Pre-med student has creative pandemic prescription – GCU Today

Orthopedic physician Dr. Randon Hall brought along a few case studies for his NERD Hours talk.

By Lana Sweeten-ShultsGCU News Bureau

Its 7 p.m. on a Thursday and instead of binging Netflix, a smattering of Grand Canyon University health care students are scattered in a socially distanced way in the Technology Building anatomy lab, seated at long lab tables and visible to Dr. Randon Hall on a Zoom call.

Pre-med junior Alyssa Deyo created NERD Hours.

Other students are remotely attending Halls talk, the latest in the NERD Hours series created by junior biology/pre-med student Alyssa Deyo. She has connected with such groups as GCUs chapter of HOSA Future Health Professionals, mentored by Dr. Mark Wireman, and the Master Anatomy Program, mentored by Michael Bodeen, to reach as many pre-health students as possible.

Hall, an orthopedic physician at Phoenix Childrens Hospital, doesnt waste any time launching into his guess-the-bone-break-and-suggest-a-treatment portion of his talk.

He shares his screen and an X-ray of a young patient who was thrown off a mechanical bull and fractured his wrist.

What kind of injury is this? he asks the students while presenting this particular case study.

After a flurry of answers via the comment section of Zoom, he bobs his head in agreement: Yes, a distal radius fracture.

A lot of people say this has to be fixed, said Hall. But it doesnt have to be. In young patients, you can leave this like this. As long as we can straighten it up a little bit, they should do OK.

Then Hall opened the door to something personal.

Hall also spoke about his residency experiences and work-life balance.

This was one of the cases I saw early on in my career, when I started working, and I was losing sleep all over it. I was worried the kids arm was going to be crooked and terrible and just needed to be fixed, and so I called one of my older colleagues and they said, Trust me, dude, itll be fine.

About six months later, You could not tell the kid had any issue at all.

Its the kind of insight Deyo looks for from NERD Hours, which stands for Networking, Educational, Resources Done Online. The virtual series for pre-health students came about as a way for them to continue to connect with mentors and get real-life experiences, even during the pandemic.

I know for myself and for others, the pandemic really hurt some of our hours for shadowing and for clinicals for pre-med, Deyo said.

Pre-med students, pre-physician assistants, pre-physical therapy students and the like wanting to enter the health care field normally learn by shadowing a physician or landing an internship at a health care facility.

Deyo spent time last summer wondering how students would be able totalk to those key medical personnel anytime soon. Then I thought to myself, you know, Im a pretty smart girl. I can get some connections really quick.

Self-starter that she is, she did.

She knew Hall from her high school, where he was the team physician and she assisted the athletic trainer. She also was one of Halls patients.

Orthopedics is definitely one of those top-tier specialties, she said. To get to talk to them (physicians) about their lifestyle, their day-to-life balance stuff like that its crucial for us so we can also understand, before we get to medical school, and start to weigh these decisions.

Not that Deyo seeks only physicians in those top-tier specialties.

GCU alumnus Thomas Varkey spoke to students about what its like being a med school student.

Medical students and GCU alumni Thomas Varkey, Zack Merhavy, Colton Zeitler and Cheney Huls all have spoken at NERD Hours about the application process.

Even myself, when I first came to college, I was like, Oh, THIS is how much medical school costs, THESE are the different specialties. I didnt know the whole extent of it. I wanted graduate students to sit down with us and tell us the reality, tell us the pricing, tell us what theyre learning.

Varkey, adjunct faculty in the Colangelo College of Business and a third-year medical student at the University of Texas Dell Medical School, said it was a blast for him to get to speak to GCU students who are about to embark on the journey hes currently taking.

I was so glad to have been given the chance to provide practical advice I wish I had been given as an undergraduate.

Assistant Dean of Science Dr. Jon Valla spoke about letters of recommendation.

Another speaker, Dr. Jon Valla, Assistant Dean of Science in the College of Science, Engineering and Technology, spoke to the students about the letters of recommendation process and how students should go about developing the relationships they need for strong faculty recommendations for graduate school.

Valla said Deyo approached him in August about coming up with a way to help students replace their experiential hours, or those real-life experience and observation hours, that are harder to find because of the pandemic.

While there essentially is no replacement for true experiential time, Valla said, Alyssas plan to bring in alumni and practitioners provides an invaluable service to our pre-health students. Its to her credit that she has been able to routinely bring in speakers with a valuable perspective and have them share with her classmates.

It also helps keep our famous GCU community alive, as well, giving students good cause to safely gather, learn some great information and be able to have casual but meaningful conversations with peers and future colleagues.

Hall agreed.

It is inspiring to see students take the initiative like this because they could have easily just used the current situation as an excuse to do less, he said. I love the passion for learning, for getting better, for gaining experience. That is the characteristic you want to see in someone pursuing medicine.

Another goal of NERD Hours is for students to network with professionals in the fields they want to enter.

Deyo said another goal of the series is to help students network, so we get our foot in the door, at least, so that we have them (physicians, medical students and other speakers) as a connection.

Ultimately, she wants to find health care professionals for NERD Hours who love what they do and can share that with her and her classmates.

I want to find physicians who are passionate, she said. If Im reading articles about someone and they seem passionate about what theyre doing, Im definitely reaching out to them.

One of the fun parts of NERD Hours, Deyo added, is hearing speakers just talk, casually, about their work and nonwork lives.

Hall spoke about how you might not want to be a surgeon if you dont want phone calls at 2 a.m. Instead, you might want to become an orthopedic physician, like him. His work hours are 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. four days a week with one half day, along with working as a team physician for various high schools.

Im never on call. I dont work any weekends, which is not the same for the surgeons, he said.

Students at his NERD Hours talk wondered how hard medical school and his residency were.

A lot of times I feel like people want to describe it in a way that It was torture. But it wasnt really torture, he said. Though it was hard hours, as a resident, he got paid, and he got help from his fellow medical school students, who all were trying to reach their goals. To me, it was more a community of like-minded people. We went to the gym, we had parties, we did all the fun stuff.

In a way, no worries.

Its that sense of camaraderie, in the end, that Deyo wants her fellow students to find in her NERD Hours series.

Just because were speaking through a screen, she said, doesnt mean we cant have a heart-to-heart.

Contact GCU senior writer Lana Sweeten-Shults at [emailprotected] or at 602-639-7901.

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Pre-med student has creative pandemic prescription - GCU Today

Lobe Sciences Announces Launch of Preclinical Study in Collaboration with the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine – Investing News Network

Lobe Sciences Ltd. is pleased to announce the launch of preclinical research studies using psilocybin and N-Acetylcysteine for the treatment of mild traumatic brain injuryconcussion with post-traumatic stress disorder . The study is in collaboration with a multidisciplinary team of scientists and physicians at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine under the lead of Michael E. Hoffer, M.D., professor of

Lobe Sciences Ltd. (CSE: LOBE) (OTC Pink: GTSIF) (Lobe or the Company) is pleased to announce the launch of preclinical research studies using psilocybin and N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) for the treatment of mild traumatic brain injuryconcussion (mTBI) with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The study is in collaboration with a multidisciplinary team of scientists and physicians at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine under the lead of Michael E. Hoffer, M.D., professor of otolaryngology and neurological surgery.

NAC has been shown to be safe and efficacious in a phase I human clinical study in treating military personnel who had suffered mTBI. The initial research focus is to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of the combination of psilocybin and NAC using broadly accepted rodent models. Final results are expected in 2021. Once this is established, more specific work can examine dose response, medicine uptake, and medicine levels. The research team at the Miller School of Medicine has conducted prior studies involving NAC with mTBI and has a license from the United States Drug Enforcement Administration to conduct research using Schedule I controlled substances, which includes psilocybin.

The Miller School of Medicine is an internationally recognized leader in medical research, ranked No. 39 among the top medical schools in the nation by Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research. In 2019, the medical school submitted 1,968 research proposals and was awarded $149 million in research funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Advances in neuro-diagnostic assessment have revealed mild traumatic brain injury (concussion) is more common than previously thought and potentially associated with a host of negative health outcomes. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimates that there are 3 million emergency room visits and over 230,000 hospitalizations due to TBI in any given year in the United States alone. Also, at the same time there are 5.3 million Americans living with the effects of mTBI (a 53% increase over ten years ago). The World Health Organization calls traumatic brain injury a silent epidemic that affects over 70 million individuals across the world. The United States Department of Defense estimates that over 345,000 individuals are affected by mTBI and that 20% of all service members who deploy suffer mTBI. mTBI and PTSD are significant health care issues that often co-occur and impact each other.

Dr. Hoffer, the principal investigator on the study, said, This a very important extension of our work with NAC and other medicines to identify new treatments for mTBI and PTSD. We are hopeful that this new combination of psilocybin with NAC will lead us to better solutions for those suffering from mTBI and/or PTSD.

Maghsoud Dariani, Chief Science Officer of Lobe said, We are very excited to begin the preclinical studies in collaboration with Dr. Hoffer and his team at the University of Miami. They have made significant in-roads studying psychedelic medicine specifically as it relates to mTBI and PTSD. NAC has been shown as the only compound that has adequate pre-clinical studies to validate use and, to date, remains the only compound that has successfully completed a phase 1 equivalent trial in a population of individuals who had acute mTBI. Given there are currently no proven effective medical treatments for the treatment of mTBI and PTSD, we feel this is an important study that can lead to human clinical trials and eventually therapeutics to make a positive impact in the physical and mental wellbeing of millions of people.

