the vice chancellor for research at Washington University in St. Louis, has been named the inaugural David T. Blasingame Professor.

Jennifer K. Lodge, PhD, the vice chancellor for research at Washington University in St. Louis and a leading expert in fungus that can cause a potentially fatal brain infection, has been named the inaugural David T. Blasingame Professor. She also serves as the senior associate dean for research and a professor of molecular microbiology at the School of Medicine.

The new professorship, funded by Washington University, was created to honor the extraordinary contributions of David T. Blasingame, who led the universitys Alumni & Development Office for 28 years until his retirement in 2018.

Lodge was named to the professorship by Chancellor Andrew D. Martin and David H. Perlmutter, MD, executive vice chancellor for medical affairs, the George and Carol Bauer Dean of the School of Medicine, and the Spencer T. and Ann W. Olin Distinguished Professor.

I am delighted to be recognizing Dr. Jennifer Lodge with a professorship honoring the legacy of David Blasingame, Martin said. Both of these distinguished individuals have long histories of extraordinary contributions to the university, and it is a pleasure to recognize those contributions with this professorship. The new professorship will support and facilitate the important work that Dr. Lodge continues to perform including her outstanding leadership of the universitys research programs during these unprecedented pandemic times as well as the vital research she has conducted over her long and distinguished career. At the same time, we are recognizing the dedication of David Blasingame in his tireless commitment to raising vital funds for the university over his many decades of service.

Lodge studies a type of fungus called Cryptococcus neoformans that typically causes lung disease that can spread through the blood to the brain in people. The fungal infection can cause meningitis in patients who are immune-compromised, and it kills an estimated 180,000 people each year. Her expertise is focused on the fungal cell wall, which is required for the fungus to grow and determine how the fungus interacts with the host. Understanding these processes could lead to new antifungal treatments and vaccines.

She is the author of over 75 scientific papers and, since 1997, her work has been funded continuously by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In her administrative roles, Lodge also leads the massive research infrastructure across Washington University, and most recently has focused considerable efforts navigating the unprecedented circumstances and pressures the COVID-19 pandemic has placed upon the universitys research labs.

Not only is Dr. Lodge a talented and productive scientist, she has done extraordinary work in her leadership of research for the medical school and the rest of the university, including tremendous work during the pandemic, Perlmutter said. We could not have had more capable leadership supporting our research programs, often times with essential services that otherwise go unrecognized and especially during this unprecedented time. Research is an essential part of everything we do, and Jennifer Lodge has been incredibly skilled in supporting interdisciplinary research projects that bring together collaborators across many departments, securing new potential funding opportunities, and maximizing the benefits of the universitys continuing investments in research and the infrastructure required to support it.

Lodge is an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Academy of Microbiology and the National Academy of Inventors. In 2014, she graduated from the Executive Leadership in Academic Medicine program at the university, and in 2015, she received the Academy of Science St. Louis Trustee Award. She has served as chair of the Group on Research at the Association of American Medical Colleges and serves on several editorial boards and NIH review panels.

It is an honor to receive this professorship recognizing the extraordinary contributions of David Blasingame, Lodge said. The support from the university will help continue my labs research into a debilitating and deadly infection. It also has been a tremendous honor to guide the extraordinary response of the universitys research community to this pandemic. Our researchers have spectacularly risen to the challenge posed by the virus from donating protective equipment to our front-line health-care workers, to pivoting work in their labs to focus on COVID-19, to adhering to our public health guidelines so that we can productively continue our important research mission.

Lodge earned her bachelors degree from Oberlin College in 1979 and her doctorate in biomedical sciences from Washington University in 1988. She continued her postdoctoral training at both Washington University and what was then Monsanto. She began her career at Saint Louis University School of Medicine, where she went on to serve as associate dean for research, from 2005 to 2009.

In 2009, she joined the Washington University faculty in the Department of Molecular Microbiology and also became the School of Medicines associate dean for research. In 2014, she was named vice chancellor for research for the entire university. In this role, she oversees university investments in research on the Medical and Danforth campuses, and oversees research compliance, education, grants and contracts.

Blasingame

Blasingame, a native of Little Rock, Ark., arrived as a freshman at Washington University in 1965 and went on to earn a bachelors degree in psychology and then a Master of Business Administration. Blasingame served in the U.S. Army and then returned to the university in 1974 as associate director of alumni relations. He was director of development for the John M. Olin School of Business from 1978 to 1985 and then named associate vice chancellor for alumni and development programs. In 1990, he was appointed vice chancellor of the department, and in 2004, he became executive vice chancellor.

Blasingame has a long history of success in leading campaigns supporting Washington University. In 2018, when Leading Together: The Campaign for Washington University ended, the program had raised more than $3.3 billion, surpassing the campaigns initial goal of $2.2 billion. His achievements in university advancement have been recognized with several awards, including the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association of Fundraising Professionals in St. Louis and the Circle of Excellence Award from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education.

I am so grateful for this professorship established in my name and could not be more pleased for Jennifer Lodge to serve as the inaugural holder, Blasingame said. While at Washington University, I saw the incredible passion and commitment our faculty bring to their work, and I had the distinct privilege of sharing news of their tremendous accomplishments with our alumni and friends. To have my name associated with our facultys life-changing scholarship, teaching, and research and with an institution that has meant so much to me is a very special honor.

Washington University School of Medicines 1,500 faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals. The School of Medicine is a leader in medical research, teaching and patient care, ranking among the top 10 medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

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Lodge named inaugural Blasingame professor - Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

Eleven Class of 2021 members will enter military medicine residency | News | Campbell University – Campbell University News

The Class of 2021 will continue the School of Osteopathic Medicines proud tradition of having approximately 10 graduates per year enter military residency programs. Eleven students slated for graduation in May 2021 matched into residency programs this month where they will serve in the United States Armed Forces while caring for soldiers, veterans and their families from Fort Bragg, North Carolina to Madigan Army Medical Center in Tacoma, Washington.

As they celebrated this milestone, the students shared what lead each of them to pursue military medicine.