About Lobe Sciences Ltd.

Lobe Sciences is a life sciences company focused on psychedelic medicines. Lobe conducts drug research and development using psychedelic compounds as well as development of innovative delivery mechanisms to improve mental health and wellness.

For further information please contact:

Lobe Sciences Ltd.Thomas Baird, CEOinfo@lobesciences.comTel: (949) 505-5623

THE CSE HAS NOT REVIEWED AND DOES NOT ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS RELEASE.

Disclaimer for Forward Looking Statements

This news release contains forward-looking statements relating to the future operations of the Company and other statements that are not historical facts. Forward-looking statements are often identified by terms such as will, may, should, anticipate, expects and similar expressions. All statements other than statements of historical fact included in this release, including statements regarding the future plans and objectives of the Company, the Companys expectations surrounding its development of treatments and/or therapeutics for mTBI and PTSD, goals and results of the preclinical research studies with the Miller School of Medicine and future expectations surrounding additional studies, research and development using NAC and psilocybin, are forward looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate, and actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the Companys expectations are risks detailed from time to time in the filings made by the Company with securities regulations. Readers are cautioned that assumptions used in the preparation of the forward-looking statements may prove to be incorrect. Events or circumstances may cause actual results to differ materially from those predicted, as a result of numerous known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors, many of which are beyond the control of the Company, including changes to the regulatory environment; and that the current Board and management may not be able to attain the Companys corporate goals and objectives. As a result, the Company cannot guarantee that any forward-looking statement will materialize and the reader is cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking information. Forward-looking statements contained in this news release are expressly qualified by this cautionary statement. The forward-looking statements contained in this news release are made only as of the date of this news release and the Company does not intend to update any of the included forward-looking statements except as expressly required by applicable Canadian securities laws.

To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/69106

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UHV NewsWire – Outstanding students persevere to find ways to help others – NewsWire

When Courtney Soliz was in a terrible car wreck in high school, she got an up-close look at the medical field. That experience inspired her to pursue a career in medicine to help others the same way doctors and nurses helped her.

Everyone, from doctors and nurses to my physical therapists, made it a personal goal to see me recover, Soliz said. They put in so much effort and pushed me to heal. They never let me fall, and it really showed me how being there for others is so important.

Soliz, who lives in Victoria, recently was named the Fall 2020 Outstanding Undergraduate Student for the University of Houston-Victoria School of Arts & Sciences. Kaila Sevilla of Houston was named the schools Outstanding Graduate Student.

Courtney and Kaila are two examples of the many incredible, intelligent students we have at UHV, said Beverly Tomek, interim dean of the UHV School of Arts & Sciences. They have put so much effort into earning their degrees, and I am proud to see them and all of our graduates move into the next phase of their lives.

Each semester, professors from UHVs three schools select outstanding graduates to be honored during commencement. UHV will hold two sets of commencement ceremonies for 2020 graduates after the spring ceremonies were canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The first three ceremonies will be Dec. 12 at the Leonard E. Merrell Center, 6301 S. Stadium Lane in Katy. The second set of ceremonies will be Jan. 9 at Faith Family Church, 2002 E. Mockingbird Lane in Victoria. Ceremonies at each location will be at 10 a.m. for UHV School of Arts & Sciences graduates, followed by School of Business Administration graduates at 1 p.m. and School of Education, Health Professions & Human Development graduates at 4 p.m. A livestream of the ceremonies will be available at http://www.uhv.edu/graduation.

Looking back at her life after the wreck, Soliz is amazed at how far shes come. When it happened, she was four months away from graduating from Victoria West High School. Instead, she had to homeschool the last part of high school while she was recovering.

After she received her diploma, she spent her freshman year at Victoria College in a wheelchair. In addition, some of the medications she was taking made it difficult to stay awake during the day. But through it all, she continued working toward her degree. Although she originally planned to transfer to the University of Texas at San Antonio, Soliz decided to go to UHV after she took a few classes while also enrolled at VC.

UHVs faculty members are wonderful because they push their students while also helping them understand and apply difficult concepts, she said. The biology faculty, especially Daniel White and Hashimul Ehsan, taught me how to study well and see how everything was connected. It was clear that their main goal is to help their students reach graduation and succeed.

When she transferred to UHV halfway through her sophomore year, Soliz began studying every morning on the third floor of the UHV University Center, where she became friends with Jesse Pisors, vice president for advancement and external relations. Pisors helped her make other connections on campus, and she eventually worked as a tutor for other students and even spoke during a UHV donor event.

At the end of the fall semester, Soliz will receive a Bachelor of Science in biology. After she graduates, she plans to take the Medical College Admission Test in March so she can apply to medical school. She wants to go into emergency medicine.

For Sevilla of Houston, UHV was the only school to which she applied because she wanted to study forensic psychology. However, the program was different than what she expected.

I had studied forensic science and psychology separately, so I was expecting some focus on criminology and looking at how and why someone commits crimes, Sevilla said. Instead, the program was more focused on mental health and how to offer treatment to people, which is something I want to do.

As part of her practicum, Sevilla worked at the Jester prison unit in Sugar Land. During her time there, she did interviews with inmates and took part in mental health examinations, checkups and checked how medication was affecting them. The overall goal was to ensure that prisoners adjusted to prison with few issues.

The experiences she had during her practicum were eye-opening and helped Sevilla set a goal for her future career. When she graduates at the end of the fall semester with a Master of Arts in forensic psychology, she plans to apply to doctoral programs in clinical psychology. Eventually, she hopes to work at a hospital, mental health clinic or prison.

Ill be happy as long as I can help underprivileged people move forward, she said. Ill be taking what I learned at UHV and my practicum experience with me as I pursue my doctorate, and Im looking forward to being able to help people who really need it.

Receiving the Outstanding Graduate Student award was a welcome surprise for Sevilla, and she is grateful for everyone who supported her through her studies, especially her classmate, Kathy Crumpler, and her practicum supervisor, Danielle Todaro, a UHV adjunct faculty member.

Soliz also is grateful to those who have supported her, including her classmate, Keir Walker; Sara Thurmond, a UHV Student Success coach and foster care liaison; her boyfriend, Alfred Garcia; and her family. She is one of four graduates in her family this semester. Her mother will be graduating from college, and two of her siblings will be graduating from high school and middle school.

Im so grateful to everyone who has supported me and to UHV, Soliz said. The environment at UHV is so welcoming, and I can tell that everyone wants to see the students succeed.

The University of Houston-Victoria, located in the heart of the Coastal Bend region since 1973 in Victoria, Texas, offers courses leading to more than 80 academic programs in the schools of Arts & Sciences; Business Administration; and Education, Health Professions & Human Development. UHV provides face-to-face classes at its Victoria campus, as well as an instructional site in Katy, Texas, and online classes that students can take from anywhere. UHV supports the American Association of State Colleges and Universities Opportunities for All initiative to increase awareness about state colleges and universities and the important role they have in providing a high-quality and accessible education to an increasingly diverse student population, as well as contributing to regional and state economic development.

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UHV NewsWire - Outstanding students persevere to find ways to help others - NewsWire

‘Coping with COVID’ Mini Med School to help address pandemic’s unseen effects – Martinsburg Journal

MARTINSBURG Hoping to address the emotional and mental toll months of isolation and stress have had on the community at large, behavioral health leadership at West Virginia University Medicine East is hosting a Mini Med School program, Coping with the COVID-19 Pandemic, to offer tools and advice toward weathering the storm in the coming winter months.

According to a release from the hospital system, WVU Medicine East and the WVU Robert C. Byrd Health Sciences Center Eastern Campus are sponsoring the virtual community program on mental well-being during a pandemic in hopes of helping curb some of the lesser-talked-about mental effects of the pandemic on both adults and children.

Co-leading the program with Michael Ang-Rabanes, assistant clinical professor and the medical director of psychiatry, Stephanie McGraw, training director for the doctoral internship program and assistant clinical professor through the school of medicine, said the pandemic has created a myriad of issues that are not as easily address with current restrictions.

What I know is that human beings, during times of stress and distress, never outgrow their need to turn to others. We are hard-wired for human connection, McGraw said. So now, we are confronted with a time where those innate evolutionary needs are also what puts us at risk for a life-threatening illness that really threatens our emotional health and well-being. The longer that we continue in this pandemic, individuals mental and emotional resources are being depleted, and that puts that them at an increased risk for developing psychiatric conditions like depression and anxiety, suicidal ideation or completed suicides.

According to McGraw, the strategies behavioral health professionals would typically recommend to help individuals cope with kind of stress - like exercise, being outdoors and spending time with loved ones- are not readily available due to the pandemic.

So its important for us to think as a community and a people to best meet everyones physical, psychological and emotional (needs) to weather this storm. And thats what we hope to do in Tuesdays presentation, McGraw said.

According to McGraw, some symptoms behavioral health professionals have noticed in both children and adults as a result of COVID-19 have included people reporting not feeling like themselves; a sense of emptiness; feeling tearful; struggling with feelings of helplessness and hopelessness; further isolation; increased anxiety; increases in impulsive behavior; and an increase in irritability.

We are noticing that some of these symptoms have presented during our initial surge, but there were a lot of protective things going on that time. As COVID lingers and we gear up for winter, we are noticing that people are feeling more depleted, and that puts them at an increased vulnerability for feeling these symptoms and may lead them to respond in a number of ways, such as indulging in risky behaviors; some may choose to decide theyre over COVID and choose to engage in behaviors that puts them, their loved ones and community at increased risks; or some may begin isolating even more.

McGraw said it is their hope to cover not only the basics of self-care during this unprecedented time, such as sleep, diet, exercise and meditation recommendations, but to offer other sources of connection and care to help people withstand the seasonal depression and anxieties seen typically as the winter months kick in, on top of the COVID-19 stresses being experienced already.

The virtual mini-medical school program is being offered free to the public as a community service of WVU Medicine and the WVU Health Sciences Center and will be broadcasted via the WVU Medicine Easts Facebook page on Nov. 17 at 7 p.m.

Closed caption will be offered for the hearing impaired.

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'Coping with COVID' Mini Med School to help address pandemic's unseen effects - Martinsburg Journal

Governor Ivey Awards Nearly $300 Million to 20 High Schools and College Across Alabama – Alabama News Network

Governor Kay Ivey on Thursday announced $298,317,492 has been awarded to Public School and College Authority (PSCA) projects to 20 entities around the state.

The Public School and College Authority was established with the intent on tackling long-standing school infrastructure projects or educational upgrades that have been delayed due to limited funding, Governor Ivey said. Im pleased to announce these 20 projects with the people of Alabama in full transparency. The announcement today marks a significant investment in the future of this state. Im grateful to the Alabama Legislature for the enabling legislation which established the PSCA and the astute work of State Finance Director Kelly Butler for positioning the bond sale in the best way possible.

During the 2019 State of the State, Governor Ivey announced her support of SB 242, the PSCA Bond Issue for public schools to use toward construction, safety improvement or technology upgrades. The PSCA is comprised of Governor Kay Ivey, State Finance Director Kelly Butler and Alabama Superintendent of Education Dr. Eric Mackey.

I am thrilled that the PSCA is able to provide these funds to worthwhile projects throughout the state, Director Butler said. I am grateful to the legislature for authorizing the sale and to Governor Ivey for her leadership in supporting this transaction. The successful sale is the result of outstanding work by the financing team, and I thank them for all of their efforts.

SB 242 authorized the PSCA to sell up to $1,250,000,000 in bonds and allocated money to every city and county K-12 school system and to higher education institutions. The money was divided with 73% going to K-12 schools and 27% going to two-and four-year colleges.

Because of very low interest rates, the bond sale resulted in the PSCA receiving over $300 million in premium revenues. The true interest cost of the bonds is 2.145% over the 20-year repayment period.

The PSCA projects funded from the premium revenue and announced today are as follows:

University of Alabama Huntsville

Huntsville Regional Lab and Morgue 11,000,000

HudsonAlpha

Expansion of Biotech Campus/designate Alabama the Discovery

Life Sciences Global Headquarters 15,000,000

Auburn University

New STEM & Agricultural Sciences Complex 50,000,000

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Genomic Medical & Data Sciences Building 50,000,000

Troy University

Center for Materials and Manufacturing 9,450,000

Alabama Center for Arts

Dorm 15,000,000

University of South Alabama

New Medical School Building 50,000,000

University of North Alabama

Computer Science & Mathematics Building 15,000,000

Alabama School of Deaf and Blind

North Alabama Campus 28,519,992

Alabama Aviation College

Phase 2 renovations of Barnett Building and upgrade the hanger floor 500,000

Lauderdale County

Workforce Development Center 8,000,000

Alabama Shakespeare Festival

Renovations & Repairs 5,000,000

Alabama School of Math & Science

Science Research Center 6,000,000

Outdoor Classrooms 235,000

AIDT

Toyota/Mazda 8,000,000

Jacksonville State University

Randy Owen Performance Center 15,000,000

The American Village

Central Independence Hall & Tower Classrooms and Experiences 5,000,000

Alabama A&M University

Library Roofing 907,500

Wilson Hall, Drake Hall, Carnegie Hall wood restoration project 605,000

University of Montevallo

Residence Halls HVAC/Roof Repair 1,000,000

University of West Alabama

Brock Hall 2ndFloor Renovation 2,600,000

Alabama State University

Friendship Manor 1,500,000

Total298,317,492

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Governor Ivey Awards Nearly $300 Million to 20 High Schools and College Across Alabama - Alabama News Network

Medical School Research Growing With Addition of Biostatistician – UNLV NewsCenter

The statistics you frequently hear on TV during medical stories dont necessarily come from the physician being interviewed. Often, they come from a crucial, but unsung, biostatistician.

These individuals often play a key role in designing studies and makesure they adhere to proper medical/scientific guidelines. Biostatisticians generally arent recognized in popular media for the studies to which they may have made important contributions. Its tough to explain in a one-minute story just what biostatisticians did, say, for a study showing a drug has treatment efficacy for 30 percent of people with diabetes.

A clinician using the new drug with patients is front and center for an interview with a reporter. Biostatisticians remain behind the scenes. To use a sports analogy, theyre best known for helping plan game strategy, rather than playing the game. Many medical experts refer to biostatistics as the science of obtaining, analyzing, and interpreting data in order to understand and improve human health. That information is at the heart of those study conclusions.

According to Dr. Kavita Batra, a new biostatistician at the UNLV School of Medicine, biostatisticians notonly can assist in designing studies;they review the data, perform quality assurance to statistical methods and outputs, and help interpret results of analyses to relay meaningful information to inform public health policies. Academic medicine, she notes, is evidence-based.

When Batra explains what she can bring to collaborations at the medical school, her scientific voice is evident: I bring my analytic, problem-solving, and communication skills to the School of Medicine. I perform advanced quantitative analysis modeling, bootstrap, meta-analysis etc. and have a firm grasp over the survey-based research. With my dental background [Batra is a former dental surgeon], I have a complete understanding of medical terminologies, which I get to apply and integrate with my statistical expertise to various areas across the school of medicine.

Dr. Deborah Kuhls, the interim assistant dean for research at the medical school, said that in hiring Batra the school found someone who has a skill set for academic medicine that is multidisciplinary. She can work as a key member of interdisciplinary research teams that include physician-scientists, residents, fellows, and medical students. Helping develop funding applications and contributing to proposal and budget development are also key parts of the job.

Batra, a native of India, received her Ph.D. in public health from UNLV in May. She focused on maternal and child health, assessing the health and financial burden of neonatal abstinence syndrome. Four years earlier, she earned her masters degree in public health at UNLV, writing a master's thesis analyzing the effectiveness of the national diabetes prevention program in reducing weight and promoting physical activity among adult Nevadans.

Cant isnt a word used much by Batra. Her personal story is a large reason for that.

Having had polio has made me stronger, said Batra, who now is matter-of-fact about the disease she contracted at the age of 6 months. Itparalyzed her lower right side, and it took five operations between the ages of 2 and 22 for her to walk well on her own. She says as a young girl she fell in love with numbers because she used to count the days she had to remain in a full-body cast after an operation.

Often it wasnt the physical problems that caused her the most distress as a young girl. Schools in India, believing her physical problems would translate into teachers having to spend time with her that didnt involve academia, wouldnt admit her. I was homeschooled by my mother. I missed being in school like other kids, she recalled.

Finally, when she passed all of a schools entrance exams, a school admitted her. My intellectual ability overcame my physical disability. She ended up skipping several grades, quickly catching up with her age group.

Emotionally, she said, her disability was difficult. When other kids were on the playground, she sat on a bench and wished she was there. People gave her strange looks when she moved. People imitated her gait. Sometimes I cried, but I was disciplined with my studies. If I couldn't be ahead with walking, Id be ahead with learning. Other students, often older, began to respect her because she could help them with their studies. Bullying ended.

As a 7-year-old,Batra began askingher parents questions that ultimately resulted in her going into medicine. I constantly asked, Why did this happen to me? Why am I different? The more I talked with them, I wanted to help people through medicine.

She initially wanted to go to medical school but decided against it because she didnt think she could move fast enough in an emergency. Instead, she went to one of Indias most prestigious dental schools. Dentists, she noted, are often the first health care professionals to recognize and identify various diseases, ranging from hypertension to oral cancer.

For five years she practiced dentistry. Then she became a public health officer, working heavily with statistics. I liked working to prevent diseases like polio, she said. I found it challenging and exciting to combine biology, statistics, and social science to address a health problem.

At the age of 30, she moved to the U.S. with her husband. The couple he works for Caesars now has an 8-year-old daughter. In addition to her studies at UNLV, she also has worked as a research coordinator and data analyst for Nevada Orthopedic & Spine Center and as an adjunct faculty member for UNLV, the Arizona College School of Nursing, the College of Southern Nevada, and Southern New Hampshire University (online).

Batra is excited about the statistical research shell be doing with the UNLV School of Medicine. I will be providing statistical consultation for research being conducted by faculty, residents, staff, and students. I will be providing support in empowering researchers in the study planning, developing the statistical models, power estimation, and interpreting results. I think the exciting piece is about the thrill of discovery, learning, and challenging your assumptions. One of the great things about statistics is that each investigation is new and unique, involves new data and hypotheses to explore, and new conclusions to be reached.