Air Force2LT Augustus E. FloydPsychiatrySan Antonio Military Medical Center, San Antonio, TXI have always had a fascination with military history and the experience of those who have taken up arms to defend our country.The psychological toll of warfare cannot be understated, and mental health fervently impacts the choices that affect every other aspect of wellness. I believe this career path will allow me to help improve the lives of service-members and empower them in our mission to win in air, space, and cyberspace!

2LT Hunter GalloglyFamily Medicine and Operational MedicineMike OCallahan Medical Center, Nellis Air Force Base, NVI chose military medicine because I truly believe the men and women who serve our country every day should be our first priority. Those in Uniform risk their health for this country, so I am happy and honored to be given the chance to serve those who serve.

2LT Ashley Murphy ShawObstetrics and GynecologyNaval Medical Center, Portsmouth, VAService:Itsanhonor to serve those who serve our country.Tradition:I will soon be the second Air Forcephysicianin my family.TheAir Force core values:Integrity first. Service before self. Excellence in all we do.

Army2 LT Peter V. ChoiFamily MedicineNational Capital Consortium, Fort Belvoir, VAI applied to Family Medicine at Ft. Belvoir in hopes of obtaining an excellent education and to be near family.

2LT Adrienne CourseyFamily MedicineWomack Army Medical Center, Fort Bragg, NCI chose Family Medicine because I want to be able to provide front-line, full-spectrum primary care and to serve others with a focus on compassion, solidarity, holism, and developing relationships. I have a passion for working directly with Soldiers and know continuing my medical education at Fort Bragg will allow me the opportunity to pursue a career in supporting military operations and to grow as an osteopathic physician in the military community.

2LT Rosina DardenPsychiatryWalter Reed Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MDI chose to be an army physician so I could serve and give back to the country that has afforded me so many opportunities. I am honored to be joining the Psychiatry program at Walter Reed and look forward to working with the men and women serving our country.

2LT Anthony LucidoPediatricsWalter Reed Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MDPediatrics has always been my specialty of choice since beginning medical school. I enjoy working with the patient population and feel the biggest impact on health is made in the earliest years of life. I have always felt a desire to serve a country which blessed me with so much. All my brothers and I are in the Army in one fashion or another, so it was only natural to continue the tradition.

2 LT R. Logan PhillipsInternal MedicineMadigan Army Medical Center, Tacoma, WAI chose military medicine because I have always valued giving back, both to my country and to its people. Serving in the military has always been a goal of mine, so serving the military as a physician has been a great opportunity for me to be able to combine the two ways to serve.

NavyJon McGill, ENS MC USNREmergency MedicineNaval Medical Center, Portsmouth, VAI am very excited to get the opportunity to start my career in the Navy in my top choice program and specialty. I have always had a desire to serve my country. Upon learning about the ability to do so while pursuing a career in medicine, I did not hesitate to sign up. The Navy particularly holds a special place in my heart as my father was also a Physician in the Navy Medical Corp. I am proud to be able to follow in his footsteps with all he has provided me. Emergency Medicine has been my passion since beginning my journey into medicine. First as and EMT and next as an Emergency Room Technician, I am extremely excited to continue my career in a field I love and enjoy.

ENS, Joseph McNamaraTransitional ResidencyNaval Medical Center, Portsmouth, VAInspired by a long line of Naval officers in the family, military medicine immaculatelypairs my own passion of serving others through medicine with this rich tradition offering a chance to help those who may sacrifice everything for our country.

ENS John PetersenInternal MedicineNaval Medical Center, Portsmouth, VAI really look forward to being at Naval Medical Center Portsmouth again after I had an away rotation there. I chose medical training in the Navy because of the unique experiences and training. The patients and the people you get to work with are great.

Class of 2019 Alumnae, Air Force Captain Julia Timm Intili, an internal medicine resident at Brooke Army Medical Center, shared her pride in having more Campbell graduates heading into military medicine.

Im proud we have so many Class of 2022 Camels heading to train in our military hospitals!

I love training at a military hospital. We were able to participate in Operation Warp Speed and were among the first to get the COVID vaccine. We get patients from war zones and deployments overseas, as well as World War II veterans with no shortage of war stories.

It is a privilege to serve these heroes, and I am well prepared thanks to my education at CUSOM. I always appreciated CUSOMs respect for the military, especially given its close proximity to Fort Bragg and Seymour Johnson Air Force Base.

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Eleven Class of 2021 members will enter military medicine residency | News | Campbell University - Campbell University News

Amid COVID-19 shortage of doctors, other health workers, foreign-trained professionals are left on the sideli – Chicago Sun-Times

As hospitals nationwide struggle with the latest COVID-19 surge, its not so much beds or ventilators in short supply. Its the people to care for the sick.

Yet a large, highly skilled workforce of foreign-educated doctors, nurses and other health practitioners has gone largely untapped due to licensing and credentialing barriers. According to the Migration Policy Institute think tank in Washington, D.C., about 165,000 foreign-trained immigrants in the United States hold degrees in health-related fields but are unemployed or underemployed in the midst of the health crisis.

Many of these workers have invaluable experience dealing with infectious disease epidemics such as SARS, Ebola or HIV in other countries, yet must sit out the coronavirus pandemic.

The pandemic highlights licensing barriers that predate COVID-19, but many believe it can serve as a wakeup call for states to address the issue for this crisis and beyond. Already, five states Colorado, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Jersey and New York have adapted their licensing guidelines to allow foreign-trained health workers to lend their lifesaving skills amid pandemic-induced staff shortages.

These really are the cabdrivers, the clerks, the people who walk your dog, said Jina Krause-Vilmar, president and chief executive officer of not-for-profit Upwardly Global, which helps immigrant professionals enter the U.S. workforce. They also happen to be doctors and nurses in their home countries, and theyre just not able to plug and play into the system as its set up.

Thats left doctors such as Sussy Obando, whos 29 and from Colombia, jumping through hoops to become physicians in the United States. In 2013, Obando graduated after six years of medical school in Colombia, then spent a year treating patients in underserved communities. But when she arrived in the United States, her credentials and experience werent enough.

Licensure guidelines vary by state. But foreign-trained doctors typically must pass a medical licensing exam that costs them more than $3,500 and then complete at least a year of on-the-job training, known as a residency, in the United States. For many, including Obando, that means brushing up on English and learning the relevant medical terminology. She also needed U.S. clinical experience to qualify for a residency, something that U.S.-trained doctors achieve through rotations during medical school.

If you dont know anyone in this field, you have to go door-to-door to find somebody to give you the opportunity to rotate, Obando said.

She tried emailing Hispanic doctors she found online to see whetehr she could complete a rotation with one of them. She ended up paying $750 to enter a psychiatry rotation at the University of Texas McGovern Medical School in Houston.

I tried to go into internal medicine, Obando said. But because psychiatry was less expensive, I have to go for that.

She also worked for almost a year as a volunteer at Houstons MD Anderson Cancer Center, and is now assisting with clinical trials for COVID vaccines at the Texas Center for Drug Development. She has applied for a residency through a national program that matches medical school graduates with residency slots. But its difficult for foreign-trained physicians to secure a spot because many are earmarked for U.S. med school graduates. And many residency programs are open only to recent graduates, not those who finished medical school years ago.

Its competitive for people who trained in the United States to get into a residency program, said Jacki Esposito, director of U.S. policy and advocacy for World Education Services, a nonprofit that helps immigrants find jobs in the United States and Canada. If youre trained outside the United States, its even harder.

Thats why states such as Colorado have eased the requirement for a residency during the pandemic. Early on, Colorado officials realized they couldnt license doctors and other health workers because coronavirus lockdowns had canceled required licensing exams. Under an executive order from Democratic Gov. Jared Polis in April, state officials created a temporary licensing program, allowing medical school graduates to begin practicing under supervision for six months and then extended that through June 2021.

Officials created a similar pathway to temporary licensure for foreign medical school graduates who lacked the minimum year of residency.

Colorado also created temporary licenses for foreign-trained nurses, certified nurses aides, physician assistants and many other health professionals. All of those licenses require supervision from a licensed professional and are valid only as long as the governors public health emergency declaration remains in effect.

The state relaxed the scope-of-practice rules for those health workers, too, allowing them to perform any task their supervisors assign to them.

So if youre an occupational therapist, you can give vaccinations as long as they are delegating to you, and theyre confident you have the skill and knowledge, said Karen McGovern, deputy director of legal affairs for the professions and occupations division for the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies. You can exceed your statutory skill and practice to what needs to be done during the pandemic.

Through mid-December, the state had received 36 applications from foreign-trained doctors seeking temporary licenses, though only one applicant met all of the criteria.

New Jersey, in contrast, received more than 1,100 applications for temporary medical licenses last year.

Michigan also issued an executive order allowing temporary licenses, but it later was rescinded.

Many of the medical professionals stuck on the sidelines have skills and experience that would be invaluable during the pandemic.

Victor Ladele, 44, finished medical school in Nigeria and treated patients during a drought in Niger in 2005, in the midst of the Darfur genocide in Sudan in 2007 and after a civil war in Liberia in 2010. His family moved to the United States a few years later, but Ladele was recruited to help with the Ebola outbreak in West Africa in 2014. What he thought would be a three-month stay turned into a two-year mission.

Now back in Edmond, Oklahoma, working with a U.N. program that helps new business ventures get off the ground, Ladele has found that the challenges of the coronavirus pandemic parallel many of his past experiences. He saw how a program for Ebola contact tracing told people with a cough or fever to call a hotline, which would direct them to a care center. But as soon as the initiative went live, rumors began to spread on social media that European doctors at the care centers were harvesting organs. It took months of outreach to tribal and religious leaders to instill confidence in the system.

He has seen similar misinformation spread about COVID and masks.

If, in Oklahoma, the public health officials had done outreach to all the pastors in the churches and gained their support for masking, would there be more people using masks? Ladele said.

Ideally, he said, he would like to spend about half of his time seeing patients, but the licensing process remains a challenge.

Its not insurmountable, he said. But when I think of all the hurdles to credentialing here, Im not really sure its worth the effort.

Upwardly Global which has offices in New York, Chicago, Washington and San Francisco helps health professionals navigate that unfamiliar application and credentialing system. Many foreign-trained health workers have never had to write rsums or interview for jobs.

While the pandemic has temporarily eased entry in five states, Krause-Vilmar and others believe it could be a model to address workforce shortages in underserved areas across the country. As of September, the federal Health Resources and Services Administration had designated more than 7,300 health care shortage areas, requiring an additional 15,000 health care practitioners.

Weve had a crisis in access to health care, especially in rural areas, in this country for a long time, Krause-Vilmar said. How do we start imagining what that would look like in terms of more permanent licenses for these folks who are helping us recover and rebuild?

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is an editorially independent, nonprofit news service covering health issues.

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Amid COVID-19 shortage of doctors, other health workers, foreign-trained professionals are left on the sideli - Chicago Sun-Times

Doctors Don’t Learn Nutrition. One MD is Out to Change That – The Beet

Doctors are taught an average of 1percent of their total lecture time in medical school learning about nutrition, and now one doctor, Dr. Michael Greger, is out to change that by encouraging students toenroll in an extra outside course in nutrition. The average time spent learning about "food as medicine" falls far short of the National Research Councils recommendation for a baseline nutrition curriculum, according to anew reportpublished by The Harvard Food Law and Policy Clinic, which has acknowledged: "Nutrition plays a critical role in the prevention and treatment of many chronic diseases, and diet is one of the most significant risk factors for disability and premature death in the United States." Neither the federal government, which helps fund medical schools nor accreditation organizationswhich validates themenforce any minimum level of diet instruction, so Greger decided to do something about it, by launching a course to teach med students how to talk to patients about the importance of nutrition in disease prevention and cure.

Given to students in Germany, the 11-part nutrition course, which Dr. Michael Gregeris an advisor to, is called ThePhysicians Association for Nutrition(PAN) International. The purpose of PAN is to teach medical students nutrition and increase awareness in the medical community of the power ofplant-based nutritionfor treating and preventing diseases like heart disease and diabetes. Taking place in Munich, the online course hasmore than 2,700 medical students signing up for the 11-part series so far. The organizers are hoping to expand it to the rest of the world.