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Medical School Research Growing With Addition of Biostatistician - UNLV NewsCenter

Higher ed’s response to growing demands for medical education | – University Business

Universities need to rethink their approach to healthcare education to get more students in the door and fill the opportunity gap in medical jobs.

No industry has been spared massive disruption from the coronavirus pandemic and resulting rapid digitalization. But for both higher education and healthcare, disruption had already been a way of lifejust on a more gradual scale. The pandemic has further driven down college enrollment numbers that were already on a decade-long decline, leaving many institutions in unprecedented financial distress. Meanwhile, healthcare providers are being pushed to simultaneously deliver higher quality care at a lower cost.

Shiv Gaglani, Osmosis.org

For university leaders, medical education presents an ideal opportunity to address current gaps in enrollment, while also positioning the institution to meet future demands. Not only are we experiencing greater demand for healthcare workers (indeed, six of the fastest 10 growing professions in the U.S. are in healthcare), but the growth of emerging fields like advanced technology, population health, and care coordination means traditional medical schools are not adequately equipped to address current needs.

Expanding healthcare education certificate and degree programs enables universities to get more students in the door today while positioning them for long-term stability through massive transformation. But it involves rethinking the traditional approach.

Since 2002, the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) has reported a 31% growth in enrollment at medical schools. Its no wonderhealthcare is where graduates will find jobs today and tomorrow. The U.S. population is growing older and sicker, with comorbidities like heart disease and diabetes on the rise. At the same time, 33% of working nurses will reach retirement age in the next 8 years. And though the nursing shortage is the most egregious, by 2030, we can expect to see a worldwide shortage of 15 million healthcare workers as the demand for jobs across health systems will likely double.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, healthcare jobs are expected to grow at a faster pace than any other industryup 14% from 2018 to 2028. These jobs appeal to a diverse population of students, too, offering a variety of entry points, educational requirements and salary expectations. A surgical technician could meet job qualifications in a shorter period of time and still expect to earn $48,000 while a nurse pursuing a RN degree will enter a labor market with a median salary of $73,000, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

But traditional higher education is simply not equipped to handle the surge of people pursuing degrees in healthcare. Over the last ten years, the number of people applying to medical school has increased by 25%, but there are not enough openings at medical schools to accommodate them. Todays social distancing guidelines in classrooms and residency programs add further strain.

So how can universities adapt to address this opportune gap?

Closing the gap in high-quality medical education is not as simple as launching new degree programs. Just as there are shortages of healthcare workers and medical education spots to train applicants, there are also not enough instructors to meet the demand. And with expansive real estate footprints becoming burdensome when competing with hybrid and online campuses, universities must get creative to maximize their human and real estate capital. The key is to integrate traditional and digital learning techniques.

Digital tools like educational videos and experiential recordings can supplement an instructors knowledge as well as spotlight the latest advancesno matter where they occur. Additionally, as emerging fields grow in popularity, supplemental digital tools provide universities with greater flexibility to apply content to various specialties and learning paths. And considering the speed of technological advancements, relying solely on traditional in-person instruction sets students and institutions behind.

Given that not all healthcare education can be done virtually, its important that there be physical spaces where trainees can meet standardized patients as well as practice on simulated cases and mannequins. As traditional college buildings empty, many of these spaces can be repurposed to provide healthcare training and potentially even basic healthcare to the communities they serve.

Digital content also gives students greater control over their education, enabling them to more extensively pursue topics that interest them the most. Plus, as more people pursue their education while working, for example, a registered nurse studying to become a nurse practitioner, the demand for flexibility in content delivery will only increase.

On-demand content delivery is here to stay and the need for additional medical education will only continue to grow. Combining these two trends presents an ideal opportunity for universities seeking new ways to increase enrollment and strengthen their foundation for the future.

Shiv Gaglani is the co-founder and chief executive officer of Osmosis.org, a health education platform with an audience of current and future clinicians as well as their patients and family members. Gaglanis primary passion is developing innovative and scalable solutions in the fields of healthcare and education. To this end he curated the Smartphone Physical, which debuted at TEDMED, and the Patient Promise, a movement to improve clinician-patient relationship through partnership in pursuing healthy lifestyle behaviors.

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Higher ed's response to growing demands for medical education | - University Business

Fauci reacts to Bannon: ‘That’s not the kind of thing you think about’ at medical school | TheHill – The Hill

DAnthony FauciAnthony FauciOvernight Health Care: COVID-19 cases rising in every state | Wisconsin health official warns state nearing 'tipping point' | Fauci predicts data from Moderna vaccine within a week Fauci reacts to Bannon: 'That's not the kind of thing you think about' at medical school Fauci predicts data from Moderna COVID-19 vaccine within a week MORE, the nation's top infectious diseases specialist, said formerTrump adviser Stephen Bannon calling for his beheading isnot the kind of thing you think about when you're going through medical school.

Bannoncaused outragelast week when he said that he wanted to put Fauci and FBI Director Christopher Wrays heads on pikes.

Fauci was asked on the Australian TV news program "The 7:30 Report" what it was like managing a pandemic and dealing with Donald Trump at the same time.

Well, it's obviously been very stressful, Fauci responded in an interview published Wednesday. To deny that would be to deny reality, when you have public figures like Bannon calling for your beheading, that's really kind of unusual, I think. That's not the kind of thing you think about when you're going through medical school to be a physician. But I've gotten through it by really focusing like a laser beam on exactly what my goal is.

President TrumpDonald John TrumpState Department won't give Biden messages from foreign leaders: report Arizona's GOP AG says people voted Republican, but not for Trump On The Money: Biden wins America's economic engines | Progressives praise Biden's picks for economic transition team | Restaurants go seasonal with winter shutdowns during pandemic MORE himself has also suggested he might fire Fauci, who said he is trying to focus on developing vaccines and treatments and encouraging Americans to take public health precautions like wearing masks and maintaining distance from others.

If you focus on that and don't get distracted by all the other noise, then it's not as bad as you might think it is. It's when you start to focus on that other junk as I call it, it's noise. It's meaningless. People calling for you to be beheaded, fired, thrown in the fire pit or whatever, that's just noise, he said.

He also said lockdowns should be a last resort and instead is focused on getting more Americans to take precautions like wearing a mask.

Fauci indicated he has not been in touch with President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenBrewery launches new Biden beer described as 'inoffensive and not too bitter' Deb Haaland says 'of course' she would serve as Interior secretary under Biden State Department won't give Biden messages from foreign leaders: report MOREs transition team, as Trump has not conceded the race and his administration has not taken steps to begin the transition process, including on the coronavirus response.

Right now, the situation, as you well know, is a rather tense situation in the United States regarding transitions, so right now things are on hold for the time being, Fauci said.

Asked about the performance of the World Health Organization, which has come under fierce criticism from Trump, Fauci said in the future it should respond in a timely manner without any indication of worrying about political ramifications.

We need countries like China to allow other scientists and health officials to look around and see what's going on, he added. That would be helpful. They did not allow that in the beginning. They essentially did not allow travel to Wuhan. Thats not a good thing.

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Fauci reacts to Bannon: 'That's not the kind of thing you think about' at medical school | TheHill - The Hill

SMHS researchers expect effective COVID-19 vaccine by end of 2020 – GW Hatchet

Media Credit: Courtesy of Harrison Jones

GW's COVID-19 vaccine research team plans to have a working vaccine completed by the end of 2020, researchers said at a press conference.

Officials from the School of Medicine and Health Sciences said they project to have an efficacious COVID-19 vaccine by the end of the calendar year at a press conference Wednesday.

Medical school administrators said GW is being assessed to be part of another COVID-19 vaccine trial, run by the Coronavirus Prevention Network, the segment of the National Institutes for Health that is running the current trial SMHS is conducting. David Diemert, the principal investigator for the trials and a professor of medicine, said the trials volunteers should be commended for pushing the research teams work forward despite national concerns about receiving a COVID-19 vaccine once it is available.

I have to say that we are particularly grateful for our volunteers given all of the negative press that has been floating around regarding vaccines, and they are really taking a step to volunteer and to control whether or not there will be a vaccine moving forward, Diemert said.

He said the trial team keeps in touch with participants on a weekly basis through telehealth visits and electronic diaries. He said several of the trials participants have developed symptoms related to COVID-19, but just one participant has tested positive for the virus so far.

After their second dose of vaccine, which is four weeks after the first, we are going to be in contact with them monthly through either in-person visits or telehealth visits, Diemert said in an interview.

Half of the vaccine trials participants are Black or Latino, surpassing the researchers goal for diversity.

Barbara Lee Bass, the dean of the medical school, said the medical community is still unsure when a widespread vaccine will be available, but theyre hopeful that high-risk groups of people, like health care workers, will be able to receive the vaccine by early 2021. She said Mayor Muriel Bowsers office has started a task force, on which an SMHS faculty member serves, to create a plan for distributing a COVID-19 vaccine once it becomes available.

I think that most people in this business think its probably going to be some time 2022 before we have widespread vaccination available, she said. Thats kind of what Im hearing, not necessarily based on inside knowledge by any means.

Moncef Slaoui, the chief adviser for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services COVID-19 vaccine development initiative Operation Warp Speed, said he is grateful to the people who have participated in the trial so far.

I really warmly thank the volunteers, the two who are with us today, but also the almost 30,000 who have participated in this particular trial of the Moderna vaccine, he said.

Slaoui said he encourages community members to participate in the trials.