The firsttime the course was offered, nearly2,500 people attended, mostlymedical students from Germany. The event's Medical Director, Niklas Oppenrieder MD, says: This record number of attendees shows us that nutrition and nutritional medicine need to be a much more central part of medical education and healthcare. Thats what we are working for at PAN.

The 11-partIss Das!(Eat That!) series has been organized almost exclusively by volunteers from the PAN University Groups and brings together renowned experts from diverse specialties of medicine and nutritional science. The online talks will take place between November 2020 and January 2021 and will cover topics such asnutritional medicine in cardiology,food and the climate crisis, andgastroenterology and the microbiome.

A patient who presents with heart disease, type 2 diabetes or even some forms of cancer (such as colon, or hormonally linked cancers such as breast and prostate) are likely to never hear a word about how changing their diet can help them get healthier, along with taking vital life-saving medicine, according to research. As prevention and intervention, doctors like Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn have used dietary changes to help treat patients facing heart surgery, to the point where signs of the disease have been reversed by adopting a whole-foods plant-based diet.

How does this affect you? The next time a doctor tells you that you need to go on medication, ask about nutrition. No one is suggesting we turn our backs on science, medicine and life-saving drugs or medical progress, but "Let thy Food Be thy Medicine" is as old as theHippocratic Oath. Food should be a tool in the kit of all doctors facing lifestyle-related diseases such as obesity, diabetes, heart disease and chronic inflammation. Studies have shown a whole-food plant-based diet low in oil can reverse symptoms of heart disease. Ask your doctor if this is an option for you.

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Doctors Don't Learn Nutrition. One MD is Out to Change That - The Beet

The 11 factors that influence med student specialty choice – American Medical Association

What motivates medical students to pursue a certain career path?The answers are both complex and individualized.

Recent data on specialty choicelooks at the question from a broad vantage point.The Association of American Medical Colleges 2019 Graduation Questionnaire asked students why they chose a specialty. The 16,000 plus respondents offered insight on how influentialvariousfactors were in choosing their specialty.

For those considering their steps after medical school,FREIDAs Specialty Guideand correspondingseries of videosoffering expert insight on specialty choiceprovidesa clear, approachable overview ofmedicalspecialties and subspecialties and canhelpyou choosea career path. Its designed to simplify medical students specialty selection process, highlightmajor specialties, detail training information and provide access torelated association information.

Learnaboutthe right time to choose a medical specialty.

Top factors

A career path is a matter of personal preference and interest. In ranking 11 factors that influence specialty choice, student respondents made that very clear.

When asked about the importance of a specialtys fitwith personality, interests, and skills, 87% of respondents indicated that it had a strong influence. Similarly, contentof specialty was selected by 83% of respondents as having a strong influence. The third most frequently cited strong influence on specialty choice by 2019 graduates was rolemodel influence at 50%.

In each of the past five years, according the AAMC, personal fit, content and role modeling were the top three choices among medical school graduates.

Learn ifresidency training length should influence specialty choice.

All 11 factors

Combining the factors that either a strong or moderate influence the entire list reads:

Otherfindings

In terms of the resources students used to research their specialty, the top picks among student respondents were advising and mentoring, which 47% of respondents found very useful and 27% found moderately useful; and participation in in-house and extramural electivesvery useful for 44% and moderately useful for 26%.

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The 11 factors that influence med student specialty choice - American Medical Association

Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine and Seton Hall University Opioid Conference to Feature Addiction Experts Working to Combat National Crisis -…

Newswise JULY 19, 2021, Nutley, NJ Experts from Seton Hall University and Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine will host a virtual conference July 30 to address the record number of opioid deaths in the nation, treatment options and training clinicians to prescribe addiction medication.

The virtual conference, Recovery from Opioid Use Disorders: State-of-the-Art Science to Advance Clinical Care, will cap a three-year federal grant shared between the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine, the Seton Hall University College of Nursing, and the Seton Hall University School of Health and Medical Sciences.

The opioid epidemic is one of our nations greatest health challenges, said Robert C. Garrett, FACHE, the chief executive officer of Hackensack Meridian Health. We are deeply committed to expanding access to care for addiction and mental health issues, better coordinating care and innovating treatment.

More than 93,000 Americans died of drug overdoses last year, a staggering record that reflects a nearly 30 percent increase from 2019, according to the CDC. Nearly 450,000 people died from overdoses involving both prescription and illicit opioids from 1999-2019, according to the CDC.

The conference features keynote speaker Beth Macy, an award-winning journalist and the New York Times best-selling author of Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors and the Drug Company that Addicted America, as well as industry leaders in the field of opioid-use disorders. Experts will discuss compelling research and treatment protocols considered best practices.

This is the product of three years of highly collaborative interprofessional work into training future clinicians to be best prepared to combat this epidemic, said Kathleen Neville, Ph.D., R.N., FAAN, associate dean of Graduate Studies and Research at the Seton Hall College of Nursing.

This presentation shows whats at stake, and what we can do to save as many lives as possible in the years to come, said Stanley R. Terlecky, Ph.D., associate dean of Research and Graduate Studies, and chair of Medical Sciences at the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine.

According to Brian B. Shulman, Ph.D., CCC-SLP, ASHA Fellow, FASAHP, FNAP, dean of the School of Health and Medical Sciences, Research conducted by SHMS faculty and administrators working interprofessionally has helped to expand our knowledge in various disciplines and push the established boundaries of this national epidemic to target the widespread misuse of opioids.

This event caps the Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) grant which was awarded in 2018 to an interprofessional leadership team with members from Seton Hall University and Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine: College of Nursing Associate Dean Neville; School of Health and Medical Sciences Department Chair and Assistant Professor Christopher Hanifin, Ed.D., PA-C; and Hackensack School of Medicine Professor Terlecky. The purpose of the grant, Seton Hall University and Hackensack Meridian Health Interprofessional Medication Assisted Treatment Training Program, is to train nurse practitioners, physician assistants and medical students on medication-assisted treatment for individuals with opioid-use disorders.