There are six vaccines being tested, two of which are almost fully completed, he said. Two more are trying to restart imminently, most likely later this week, next week, and there will be two more late in December and early December.

Wilma Capriles, a housekeeper from D.C. and a participant in the study, said she wanted to participate in the trial to help a vaccine be widely available.

I recommend it to everybody, she said. I think it is safe. I think its good for everybody, especially for Latino people.

Stay up to date on GW, D.C. news related to the virus. READ MORE

This article appeared in the October 26, 2020 issue of the Hatchet.

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SMHS researchers expect effective COVID-19 vaccine by end of 2020 - GW Hatchet

Biracial Stanford physician: We must look beyond race in medicine – Scope

In an August column in STAT News, Megan Mahoney, MD, Stanford Health Care's chief of staff, wrote, "In medical school, I was diligently trained to report to my attending physicians the age, race, and gender of my patients -- in that order."

She wondered how a doctor would describe her, a biracial woman, and what the medical consequences might be for her.

For a 1:2:1 podcast, I spoke with Mahoney, a family medicine clinician, about her background; about race and how it plays out in clinical settings; and about what needs to change to overcome systemic racial inequities in the nation's health care system.

This Q&A is edited and condensed from that conversation.

You wrote in your column: "It's time to stop using skin color and race in medicine and see patients for who they really are." It came out of your experience as a biracial woman. Tell me about your parents.

My father was born to Irish-American parents. After graduating from prep school and the U.S. Naval Academy, he married, but he lost his wife to meningitis. He decided to go into the priesthood. As a priest, he began working in Memphis and became very active in the civil rights movement.

My mother was born in Memphis -- the Jim Crow South -- as one of 13 children. Sometimes all the family had to eat were peaches from the trees in their backyard.

She received a full scholarship to a small Catholic college in Kansas. She returned to Memphis after college to teach at a high school. She also was treasurer at the Catholic parish church where my father served, which is how they met.

My mother received a PhD in mathematics, and later was one of the first African-American women in the United States to become a university president. She served as president of Lincoln University of Missouri for seven years.

My father was by her side throughout her career. It was quite a love story.

When were you first aware of being biracial?

I grew up in Columbus, Ohio. I was in kindergarten, the very first day of school, on the playground with a group of kids. They looked at me quizzically, trying to size me up, and asked, "So, what are you?" I had no idea what they were referring to.

Later, at the dinner table, I asked my parents, "There's this question I'm not really sure how to answer." They told me to go back the next day. If I was asked again, I should respond, "I'm mixed." I felt very prepared. I went back and was asked again, "What are you?" I responded, "I'm mixed up."

As you moved through life, college and medical school, how did being a biracial woman impact you?

For most of my adult life, I was categorized as "other." On applications for various schools, I've had to be limited in how I describe my racial background. They'd ask, White, African American, Asian, Pacific Islander, Hispanic, but there often was not a box that gave me an opportunity to write in, "White and Black."

When I was in high school, my counselors were pushing me towards Ivy League colleges, but I selected a school -- UC Berkeley -- because of its racial diversity.

For the first time, I could experience being surrounded by people of all different backgrounds. I can just share with you that that sense of belonging was truly cherished. For once, I didn't have to be asked, "Where are you really from?" It didn't matter.

In your opinion piece for STAT news, you write that it's time for medicine to look beyond race as a determinant factor and see people as individuals.

The practice of medicine has not truly accounted for mixed-race individuals and lacks the precision to recognize our whole, inclusive identities. A lot of it is based in our history in medicine.

Fortunately, there is now a greater appreciation that race is a social concept, rather than a genetically bounded category, thanks to the genomic revolution. We know now that we, as a species, share 99.9% of our DNA with each other, and that our traits that are typically associated with race are not linked genetically to health-related genes.

There is a greater appreciation for the role of environmental, social and behavioral factors, their influence on health outcomes, and how they probably determine over 70% of what determines health, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That exceeds the contribution made by genetics and even medical treatment.

Black Americans have higher rates of morbidity and mortality for COVID-19. Systemic inequities also bear out for Latinos and Indigenous Americans. Are racial inequities baked into the health care system?

Sadly, racism and bias are baked into most, if not all, of our institutions. We need to identify where they exist and then address and change them. I'm committed to that.

A recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey found that one in five Black Americans say they've experienced discrimination while seeking health care in a clinic.

That's a stark statistic, and it likely does reflect the experiences of Black Americans. I think that we as physicians are morally obligated to practice cultural humility -- the fact that we all carry unconscious biases. We all do. We have to become aware of that and approach it with a certain level of humble inquiry, questioning ourselves in how we're practicing medicine.

How do the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and many others, and the data you're talking about, meet this particular moment? Are we at an inflection point?

I think so. There is a greater interest in raising our collective awareness around these issues. I've also noticed that there is a concerted effort behind wanting to make curricular changes in medical school, so we are understanding how race and racism impacts health and health outcomes.

I'm seeing changes I've never witnessed before, happening throughout our institutions.It's really an important time.

Top image of Megan Mahoney, MD, with a patient by Steve Fisch. Family photos courtesy of Mahoney.

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Biracial Stanford physician: We must look beyond race in medicine - Scope

Global Medical Education Market Expected to Reach highest CAGR by 2027: GE Healthcare Institute, TACT Academy for Clinical Training, Johns Hopkins…

The Global Medical Education Market report is designed to serve as a ready-to-use guide for developing accurate pandemic management programs allowing market players to successfully emerge from the crisis and retrack voluminous gains and profits. This in-depth research report presentation on global Medical Education market offers decisive market intelligence across multi-tier levels comprising regional, industry level, followed by further supply chain landscape.

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GE Healthcare InstituteTACT Academy for Clinical TrainingJohns Hopkins School of MedicineCAE HealthcareHarvard Medical SchoolSiemens HealthineersApollo HospitalsHealthcare Training Institute, New JerseyStanford University School of MedicineOlympus AmericaAmerican College of RadiologyZimmer Biomet InstituteGundersen Health System

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Unbiased research initiatives offer relevant cues on the impressive market recovery from sudden pandemic crisis that substantially laid a temporary dent in the global Medical Education market. Proceeding further, this extensive research compilation suggests that the CAGR percentage is anticipated to be on an optimistic prognosis, reflecting impressive revenue generation outcome through the forecast span. Echoing lucrative growth outcome of the historical timeline, future growth possibilities are also likely to remain robust in foreseeable future.

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On-campusDistanceOnline

Medical Education market Segmentation by Application:

Cardiothoracic TrainingNeurology TrainingOrthopedic TrainingOral and Maxillofacial TrainingPediatric TrainingRadiology TrainingLaboratoryOthers

This section of the report allows readers to clearly identify the segment which is anticipated to ensure highest returns, thus encouraging investors to make logical business decisions. Further in the Medical Education market report, readers are also equipped with assorted knowledge spots pertaining to product and service oriented developments besides evaluating their applicability across sectors and geographies.

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Analysis comprising both country-level as well as regional details have been broadly discussed to tap developments across consumer behavior, top stimulants as well as notable barriers that also tend to mold growth prognosis in global Medical Education market. Some of the major regional areas included in the report comprise North and South Americas, APAC, Europe and MEA.

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Global Medical Education Market Expected to Reach highest CAGR by 2027: GE Healthcare Institute, TACT Academy for Clinical Training, Johns Hopkins...

Applying to a Tufts graduate school? Here’s what to expect – Tufts Daily

Applying to schools can be a daunting process, particularly at the graduate level. As with many things COVID-19 has impacted, the application process to graduate schools is evolving under the circumstances.

At Tufts University School of Dental Medicine, interviews with applicants are now being done using video, according to Gillian Anzivino, director of admissions.

While we miss seeing candidates in person, most people are now comfortable with video interactions, she wrote in an email to the Daily. Some applicants and interviewees have enjoyed the new flexibility.

As part of the dental school application, applicants are now asked to share how they have been impacted by COVID-19. Robert Kasberg, associate dean of admissions and student affairs, has noticed a decrease in some applicants volunteer and community service hours due to the pandemic.

Candidates will have to demonstrate their ability to communicate compassionately, he wrote in an email to the Daily.

Since COVID-19 has limited the availability of hands-on experiences, Kasberg detailed how dental school applicants have simulated fine motor skills by not only working in a dental lab, but also through jewelry-making or playing the piano or guitar.

During the pandemic, there might have been more time for applicants to practice some of those micro-motor skills, he noted.

The Tufts University School of Medicines interview process has also been altered this year. The school has created a fully remote interview day, which includes virtual interviews, live and pre-recorded talks for the applicants, a virtual tour, sessions led by current students, and a session for applicants who are underrepresented in medicine (URM), along with a session for those who identify with the LGBTQIA+ community, David Neumeyer, dean of admissions at the Tufts University School of Medicine, wrote in an email to the Daily.

One of the questions added to the application is how COVID-19 has affected the applicants experiences so far. The Medical College Admission Test is also being accepted through the fall as it may have been disrupted earlier in the year. While only some applicants have had a more challenging time finding meaningful work compared to past years, Neumeyer expects more to have difficulty in gaining hands-on experience in the next cycle of applications.

Gaining the experience in medicine is really not meant as much for us as an admissions committee, but rather for you as an applicant, so you can make sure that you are ready and understand as best as you can what it means to be a physician, Neumeyer said.