Additional conference speakers will present on their respective areas of study. Alexis LaPietra, D.O., Chief of Pain Management/Addiction Medicine at the Alternative to Opioid Program at St. Josephs University Medical Center, will present the Alternative to Opioids Program, a unique alternative to opioid treatment for acute pain in the emergency room. Ramon Solhkhah, M.D., Chairman, Department of Psychiatry, Jersey Shore University Medical Center, will speak on the current status of the opioid-use crisis and evidence-based solutions, and Steve Drzewoszewski, MSW, LCSW, LCADC, CCS, Former Director of Substance Abuse Counseling Services at HMH Carrier Clinic, will present on motivational interviewing and OUDs.

During the event, each project director will also present their respective schools outcomes of their grant, with CEO of Hackensack MeridianHealth Robert C. Garrett introducing the conference with Seton Hall University Provost and Executive Vice-President Katia Passerini.

Recovery from Opioid Use Disorders: State-of-the-Art Science to Advance Clinical Care is on Friday, July 30, 11 a.m. 3 p.m. CME will be offered to healthcare professionals. This educational activity has beenapproved forAMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)

To register for the event and to learn more about the agenda and speakers, visit here.

ABOUTHACKENSACKMERIDIAN HEALTH

Hackensack Meridian Health is a leading not-for-profit health care organization that is the largest, most comprehensive and truly integrated health care network in New Jersey, offering a complete range of medical services, innovative research and life-enhancing care.

Hackensack Meridian Health comprises 17 hospitals from Bergen to Ocean counties, which includes three academic medical centers Hackensack University Medical Center in Hackensack, Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, JFK Medical Center in Edison; two children's hospitals - Joseph M. Sanzari Children's Hospital in Hackensack, K. Hovnanian Children's Hospital in Neptune; nine community hospitals Bayshore Medical Center in Holmdel, Mountainside Medical Center in Montclair, Ocean Medical Center in Brick, Palisades Medical Center in North Bergen, Pascack Valley Medical Center in Westwood, Raritan Bay Medical Center in Old Bridge, Raritan Bay Medical Center in Perth Amboy, Riverview Medical Center in Red Bank, and Southern Ocean Medical Center in Manahawkin; a behavioral health hospital Carrier Clinic in Belle Mead; and two rehabilitation hospitals - JFK Johnson Rehabilitation Institute in Edison and Shore Rehabilitation Institute in Brick.

Additionally, the network has more than 500 patient care locations throughout the state which include ambulatory care centers, surgery centers, home health services, long-term care and assisted living communities, ambulance services, lifesaving air medical transportation, fitness and wellness centers, rehabilitation centers, urgent care centers and physician practice locations. Hackensack Meridian Health has more than 34,100 team members, and 6,500 physicians and is a distinguished leader in health care philanthropy, committed to the health and well-being of the communities it serves.

The network's notable distinctions include having four hospitals among the top 10 in New Jersey by U.S. News and World Report. Other honors include consistently achieving Magnet recognition for nursing excellence from the American Nurses Credentialing Center and being named to Becker's Healthcare's "150 Top Places to Work in Healthcare/2019" list.

Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine, the first private medical school in New Jersey in more than 50 years, welcomed its first class of students in 2018 to its On3 campus in Nutley and Clifton. Additionally, the network partnered with Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center to find more cures for cancer faster while ensuring that patients have access to the highest quality, most individualized cancer care when and where they need it.

Hackensack Meridian Health is a member of AllSpire Health Partners, an interstate consortium of leading health systems, to focus on the sharing of best practices in clinical care and achieving efficiencies.

For additional information, please visit http://www.hackensackmeridianhealth.org.

ABOUTSETON HALL UNIVERSITY

One of the countrys leading Catholic universities, Seton Hall has been showing the world what great minds can do since 1856. Home to nearly 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students and offering more than 90 rigorous academic programs, Seton Halls academic excellence has been singled out for distinction by The Princeton Review, U.S. News & World Report and Bloomberg Businessweek.

Seton Hall embraces students of all religions and prepares them to be exemplary servant leaders and global citizens. In recent years, the University has achieved extraordinary success. Since 2009, it has seen record-breaking undergraduate enrollment growth and an impressive 110-point increase in the average SAT scores of incoming freshmen. In the past decade, Seton Hall students and alumni have received more than 30 Fulbright Scholarships as well as other prestigious academic honors, including Boren Awards, Pickering Fellowships, Udall Scholarships and a Rhodes Scholarship. The University is also proud to be among themost diverse national Catholic universitiesin the country.

In recent years, the University has invested more than $165 million in new campus buildings and renovations. The Universitys beautiful main campus in suburban South Orange, N.J. is only 14 miles from New York City offering students a wealth of employment, internship, cultural and entertainment opportunities. Seton Halls nationally recognized School of Law is located prominently in downtown Newark. The Universitys Interprofessional Health Sciences (IHS) campus in Clifton and Nutley, N.J. opened in the summer of 2018. The IHS campus houses Seton Halls College of Nursing, its School of Health and Medical Sciences as well as Hackensack Meridian Healths Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine.

For more information, visit http://www.shu.edu.

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Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine and Seton Hall University Opioid Conference to Feature Addiction Experts Working to Combat National Crisis -...

Fresh out of medical school, they volunteered to help battle the coronavirus pandemic Borneo Bulletin Online – Borneo Bulletin Online

Colleen M Farrell

THE WASHINGTON POST As the coronavirus overwhelmed hospitals in New York last spring, some medical schools offered their final-year students an unusual option: They could graduate early to begin working as physicians on the front line of the pandemic. In her new book, Life on the Line: Young Doctors Come of Age in a Pandemic, Emma Goldberg takes us into the lives of six students who, despite their fears of contracting the novel virus (and in some cases, despite the pleas of their parents), felt themselves called for duty.

These students from New York University (NYU), Mount Sinai and Albert Einstein had already completed all the core requirements of medical school. Had the pandemic not disrupted social rituals, they would have spent the spring celebrating their residency matches and graduations, surrounded by friends and family. Instead, they chose to face the many challenges of being Day One doctors (even a simple Tylenol order prompts an anxious triple-check) amid a pandemic that was overwhelming their senior colleagues, killing hundreds of New Yorkers daily and isolating millions more.

In the opening pages we meet Sam, a NYU medical student. Sam joins the COVID wards at Bellevue Hospital which once cared for more patients with AIDS than any other hospital with a sense of historic purpose.

As I read about Sams entry into Bellevue, I could feel myself standing in the eerily quiet, glass-encased lobby of that hospital. When the pandemic began, I was an internal-medicine resident at Bellevue. Like many health-care workers on the front lines of this crisis, the trauma of the spring surge goodbyes over FaceTime, beds crammed into makeshift intensive care units (ICUs), endless alerts called overhead has left me with scars. It has been hard to revisit that time in my mind without my heart racing and stomach clenching. I worried that reading this book would reopen those wounds.

But remarkably, with her sensitive reporting and deeply human portrayals of Sam, Gabriela, Iris, Elana, Ben and Jay, Goldberg has created a work that not just documents a significant moment in time but helps us heal from it, too. For anyone seeking to understand, or remember, what New York and its hospitals were like in the spring of 2020, Life on the Line is essential reading.

News stories from New Yorks COVID spring emphasised the medical interventions of intensive care: intubation, dialysis, CPR. The new doctors entry into the hospitals is steeped in war metaphors. The vice dean for academic affairs at NYU tells them they are joining the COVID Army. At Montefiore Hospital, they are dubbed the Coalition Forces. Like new military recruits, they don layers of protective gear, put their bodies at risk and witness a horrifying number of casualties.

But the stories in Life on the Line offer a refreshingly different view of the pandemic than those eye-catching headlines and talk of war. Given their inexperience and their institutions appropriate commitments to minimise their exposure to the virus, the interns are largely removed from the adrenaline-pumping action. In one scene, Sam literally has a patients door closed in front of him. Inside the room, the resident physicians perform CPR, trying to resuscitate the patient, whose heart has stopped. Sam stands at a mobile computer in the hallway, placing orders. His is a necessary job, but as Goldberg puts it, if this were a TV medical drama, Sam would be an extra.

The interns distance from life-or-death emergencies allows different, yet vitally important, aspects of pandemic health care to shine through. Iris cares for a man who survived the COVID ICU but still breathes through a tube in the front of his neck and is barely conscious. Not sure how to act around him, she makes a point of cheerily introducing herself to him. After days without him ever seeming to register her presence, when she tells him that his family loves him, she sees a tear fall from his eye.

In one of the most moving passages of the book, we meet Manny, a 38-year-old man with Down syndrome and severe anxiety whom Jay is caring for. Manny initially came to the hospital because his father, his sole family member, was sick with covid. Manny had no one else to care for him, and so the hospital staff allowed him to live in the hospital while his father was admitted. When his father tragically dies of the virus, Manny has nowhere to go, so he is admitted to the hospital as a patient until Alicia, the social worker, can find him a safe home. Jay wholeheartedly devotes herself to Mannys care, even accompanying him on a visit to a group home.

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Fresh out of medical school, they volunteered to help battle the coronavirus pandemic Borneo Bulletin Online - Borneo Bulletin Online

Adding Value to Others – Wexner Medical Center – The Ohio State University

Joel Goodnough freely admits he wasnt always philanthropic.Im not a naturally giving person, he says. But I found that if I take that first step and start giving, it changes your heart, and your actions follow your heart. You become more interested in the people youre giving to, and it just makes you look beyond yourself.

Goodnough, 75, 79 MD, and his wife, Brenda, have found numerous ways to impact the lives of others through giving to The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. They gave to The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC James), after a family member of Dr. Goodnoughs was diagnosed with prostate cancer.

An additional motivation for their giving emerged after Dr. Goodnough retired from his Ob/Gyn practice in Chicago about 10 years ago. He and Brenda moved to her hometown of Jackson, in the Appalachian region of southern Ohio. There, the Goodnoughs have seen firsthand how challenging it can be for students to pursue a career in medicine.

The Goodnoughs have established a scholarship fund to cover the costs of one student per year from an Ohio Appalachian county to attend The Ohio State University College of Medicine. Its one way they hope to improve access to care in areas where there are few medical providers.

These counties are underrepresented in medical school, as most rural areas are, but especially in Appalachia, Dr. Goodnough says.

They also support the Ohio State College of Medicines Medical Careers Pathway Post Baccalaureate Program (MEDPATH), which provides an additional year of instruction to students before medical school. MEDPATH is designed to increase the number of students from underrepresented populations in medicine, including those from economically and educationally disadvantaged backgrounds who benefit from the preparatory coursework.

This is particularly good for students coming from some of these smaller high schools in Appalachia, where the graduating class may be 100 to 200 students and the schools just arent as good as you're going to find in some of the Columbus metropolitan areas, so they come out of school already behind the eight ball, Dr. Goodnough says.

Most recently, the Goodnoughs provided funding for the new home that those students will utilizethe Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Center. This reimagined Hamilton Hall will foster the experiences and opportunities necessary for future physicians and health science professionals to grow and become tomorrows health care leaders.

Were placed on this earth to add value to other people, Dr. Goodnough says. Its always good to surround yourself with good people. It makes you a better person, but adding value to others makes you a better person as well.

Read more stories of impact in the 2020 College of Medicine Annual Report.

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Adding Value to Others - Wexner Medical Center - The Ohio State University

Florida optometrists push for expanded treatment options, but ophthalmologists arent having it – The Capitolist

A turf war has reignited in Tallahassee between optometrists and ophthalmologists over two newly filed bills in the Florida House and Senate.

The proposals, HB 631 in the House and its Senate companion, SB 876would expand the scope of practice for optometrists to allow them to perform limited surgical procedures and prescribe an expanded list of medications specialties that have long been restricted to ophthalmologists, who have undergone several additional years of specialized training.

Its not a new battle. Similar turf wars between the two groups have flared up in the past, with the pro-optometry side arguing that expanding their scope of practice will introduce competition into the health care market and provide Florida residents with more access to professionalized eye care.

But a statewide association of ophthalmologists says the bill is dangerous and should not be passed.

The idea that an optometrist could become licensed to perform surgery through legislation, instead of completing medical school and residency training, is a dangerous threat to patient safety, saidDr.Sarah Wellik, President of the Florida Society Ophthalmologists. With Florida being the epicenter of the opioid epidemic, it would be catastrophic for the Legislature to expand optometrys prescribing authority to over 4,000 non-medical professionals.