Anne Moore, program specialist in the Office of Scholar Development, spoke to how being flexible with the changing times is crucial to COVID-19-impacted circumstances. One of her key takeaways is to translate hard skills into experiences that demonstrate a students values.

If you want to go to [medical] school, ultimately whats that about is helping people. And you know what people need right now, is help. It comes back to how to manifest your values most clearly, Moore said. Even though you may not be gaining those skills in the same timeline that you initially anticipate.

In addition to application changes, the medical schools admissions staff has undergone counseling to adapt to the impact of COVID-19 on students applications.

We have trained and will re-train our admissions committee to try to best understand what an applicant has to go through to be ready to apply to medical school, Neumeyer said.

Its admissions staff has also conducted further training on diversity and inclusion in the universitys quest to become an anti-racist institution.

One of the trends multiple graduate schools have noticed is an increasing number of applications. Applications to the doctor of dental medicine program at Tufts University School of Dental Medicine are up 4% from this time last year, and applications to the schools postgraduate programs are up 27% from this time last year.

Aviva Must, dean of public health programs and professional degree programs, saw increased interest in the masters of public health program, both the on-campus and online formats, which she attributes to the awareness of the importance of public health.

We had an uptick in applicants and in enrolled students, despite our on-campus program being remote, she said.

As with many things with COVID, many of us have become more extreme versions of ourselves. So if students had any hesitations about whether or not to go to grad school, I think that hesitation has become exacerbated, Moore said. I think students who have seen grad school as a key or logical next step are more motivated to go.

According to a 2018 report from the U.S. Census Bureau, during the last recession, enrollment in higher education rose by nearly 3 million. While Moore stresses the importance of having a clear reason to go to graduate school, she acknowledged that going to graduate school during a bad economy is sometimes viewed as a way to gain credentials and enter the job market when the economy has rebounded. Applying to schools when plans have gone awry can be nerve-wracking, but Moore aims to advise students on adapting to the times, emphasizing that everyone is in the same boat.

With my students, I tell them: Look, youre stuck, and youre feeling how am I going to do this, go to grad school, but the rules are changing and they always will, Moore said. So look at your feet and look for the opportunities where you are, and try to make the world better in whatever that means to you.

On the graduate counseling side, Moore has been helping students frame their landscape. I think about the future in three-to-six month blocks of time, Moore said. The question she poses allows for ebbs and flows: Whats going to make the next season allow for a set of options that look appealing?

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Healer’s art: Integrating the humanities into medical education – Arizona Daily Wildcat

During the last decade, there has been a strong initiative by medical schools around the nation to integrate medical humanities into their curriculum. This movement seeks to train resilient medical students with holistic approaches that will better address the complexities of healing diverse patients.

The University of Arizona College of Medicine Tucson has made its mission to be in the forefront of this movement. At UACOM-T, the Medical Humanities Program provides students with enrichment electives that serve as a journey through medical humanities in order to learn and practice the tools that will aid [students] in becoming more compassionate and empathic physicians.

This academic year the "Healers Art" elective has been a favorite amongst students. The purpose of this course is to allow students to explore areas not fully addressed in the curriculum and feel connected to the real reasons for becoming a physician, said Dr. Patricia Lebensohn, professor of Family and Community Medicine and director of the Healers Art elective.

During each session, students get together to discuss mindfulness, grief, the meaning of service and the awe of medicine. Through these conversations, students share personal stories, beliefs and experiences that have impacted their ongoing journey through the medical profession. These conversations are enhanced by faculty mentors and physicians who contribute their personal experiences and share valuable lessons with students.

I think it is a precious opportunity to have physician mentors who can share their unique life stories inside and outside of medicine, said Hannah Korah, a first-year MD/PhD student. It is truly a humbling experience to see physicians be human beings who are vulnerable and so emotionally strong after everything they have gone through.

As expected, many of these conversations can be difficult. Students often share how emotional experiences such as the passing of a loved one or a personal failure have shaped or continue to shape their lives.

Rosemarie Turk, a second-year medical student at the UA, is grateful to participate in these conversations.

"I was not quite sure what to expect going into the elective. Now that we are half way through, I feel like I have learned that people carry so much with them in their everyday lives and don't always have an outlet to express it," Turk said. "I feel very grateful to gain more perspective through the Healer's Art elective."

Another common topic for students is the physical and mental demands of medical education.

During each session we are able to talk about particularly stressful days in medical school and our mental wellbeing, said Jarrod Rulney, a first-year medical student. It is very comforting to know that we all have a common struggle. Everyone is very supportive and eager to help.

Conversations about mental health have proven especially important. Decades of research has repeatedly shown an increasing rate of burnout, cynicism and anxiety amongst medical students and new practicing physicians.

Healers Art has taken initiative to address the vulnerability of being a medical student and physician, Korah said. The emotional toll of what we are dedicating our lives to is often hidden under shadows of textbooks, lectures, and clinical skills. This course teaches me to embrace the struggle, keeps me grounded, and reminds me that I am not alone on this journey.

By emphasizing the ways medial humanities can improve student wellbeing, UACOM-T hopes to mitigate burnout and mental health concerns early in training. Lebensohn said that she believes that Healers Art will serve as an antidote to the hidden curriculum that over time make students less empathic, more jaded and burned-out.

Around the nation, similar efforts have shown promising results. A recent study by University of Washington School of Medicine suggests that the integration of humanities education into their medical school curriculum has led to an increase in student performance, well-being and empathy.

The Healers Art elective has also served as way for students and faculty to appreciate and share a common passion for the humanities. The intersections between medicine, music and art are frequently explored during each session, adding greater depth to already complex conversations.

Turk explained that cultivating her interest in the humanities will make her a better physician.

The humanities are important in every aspect of life. They are embedded [in] everyone's life because, after all, we live a human experience. With such rich and unique experiences and different ways of processing them, the humanities allow us to better understand our patients and one another," Turk said.

Lebensohn said she shares these sentiments. In her personal life, she reads non-medical fiction, enjoys music and explores cinema. She believes that these interests make her a more complete and compassionate professional.

The humanities are an integral part of my role as a physician and how I connect at a human level with [my] patients. They are an important part of my personal and professional life," Lebensohn added.

Ultimately, renewed interest in medical humanities highlights the need to address curricular gaps that push non-medical courses to the sidelines. Educators around the country recognize that medical students need training beyond the scientific principles of medicine to become competent physicians. Through courses like Healers Art, UACOM-T seeks to close this gap in training.

For students like Rulney, Healers Art brings a refreshing focus to the humanistic foundations of medicine.

Courses like Healers Art remind me why I wanted to pursue medicine in the first place. At its core, this profession is about connecting with people, understanding their human experiences and collaborating with them to improve their quality of life. Healing is incomplete without a humanistic approach," Rulney added.

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Healer's art: Integrating the humanities into medical education - Arizona Daily Wildcat

Dr. Kimberly Gilbert Chronicles Her Experience in Medical School in New Book Free Press of Jacksonville – Jacksonville Free Press

By Rolling Out Dr. Kimberly Gilbert, a board-certified Atlanta-based physician has penned a new book, So When Do I See the Doctor? The book is about her journey to becoming a physician and the challenges she faced as a result of her race and gender and how she found the strength to complete medical school, residency, and beyond despite hardship.

What inspired you to write So When Do I See the Doctor?

When I started my journey to becoming a physician, there were not any easily accessible stories to read that spoke candidly about the trials that many Black students and doctors, especially Black females, would experience from different perspectives on the road to success. More physicians are starting to tell their stories online, in magazines, and on TV, but I wanted to also give something a little old school in the form of a book. I wanted it to be comprehensive and honest. I also wanted it to be inspirational. The book not only addresses racism and sexism but also intra-racial and intra-cultural issues, and how people in positions of influence can oftentimes encourage or destroy whoever is listening to them.

What is the story behind the title?My first patient in private practice was an older White male. After clearly introducing myself when I entered the patients room wearing my long white coat and name tag, spending over one hour with him listening to his concerns, examining him, reviewing imaging studies with him, and discussing my recommendations, he told me that I had a great plan before asking, So when do I see the doctor?

Name three takeaways for the reader from the book. Despite how society may portray us, Black people are equal and worthy of the same safety, education, respect, and opportunities for success as anyone else. Our ancestors are the reason why we have the opportunities that we have today, and our decisions each day will determine the opportunities of tomorrow for those who follow our paths. No matter what struggles you go through on your journey to success, you can not only persevere but also maintain who you are along the way.

At what point did you know it was time to write this book, was it a deliberate decision or did it evolve?

My husband and friends have been telling me to write a book for years, after hearing my stories as they happened, telling me that very few people outside of medicine think Black female physicians also go through race and gender bias because our accomplishments and career are so prestigious. When the pandemic hit, it exposed so much racial injustice in America, I felt it was the perfect time to bring awareness of its existence in health care.

What is the best piece of writing advice that you received?Be authentic

For more on the original article visit: https://rollingout.com/2020/10/19/dr-kimberly-gilbert-chronicles-her-experience-in-medical-school-in-new-book/

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Dr. Kimberly Gilbert Chronicles Her Experience in Medical School in New Book Free Press of Jacksonville - Jacksonville Free Press

An Arizona student was arrested after threatening to kill medical school classmates and bomb the campus, authorities say – CNN

The student faces four felony counts of computer tampering by using a computer in a course of conduct that threatened, terrorized or tormented specific individuals, police said.