The 2021 battle could soon become more intense as lobbyists line up on both sides to advocate for their respective clients. State Senator Manny Diaz Jr. and State Representative Alex Rizo filed the bills in the Senate and House, respectively. Diaz previously filed legislation to expand the optometrist scope of practice when he served in the Florida House.

While both optometrists and ophthalmologists are both considered eye doctors, optometrists typically undergo four years of instruction after undergraduate school in a professional program that trains them to perform eye exams and vision tests, as well as prescribe glasses and contacts, and monitor eye health for diseases like diabetes, glaucoma and dry eye.

Ophthalmologists, by contrast, have gone to three years of medical school after undergrad, after which they participate in a 1-year internship and a residency of 3 years. Those stints are sometimes followed by a 1 to 2 year fellowship program. Ophthalmologists can perform virtually all of the same procedures as optometrists, but can also perform specialized surgeries and generally can provide a higher level of care for more complex eye problems.

The Florida Optometric Association did not immediately respond to a phone call and email seeking comment for this story.

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Florida optometrists push for expanded treatment options, but ophthalmologists arent having it - The Capitolist

Wharton Undergraduate Healthcare Conference addresses impact of COVID-19 on health care – The Daily Pennsylvanian

(Photo from Hannah Gross)

This year's Wharton Undergraduate Healthcare Conference focused on the impact of COVID-19 on the health care industry, featuring speakers from Moderna and NewYork-Presbyterian.

The conference, titled Healthcare in the Wake of COVID-19: The Future of a Changing Industry, took place virtually on Jan. 30. The event included keynote addresses from NewYork-Presbyterian Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Laura Forese and Moderna Chief Medical Officer Tal Zaks, as well as four panels: Health Disparities & Inequities, The Future Of Health Coverage, Outbreaks Of Disease, and Digital Health.

Panelists included legal, medical, and policy experts from a variety of universities and health systems, who shared their experiences with COVID-19. Speakers also addressed the potential long-term impacts of the pandemic on the United States' healthcare system, including an increase in the prevalence of telemedicine, the confrontation of pre-existing health disparities, and the switch to another model of healthcare, such as a single-payer system.

Forese, who oversees operations at 10 hospital campuses in New York, discussed the importance of leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic, focusing on its application to vaccine hesitancy and supply chain coordination. Zaks, a professor of Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine, discussed the use of mRNA technology in the development of COVID-19 vaccines and other potential uses in healthcare.

During the Outbreaks of Disease panel, panelists discussed the initial response to COVID-19 and attempts to limit its spread.

Abraar Karan, aresident at the Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, recalled wondering if COVID-19 would be the "next big pandemic" in it's early stages.

"We realized this was going to be really difficult," Karan said. "Its just been a game of trying to stay afloat.

Senior Director of the System-wide Special Pathogens Program at NYC Health + Hospitals Syra Madad said one of the biggest challenges involved adjusting to rapidly changing clinical guidance and resource availability at hospitals.

"Were not used to [the] reuse of PPE, so there was a lot of training that had to go into that, Madad said.

Panelists also discussed how the COVID-19 pandemic impacted all aspects of life, not just health care. Wharton professor Mauro Guilln detailed the pandemic's impact on globalization and business, while Eric Pevzner from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Epidemic Intelligence Service touched on the role of the CDC and the U.S. government in preventing future outbreaks.

Wharton and College junior and WUHC Conference Chair Eric Hsieh said The Future of Health Coverage panel was particularly interesting because of the diversity of fields the panelists came from, including politics, medicine, and law.

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"This led to a back-and-forth discussion about the actual likelihood of a single payer system and about whether employer-sponsored health coverage is sustainable moving forward," Hsieh said.

Despite the virtual format, Conference Committee member and College junior Timothy Lee said WUHC still witnessed high levels of student interaction during the event. Lee said many attendees submitted questions and interacted directly with the keynote speakers, rather than just typing in a Zoom chat.

"It was definitely challenging transitioning to an online Zoom format, while still maintaining the interactive and engaging nature of the WUHC Conference," Lee said. "However, we realized that having this event online opened up a multitude of possibilities in terms of the speakers we could get and who we could market the conference towards.

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Wharton Undergraduate Healthcare Conference addresses impact of COVID-19 on health care - The Daily Pennsylvanian

Medical schools see spike in students inspired to apply by the pandemic – KBJR 6

DULUTH, MN -- While many are being asked to stay home because of the pandemic, others are headed to the front lines.

Medical schools across the country have seen a huge spike in applicants, including in Duluth.

Applications for the University of Minnesota Medical School, Duluth Campus increased 77 percent this year.

3,422 people applied for the Duluth campus program, which can take 65 in this cohort.

At the University of Minnesota Medical School's Twin Cities campus, applications went up by 40 percent.

With the added attention on healthcare workers during the pandemic, some are calling this increase the Fauci Effect," in reference to infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci.

Dr. Kendra Nordgren, Assistant Dean for Admissions at the University of Minnesota Medical School, Duluth Campus said the pandemic has created an opportunity for people to pivot from their former career to the medical field.

"Seeing physicians and health care workers is showing them the connection that they can have to community and patients in a way they aren't experiencing in whatever trajectory they're currently on," Nordgren said.

Shane Johannsen first applied to medical school two years ago but did not get accepted. He is currently a medical assistant and EMT.

Johannsen works closely with COVID-19 patients and sees the need caused by the pandemic.

"This is the time to do it," Johannsen said. "This is what I want to do, and I want to become a doctor."

Johannsen decided to reapply to medical school and, weeks ago, found out he had been accepted to the 2021 program.

Johannsen said he is not the only one applying.

"They see all over the media. They say, 'Hey, we need doctors, we need nurses, we need physicians' assistants, we need all these different aspects.' It really just lets people know this is the time to do it. This is when we need it the most," he said.

Nordgren said the attention on healthcare workers is also encouraging non-traditional students to apply.

"Seeing the work that's being put out there and recognized is helping drive this influx," she said.

While being on the frontlines is difficult work, Johannsen is ready to answer the call.