It's unclear if she has legal representation.

The dean of Midwestern University at Glendale contacted authorities in April and reported that the student had sent a message from their phone threatening to bomb the campus, according to police and a probable cause statement.

When the dean confronted the student, she denied sending the message, the probable cause statement says.

The dean said the student was not doing well in school and was set to take her third medical board test after failing the first two, adding that if she failed the last test, she would be removed from the school, according to the court documents.

Earlier this month, a mass email was sent to about 200 students that named victims the author wanted to kill, according to police and the probable cause statement.

"Several more emails were sent in group messages threatening death and involving the families of the students," police added.

The student was arrested Wednesday after she was linked to the email addresses, social media accounts and electronic devices that were involved in the threatening messages, police said. The FBI is assisting in the investigation.

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An Arizona student was arrested after threatening to kill medical school classmates and bomb the campus, authorities say - CNN

Statement by Dr. Yaron Rado, Chief Radiologist and Chairman of the Board of Doctors Hospital on Cayman Court Judicial Review challenging concessions…

GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands, April 27, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Dr. Yaron Rado, Chief Radiologist and Chairman of the Board of Doctors Hospital, issued the following statement regarding the three-day judicial review, Grand Court Cases Nos 55 and 150 of 2021 challenging Institutionally registered medical professionals practising in Cayman and the financial concessions awarded to them.

"To set the scene:

Unlike doctors on the Principal List, the Health Practice Regulations don't require institutionally registered doctors to have any postgraduate qualifications or any special training. Institutional List practitioners need only have obtained their qualifications from almost any medical school in the world (vs Principal List providers who must be registered from one of seven countries: Australia, Canada, Jamaica, New Zealand, South Africa, United Kingdom, and the United States).

They are also not required to provide proof of specialist qualifications to call themselves a specialist or consultant, let alone a proper residency program (5 years), a fellowship program (an additional two years), and then three years of post-specialisation experience as required for the Principal List.

The only safeguard for patients to date is that institutionally registered doctors must practice at a "designated facility" and that Cabinet is responsible for designating these facilities.

Of course, the problem is that until April 6 2022, the Cabinet did not require facilities to meet any particular criteria before designating them, and Cabinet has no record of why Health City, Total Health, and Aster DM were designated as such. Cabinet has also not produced any criteria for reviewing the designation of facilities. In other words, there has been nothing to stop facilities from employing inexperienced Institutional List doctors with minimal supervision.

Until this court hearing, the concern had repeatedly been expressed by the local medical community that doctors on the institutional list were subject to a far lower level of regulation than doctors on the principal list, with consequent concerns for patient safety. This meant that doctors could be registered to practice here as institutional list practitioners with potentially very limited experience and qualifications.

On day 2 of the JR hearing, however, the Government's QC stated that, on the Governments interpretation of the legislation, all doctors must possess the same or equivalent level of qualification and experience for registration. He stated that this is because Regulation 5 of the Health Practice Regulations is applicable to institutional list doctors as well as principal list doctors. On day 3 of the JR hearing, the Government's QC once more confirmed that this is the correct interpretation of the law, and the interpretation the government applies in regulating the institutional list.

We must await Justice William's judgment to find out whether he will record that this new construction of the health practice law and regulations is correct, and must be applied going forwards, or whether he will instead recommend that the position is clarified by amending the legislation. Either way, the Government's formal position, as articulated in court last week, means that all doctors registered to practice in Cayman must now possess an appropriate, minimum level of qualification and experience. As such, Regulation 5A, and the "second-tier" institutional list (initially introduced by the Health Practice law (2013 revision), will effectively be abolished."

Of these two Grand Court Cases Nos 55 and 150 of 2021 in the Cayman court, this is a huge win for healthcare in Cayman - and for all duly regulated Principal List practitioners after years of dedication and investment into their education in compliance with the Health Practice Act and under the supervision of the Medical and Dental Council (MDC). I want to express my sincere appreciation for our lawyers Sally Bowler, Chris Buttler, and Ben Tonner from McGrath Tonner, who have worked tirelessly on our behalf to help affect these changes.

Unfortunately, all Institutional List physicians with boots on the ground in Cayman are exempted from meeting Principal List standards. Thankfully, the Cayman Islands Medical and Dental Society (CIMDS) has recently launched the "Green Tick" campaign to raise awareness about healthcare providers' two separate registration lists. We invite the people of the Cayman Islands to educate themselves so they can make informed healthcare choices for their families. We also ask our Government to strongly reconsider their position on this matter as each existing Institutional List provider renews their registration (every two years). They should be held to the same medical standards, values, and code of ethics we Principal List providers stand behind for our patients.

At this juncture, only half the battle is won.

The Government has a discretion under the various laws to waive the duties payable by healthcare facilities, indeed by anyone. However, there is currently no transparent, published guideline or criteria assisting those liable to pay these duties to understand when they will or won't be eligible for a waiver or an exemption: meaning that there is currently no transparent benchmark for obtaining a duty waiver or exemption. Health City (both in the east end and at its current and forthcoming Camana Bay facilities) receives huge financial privileges in the form of stamp duty waivers, import duty exemptions and discounts on work permit fees. This is all predicated on a contract that it entered into with the Government in 2010.

By comparison, Doctors Hospital paid CI$ 1.2 million in stamp duty to acquire its current site and has spent more than CI$ 1 million in customs duty alone over the last three years. Yet 12 years later Health City's medical tourism facility, at least as the 2010 contract envisioned it to be, namely, an integrated hospital comprising of a hospital, medical university and an assisted living facility, has not materialized. So why are these concessions continuing to be granted?

Doctors Hospital is concerned about this lack of transparency and the lack of any regulatory framework which ensures fairness. As a result, Doctors Hospitals seeks a declaration that transparent criteria for the granting and refusal of concessions ought to be published for all to see.

Doctors Hospital has the same interest as any other taxpayer in the lawfulness of the Government collecting taxes and believes it is unlawful for the Government to grant waivers to Health City and others on the premise that it is now contractually bound to do so. In particular, when the public is losing out on large sums of money that would be available for public services.

Doctors Hospital's motivation in bringing this judicial review is to, first and foremost, promote and preserve the integrity of healthcare in Cayman and to ensure that the Cayman Islands Government provides a fair and transparent tax system for all.

The ultimate findings from this three-day judicial review will be revealing. I sincerely hope that patient safety and the highest principles of healthcare are fully realised and that we bring an end to a long list of discriminatory concessions that Health City's arrival in the Cayman Islands has brought about."

SOURCE Doctors Hospital

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Statement by Dr. Yaron Rado, Chief Radiologist and Chairman of the Board of Doctors Hospital on Cayman Court Judicial Review challenging concessions...

Everything we know about Dr. Lindley Dodson – KXAN.com

Award-winning pediatric doctor shot and killed Tuesday night

by: Billy Gates

AUSTIN (KXAN) Police identified a doctor who worked at the Childrens Medical Group as the victim in a deadly SWAT standoff Tuesday night in central Austin.

Dr. Lindley Dodson was found dead inside the pediatric office after a SWAT team breached the doors of the building, ending a 6-hour standoff. She was a pediatrician at the office operated by Ascension Seton Dell Childrens Medical Center.

She is survived by her husband, her two daughters and her son.

Dodson, 43, grew up in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and completed her undergraduate degree in chemistry at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia, where she graduated magna cum laude, her LinkedIn profile says. She attended medical school at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans.

We are shocked at the tragic loss of Lindley, and our hearts go out to Katherine, Paul, Drew, and the entire family, said LSU Interim President Tom Galligan. Words fail us, but we offer our good thoughts, sympathy, and prayers to our friends and colleague.

She completed her residency at Vanderbilt University Childrens Hospital in Nashville, Tenn., and was certified by the American Board of Pediatrics.

She joined Childrens Medical Groups office in 2017, according to its website. Her LinkedIn profile said she was also a partner at CMG.

Before coming to work in Austin, she was a Harvard Medical School instructor and was an urgent care doctor at Childrens Hospital Boston following her residency in Nashville. For 10 years, she worked at Dell Childrens Hospital in Austin and was named the hospitals top pediatric doctor in 2012 and 2017.

She was named a Rising Star by the Texas Super Doctors for three consecutive years, 2017-2019.

Multiple people replied to tweets by KXAN reporter Jody Barr, saying Dodson was their childs doctor or that they knew her personally.

Such a massive and heartbreaking loss for our community, one tweet said.

Another person who tweeted said she cared for his two sons, and the news was an absolute tragedy.

We are absolutely devastated and shaken, they added.

Karen Shafrir Vladeck, an Austin lawyer and friend of Dodson, said she was an absolute shining light, and organized a tribute thread on Twitter for people to share their favorite memories of Dodson.

Our entire community is beyond words gutted by the senseless loss of our wonderful pediatrician and friend, Dr. Lindley Dodson. This thread is dedicated to her life and love of children and I invite anyone who knew her to share a memory here, if that helps you process your grief. pic.twitter.com/JRU8pSIeHA

Dr. Dodson was a light. An absolute shining light. She walked into the exam room with a broad but sympathetic smile on her face every time you were there, she tweeted. She made you feel like your childs illness was the only one that mattered in that moment, even though you knew there was a line of other kids and parents waiting anxiously to see her. She always made you feel important and heard.

Texas Rep. Lloyd Doggett said Dodson cared for two of his grandchildren and offered his condolences on Twitter.

Last night, in a horrifying act of gun violence, one of our most skilled, compassionate pediatricians, Dr. Lindley Dodson, was held hostage and murdered at her Central Austin office. She provided care for our youngest 2 grandchildren & so many other children across the community. pic.twitter.com/98BhHyycVw

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Everything we know about Dr. Lindley Dodson - KXAN.com

The Fauci effect: UND medical school sees big increase in applications during pandemic – Grand Forks Herald

There's a significant uptick in applications in the original applications coming to the school, and then the secondary applications that we get for interviews, Jim Porter said.

It's not a phenomenon unique to UND medical schools across the country are seeing an upswing in applications, too. As of December, the number of applications has increased by 18% over 2019, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges.

Whats driving the increase?

It may be the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and the example set by health care workers and public health officials like Dr. Anthony Fauci, one of the nation's leading doctors during the pandemic and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

The jump in applications has been dubbed the Fauci effect.

I think the pandemic has pointed out to a lot of very motivated, altruistic young people that they need to take some ownership of what happens in this world, said Dr. Joshua Wynne, dean of UNDs medical school.

One way they can do that is going into a health profession like medicine.

I think that it does speak to the altruism and dedication of young people, as seeing it as a real calling to try to help the world become a better place, and specifically, in this case, help North Dakota become a better place, Wynne said.

The increase in interest in the medical field is "unprecedented," Geoffrey Young, the AAMC's senior director for student affairs and programs, told NPR last month. Young said the only comparison he could make to what is happening now with medical applications would be the dramatic increase in people who entered the military following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Although more people are applying for UNDs medical school, that doesnt necessarily mean the school will increase its class sizes or admit a large number of extra students, Wynne noted.

Our class size is largely fixed, not so much by finances, not so much by dictums or policy, but, quite frankly, by the number of clinical opportunities that medical students in particular have after their initial education, Wynne said.

Medical school is broken into two halves, Wynne explained. The first is based around lectures and in-class learning, the second on clinical practice, where students learn in actual medical facilities.

But North Dakota, due to its smaller population, has a limited number of medical providers to work with, Wynne said. UND students already are working in the four major cities and six major providers in the state, as well as in the rural areas. There isnt a lot of space to put more students.

We have to rely on our clinical partners and their primary mission is patient care," Wynne said. "So they accommodate us, they help us with the educational experience, but there are finite spots available and we obviously dont want to get in the way of patient care. So were limited.

Still, the increase in applications will make for a very competitive class, Porter said.

Wynne noted that 91% of North Dakotans who attend medical school do so at UND.

The increase in applications will mean either more students from North Dakota are getting interested in medicine and/or we're attracting more students out there, he said. The bottom line is, I think it's a testament to the value proposition that the School of Medicine and Health Sciences offers, which is an excellent education at a modest cost.

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The Fauci effect: UND medical school sees big increase in applications during pandemic - Grand Forks Herald

Wayne State University School of Medicine extends outpatient education with Michigan Healthcare Professionals – The South End

The Wayne State University School of Medicine and Michigan Healthcare Professionals have announced an agreement that makes one of southeast Michigans largest multi-specialty medical groups the schools newest affiliate for the training of medical students.

The affiliation, launched Jan. 1, will see WSU medical students train with physicians in the 169 outpatient offices and diagnostic centers of Michigan Healthcare Professionals, which has more than 450 health care providers serving all the hospitals in the tri-county and metropolitan Detroit areas.

Wayne State Universitys 1,200 medical students, the largest class of medical students in Michigan, receive inpatient training in affiliated hospitals in southeast Michigan. Michigan Healthcare Professionals now expands critical training in outpatient settings.

We look to establish a national leadership in medical school-group practice affiliation that sets a new paradigm in health care training in outpatient settings with Michigan Healthcare Professionals, said Mark E. Schweitzer, M.D., dean of the WSU School of Medicine. This will be a national model for health care education. We anticipate that this affiliation will be further developed into a more comprehensive system that encompasses both medical school and residency training opportunities in the future.

It is a privilege to enter into this partnership with Wayne State, said Jeffrey Margolis, M.D., president of Michigan Healthcare Professionals and board member and lead physician of the Oakland Medical Group Oncology Division. Its the highest honor when a medical school recognizes your excellence in clinical care and entrusts you to educate future generations of doctors.

With the future of medicine focused on population health and enhanced wellness-based care models, MHPs network of highly-trained physicians will provide students with advanced training in community outpatient settings, where the majority of patient primary and specialty physician encounters occur. MHP providers are nationally known for several specialties including oncology and radiation therapy.

MHPs guiding philosophy of physicians taking more responsibility for the outcomes of medical care and the overall well-being of patients, patient care protocols guided by well-defined clinical trials, an emphasis on preventive medicine and related wellness programs, and a team concept in which physician care is augmented by ancillary health care workers, aligns with the School of Medicines goal of developing and training a diverse student body through high-quality education, clinical excellence, pioneering research, and investment in the community to prepare physician and biomedical scientific leaders who transform the promise of equal health into a reality for all.

The affiliation broadens the medical student experience beyond inpatient settings and provides students with the opportunity to understand the continuum of care in a patient-centered care model from wellness and prevention through to chronic and acute illness and injury.

About Wayne State UniversityWayne State University is a premier urban research institution offering more than 350 academic programs through 13 schools and colleges to nearly 27,000 students.

About Michigan Healthcare ProfessionalsMichigan Healthcare Professionals is a physician-led and administered organization. Our mission is to develop improved health care systems that are high quality, efficient, coordinated, appropriate and cost effective.

Media contacts:

Wayne State University School of Medicine Philip Van Hulle 586-206-8130

Michigan Healthcare Professionals Lynda Glasser 248-851-3300

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Wayne State University School of Medicine extends outpatient education with Michigan Healthcare Professionals - The South End

Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine gets pre-accreditation, announces affiliation partnerships with local hospitals – Daily Herald

The road the inaugural school year at the Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine has been a long one, but the college recently received pre-accreditation, allowing it to begin enrolling students.

Dr. John Dougherty, founding dean and Chief Academic Officer, said a good way of describing the journey to pre-accreditation is a roller coaster ride. Dougherty was first approached by Presidents Richard Nielsen about 3 years ago.

The news from last week was a culmination of a ton of work by a lot of different people but probably the most challenging part of it was making a cohesive group of individuals who would help us be successful, Dougherty said.

With the school beginning to enroll students, there were about 2,000 applications submitted from individuals looking to be a part of the inaugural class. Those 2,000 applicants will be narrowed down to just 90.

The pre-accreditation stage basically means Noorda-COM has the means to begin teaching, along with the necessary elements to educate students looking to become future physicians.

What sets Noorda-COM apart from other medical schools is that osteopathic schools teach students to focus on the patients rather than the diagnosis. Dougherty said this is something that osteopathic medicine was founded on.

This fits into the mold President Nielsen has laid out in his career as well as at Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions.

He sought out an Osteopathic medical school because of those core values and the similarity to his personal philosophy and that of osteopathic medicine, Dougherty said. It was a good match for what he was looking to develop and create here, relative to who we are as a profession.

With students being welcomed in for the fall of 2021, Dougherty said the school is looking for individuals who want to be what he calls heroes. It wants students who are humble, empathetic, respectful, open minded and those who understand that it is their calling to be there for the patient.

Along with the search for students to fill the inaugural class, Noorda-COM also announced affiliation partnerships with hospitals around the state of Utah.

Normally, the final 2 years of medical school focus on the clinical aspects of medicine and the day-to-day practices.

Not having a hospital of our own, its very important for us to be able to partner with existing facilities that have wonderful opportunities for our students to rotate in, said Dr. Michael Rhodes, Noorda-COM Associate Dean of Clinical Affairs.

These affiliations include Intermountain Healthcare, Revere Health, Utah Valley Specialty Hospital and more.

Students will have seven different rotations that include a number of different focuses at various hospitals. In the first week of these rotations, students will be on campus, where they will run through simulations prior to work in hospitals.

This allows the students to see a variety of different approaches when it comes to creating healthcare management systems and styles, Rhodes said.

This includes augmented reality, virtual reality and hologram patients in an effort to help the students be more prepared and helpful with the care teams at the hospitals.

These rotations will allow students to receive a diverse training in different focuses within medicine.

That gives a young student the opportunity to see the variety so that they can hone in on what it is they really want to be, what specialty they want to go into and what interest they really have, Rhodes said. By the end of those core rotations, theyll really know and get a good feel for what they want to do for the rest of their career and what they dont.

Another plus to the affiliations is that all of the sites are within 30 minutes of the campus. Dougherty added that in one of his previous jobs at a college, students were spread across 17 different states and left without much support from the medical school.

A close proximity to the school lets students receive help if they need it while being able to accomplish more and travel less.

As for the next step for the school, Dougherty said it will begin to pick the 90 students who will be a part of the inaugural class, which is expected to be a tough task.

Faculty are also working on creating the content for the courses, which includes four to seven minute pre-recorded videos. This curriculum can then be accomplished by the student at their own pace and at whatever time of day is most convenient.

Once these tasks are completed, among others, the school will be ready to welcome in its first students come the fall of 2021.

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Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine gets pre-accreditation, announces affiliation partnerships with local hospitals - Daily Herald