"This is where I belong," he said. "This is what I want to do, and I think a lot of people feel the same way."

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Medical schools see spike in students inspired to apply by the pandemic - KBJR 6

Common brain malformation traced to its genetic roots – Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

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Discovery could aid early screening, shed light on how Chiari malformation arises

The lowest part of a child's brain is visible below the bottom of the skull in this MRI scan and shows evidence of a Chiari 1 malformation. Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have shown that Chiari 1 malformation can be caused by variations in two genes linked to brain development, and that children with large heads are at increased risk of developing the condition.

About one in 100 children has a common brain disorder called Chiari 1 malformation, but most of the time such children grow up normally and no one suspects a problem. But in about one in 10 of those children, the condition causes headaches, neck pain, hearing, vision and balance disturbances, or other neurological symptoms.

In some cases, the disorder may run in families, but scientists have understood little about the genetic alterations that contribute to the condition. In new research, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have shown that Chiari 1 malformation can be caused by variations in two genes involved in brain development.

The condition occurs when the lowest parts of the brain are found below the base of the skull. The study also revealed that children with unusually large heads are four times more likely to be diagnosed with Chiari 1 malformation than their peers with normal head circumference.

The findings, published Dec. 21 in the American Journal of Human Genetics, could lead to new ways to identify people at risk of developing Chiari 1 malformation before the most serious symptoms arise. It also sheds light on the development of the common but poorly understood condition.

A lot of times people have recurrent headaches, but they dont realize a Chiari malformation is the cause of their headaches, said senior author Gabriel Haller, PhD, an assistant professor of neurosurgery, of neurology and of genetics. And even if they do, not everyone is willing to have brain surgery to fix it. We need better treatments, and the first step to better treatments is a better understanding of the underlying causes.

If people start experiencing severe symptoms like chronic headaches, pain, abnormal sensations or loss of sensation, or weakness, the malformation is treated with surgery to decompress the Chiari malformation.

Theres an increased risk for Chiari malformations within families, which suggests a genetic underpinning, but nobody had really identified a causal gene, Haller said. We were able to identify two causal genes, and we also discovered that people with Chiari have larger head circumference than expected. Its a significant factor, and easy to measure. If you have a child with an enlarged head, it might be worth checking with your pediatrician.

To identify genes that cause Chiari 1 malformation, Haller and colleagues sequenced all the genes of 668 people with the condition, as well as 232 of their relatives. Of these relatives, 76 also had Chiari 1 malformation and 156 were unaffected. The research team included first author Brooke Sadler, PhD, an instructor in pediatrics, and co-authors David D. Limbrick, Jr., MD, PhD, a professor of neurosurgery and director of the Division of Pediatric Neurosurgery, and Christina Gurnett, MD, PhD, a professor of neurologyand director of the Division of Pediatric and Developmental Neurology, among others.

Sequencing revealed that people with Chiari 1 malformation were significantly more likely to carry mutations in a family of genes known as chromodomain genes. Several of the mutations were de novo, meaning the mutation had occurred in the affected person during fetal development and was not present in his or her relatives. In particular, the chromodomain genes CHD3 and CHD8 included numerous variants associated with the malformation.

Further experiments in tiny, transparent zebrafish showed that the gene CHD8 is involved in regulating brain size. When the researchers inactivated one copy of the fishs chd8 gene, the animals developed unusually large brains, with no change in their overall body size.

Chromodomain genes help control access to long stretches of DNA, thereby regulating expression of whole sets of genes. Since appropriate gene expression is crucial for normal brain development, variations in chromodomain genes have been linked to neurodevelopmental conditions such as autism spectrum disorders, developmental delays, and unusually large or small heads.

Its not well known how chromodomain genes function since they have such a wide scope of activity and they are affecting so many things at once, Haller said. But they are very intriguing candidates for molecular studies, to understand how specific mutations lead to autism or developmental delay or, as in many of our Chiari patients, just to increased brain size without cognitive or intellectual symptoms. Wed like to figure out the effects of each of these mutations so that in the future, if we know a child has a specific mutation, well be able to predict whether that variant is going to have a harmful effect and what kind.

The association between chromodomain genes and head size inspired Haller and colleagues to measure the heads of children with Chiari malformations, comparing them to age-matched controls and to population averages provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Children with Chiari tended to have larger than average heads. Those children with the largest heads bigger than 95% of children of the same age were four times more likely to be diagnosed with the malformation.

The findings suggest that children with larger heads or people with other neurodevelopmental disorders linked to chromodomain genes may benefit from screening for Chiari malformation.

A lot of kids that have autism or developmental disorders associated with chromodomain genes may have undiscovered Chiari malformations, Haller said. The only treatment right now is surgery. Discovering the condition early would allow us to watch, knowing the potential for serious symptoms is there, and perform that surgery as soon as its necessary.

Sadler B, Wilborn J, Antunes L, Kuensting T, Hale AT, Gannon SR, McCall K, Cruchaga C, Harms M, Voisin N, Reymond A, Cappuccio G, Burnetti-Pierri N, Tartaglia M, Niceta M, Leoni C, Zampino G, Ashley-Koch A, Urbizu A, Garrett ME, Soldano K, Macaya A, Conrad D, Strahle J, Dobbs MB, Turner TN, Shannon CN, Brockmeyer D, Limbrick DD, Gurnett CA, Haller G. Rare and de novo coding variants in chromodomain genes in Chiari I malformation. American Journal of Human Genetics. Dec. 21, 2020. DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2020.12.001

This study was funded by Sam and Betsy Reeves and the Park-Reeves Syringomyelia Research Consortium; the University of Missouri Spinal Cord Injury Research Program; the Childrens Discovery Institute of St. Louis Childrens Hospital and Washington University; the Washington University Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences, grant number UL1TR000448 from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health (NIH); the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development, award number U54HD087011 to the Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center at Washington University; the Swiss National Science Foundation, grant number 31003A_182632; and the Jrme Lejeune Foundation.

Washington University School of Medicines 1,500 faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals. The School of Medicine is a leader in medical research, teaching and patient care, ranking among the top 10 medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

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Common brain malformation traced to its genetic roots - Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis