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Students invited to learn entrepreneurial skills at Pomona Innovation Weekend

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Western University of Health Sciences is partnering with Cal Poly Pomona and the Pomona Chamber of Commerce on the second Pomona Innovation Weekend, an intense three-day workshop where students learn how to turn an idea into a business.

Pomona Innovation Weekend, previously called 3-Day Startup Pomona, will take place Oct. 20-22, 2017 in the Bronco Student Center at Cal Poly Pomona. The event is free and open to all graduate and undergraduate students. The application deadline is Monday, Oct. 9, 2017.

Click here to view the website: http://cppilab.org/events/innoweekend/.

Click here to view a flier: http://ws.westernu.edu/WesternU-News/docs/PIW-Flyer-MO.pdf

The first day is spent developing teams based on the top ideas selected, said Cal Poly Pomona student Peter Nguyen, one of the student organizers of Pomona Innovation Weekend. Participants learn how to create a Business Model Canvas, a visual chart describing a firm’s value proposition, infrastructure, customers and finances. The teams then develop their business plans, conduct market research, meet with mentors and, on day three, present their final pitches to a panel of experienced entrepreneurs and professionals.

Health professions students from WesternU will work together with undergraduate students from Cal Poly Pomona and other universities majoring in business, engineering, computer science and other disciplines.

“This is a great opportunity,” Nguyen said. “It allows you to collaborate with different mindsets and different talents.”

WesternU is playing a pivotal role in the event. College of Veterinary Medicine (CVM) Professor Malika Kachani, PhD, DVM, College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific Assistant Professor Maryam Othman, MD, MPH, and CVM student Christina Trabanco are helping to organize the event. Several WesternU faculty and staff members also are serving as mentors and panelists.

“Last year’s event was really positive. All the teams got a lot of feedback from each other and from mentors and organizers,” said WesternU Center for Academic and Professional Enhancement Instructional Designer Adam Hain, who served as a mentor last year and will return in the same role this year.

“You could see that in the excitement coming off the teams. They had really great ideas and it was a really powerful experience,” Hain said. “I think they all got a lot out of it. People were excited to see their idea come to life.”


This Week@WesternU, Oct. 2-6, 2017

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Students invited to learn entrepreneurial skills at Pomona Innovation Weekend

Western University of Health Sciences is partnering with Cal Poly Pomona and the Pomona Chamber of Commerce on the second Pomona Innovation Weekend, an intense three-day workshop where students learn how to turn an idea into a business.

Pomona Innovation Weekend, previously called 3-Day Startup Pomona, will take place Oct. 20-22, 2017 in the Bronco Student Center at Cal Poly Pomona. The event is free and open to all graduate and undergraduate students. The application deadline is Monday, Oct. 9, 2017.

Click here to read the full story: https://news.westernu.edu/students-invited-to-learn-entrepreneurial-skills-at-pomona-innovation-weekend/

Click here to view the Pomona Innovation Weekend website: http://cppilab.org/events/innoweekend/.

Click here to view a flier: http://ws.westernu.edu/WesternU-News/docs/PIW-Flyer-MO.pdf

 

 

Musicians in Medicine Benefit Concert

The Musicians in Medicine Benefit Concert raised more than $2,300 for hurricane relief. Click here to read a message from second-year College of Veterinary Medicine student Trusten Moore about the concert: https://www.facebook.com/WesternUniversityofHealthSciences/posts/1653846974648088

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Kudos on accomplishments
Third-year COMP-Northwest osteopathic medical students Nam Nguyen, Jacob Leroux, Derek Titus, Matthew White, Jessica Hu, and Max Taylor, gave presentations as part of two different panels at the Oregon Health Authority’s Mid-Valley Summit in Salem on Sept. 22. Click here to read more.

Dennis Muscato, MS, was an invited speaker at the American Medical Association (AMA) ChangeMedEd Conference “Creating a Community of Innovation” Sept. 12-14, 2017 in Chicago, Illinois. He presented “The Lifestyle Medicine Education Collaborative (LMEd) offers leadership, guidance, and resources to advance the adoption and implementation of lifestyle medicine curricula throughout medical education.” AMA ChangeMedEd is a national conference bringing together leaders from across the education continuum, as well as from innovative educational institutions, to continue changing the way future physicians are trained.

 

Medical Anatomy Center news
Brion Benninger, MD, Professor of Medical Innovation, Technology & Research and Clinical Anatomy, and Medical Anatomy Center executive director, designed and hosted an Innovative Wet & Dry Simulation Skills Lab for Pre-hospital Care and Wilderness Medicine for the Oregon Emergency Medical Services celebrating 25 years of excellence in education Sept. 21-24, 2017. Click here to read more.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
U.S. Army Capt. Jeremy Lewis, DVM ’10, recently participated in the RHC-A Best Medic Competition. He was a member of the winning team. The competition included a physical fitness test, day and night land navigation, a 12-mile foot march, combat water survival, knot assessment/swiss seat, combat trauma lane urban and the M4 rifle and 9mm pistol stress shoot range.  

Capt. Lewis will be traveling to San Antonio to compete in the MEDCOM competition Oct. 27 to Nov. 2. This competition is a two-soldier team competition that challenges the Army’s best medics in a 72-hour demanding, continuous, and realistic simulated operational environment. The operational environment requires medics to be agile and adaptive, demonstrate mature judgment and initiative, and to find and exploit opportunities. This competition provides a tremendous opportunity to showcase the capabilities of the Army medical personnel.

CVM Post-Doc student Elton Vasconcelos has a recent publication as a result of his previous research project in Brazil last year: http://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-10853-6. He passed through a migration from protozoan trypanosomatid parasites’ genome studies (primitive unicellular eukaryotes that lack introns, and, therefore alternative splicing) to a more genetically complex trematode worm (the blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni). He developed a computational pipeline on order to identify more than 7,000 novel long non-coding RNAs (IncRNAs) in the whole genome/transcriptome of S. mansoni. It had never been studied in that organism before. He is seeking collaborations with anyone interested in IncRNAs and/or high-throughput transcriptomic approaches. He is under the supervision of Drs. Pedro Diniz and Brian Oakley in the College of Veterinary Medicine.

CVM Associate Professor Babak Faramarzi and his colleagues published a research article in Canadian Veterinary Journal (CVJ 58; 8: 823-828) titled, “Response to acupuncture treatment in horses with chronic laminitis.” The study was supported by an extramural grant from AHVM foundation. Authors include: Babak Faramarzi, Dongbin Lee (Dr. Faramarzi’s post-doctoral fellow), Kevin May (private practitioner and past president of the International Veterinary Acupuncture Society) and Fanglong Dong (GCBS biostatistician). The increasing interest in integrative and alternative treatments led the researchers; the authors have also been interviewed by several related national journals/newsletters.

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

Diabetic amputation rates
Foot and Ankle Center Medical Director Jonathan Labovitz, DPM, FACFAS, CHCQM, is featured in two web-based news articles on diabetic amputation rates that prompted a third article. The two original articles are here: http://inewsource.org/2017/09/20/diabetes-amputations-increase-california/ (Sept. 20, 2017) and  https://www.medpagetoday.com/endocrinology/diabetes/68086 (Sept. 22).

On Oct. 2, 2017, a follow-up article was published: http://inewsource.org/2017/10/02/experts-react-diabetes-amputation-increase/

This Week@WesternU, Oct. 10-13, 2017

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A Tribute to Caring

WesternU will hold its annual fundraising gala “A Tribute to Caring” (ATC) Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017 at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California. Proceeds benefit student scholarships. WesternU will honor Inter Valley Health Plan, represented by President and Chief Executive Officer Ronald H. Bolding. Proceeds from ATC benefit student scholarships. Click here to visit the ATC website for more information and to purchase tickets: http://www.westernu.edu/tribute/#home

 

 

Students invited to learn entrepreneurial skills at Pomona Innovation Weekend

Western University of Health Sciences is partnering with Cal Poly Pomona and the Pomona Chamber of Commerce on the second Pomona Innovation Weekend, an intense three-day workshop where students learn how to turn an idea into a business.

Pomona Innovation Weekend, previously called 3-Day Startup Pomona, will take place Oct. 20-22, 2017 in the Bronco Student Center at Cal Poly Pomona. The event is free and open to all graduate and undergraduate students. The application deadline is Friday, Oct. 13, 2017.

Click here to read the full story:
https://news.westernu.edu/students-invited-to-learn-entrepreneurial-skills-at-pomona-innovation-weekend/

Click here to view the Pomona Innovation Weekend website: http://cppilab.org/events/innoweekend/.

Click here to view a flier: http://ws.westernu.edu/WesternU-News/docs/PIW-Flyer-MO.pdf

 

 

Collaborating Across Borders VI

WesternU Vice Provost Sheree Aston, OD, MA, PhD, served as the U.S. Co-Chair for Collaborating Across Borders VI, the major interprofessional conference in North America. The conference took place Oct. 1-4, 2017 in Banff, Alberta, Canada. The Canada Co-Chair was Dr. Anne Gooden-Webster. The hosting organizations are the American Interprofessional Health Collaborative (AIHC) and the Canadian Interprofessional Health Collaborative (CIHC).  Dr. Aston is a Trustee of AIHC. The conference attracted more than 600 attendees from eight countries. Click here to read more about the conference: http://www.cabvibanff.org/

 

 

From the College of Allied Health Professions:

PA Profession 50th anniversary
During this week 50 years ago, the PA Profession became official as the first group of PAs graduated from Duke University. The PA Professional was the vision of Eugene S. Stead Jr., MD, who wanted to assist in the shortage of trained providers to meet the basic medical needs of the people in the United States back in the 1960s.

WesternU embraced PA education in 1990 by enrolling its first class of PAs. Since then, WesternU has matriculated 33 PA classes and has educated approximately 2,100 graduates.

Click here to read more about the history of the PA profession from Department of Physician Assistant Education Chair Roy Guizado, MS, PA-C, DFAAPA: https://news.westernu.edu/pa-profession-50th-anniversary/

Please join and support the current first-year PA students from noon to 1 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 11 on the Esplanade to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the PA Profession. There will be activities and food to be enjoyed by all. Click here to view a flier on Facebook.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Kudos on accomplishments
Edward Barnes, MD, FACP, was awarded “The 2017 Teaching Award” from the American College of Physicians (ACP), California Region-II on September 17, 2017

The American College of Physicians is a national organization of internists — physician specialists who apply scientific knowledge and clinical expertise to the diagnosis, treatment and compassionate care of adults across the spectrum from health to complex illness.

Third-year COMP-Northwest student Christopher Jurief was recognized for his research presentation at the Pacific Northwest Association of Toxicologists (PANWAT) Annual Regional Chapter Meeting at Seattle Genetics in Bothell, Wash. Oct. 2, 2017. Jurief presented “Cellular Models of Human Neurodevelopment Differ in Their Sensitivity to Environmental Chemical,” a study conducted in the lab of COMP-Northwest Professor Glen Kisby, PhD, with several collaborators. This study looked at two in vitro neural models used to study environmental chemicals and their toxicity, and compared how these two models responded to certain established toxins. Jurief was awarded a certificate for “Best Platform Presentation.”

Clinical Assistant Professor of Family Medicine Scott Nass, MD, MPA, FAAFP, AAHIVS, was recently elected President-Elect for GLMA: Health Professionals Advancing LGBT Equality. Click here to read more.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Professor Ana Alcaraz was one of 10 facilitators in charge of a round-table discussion, “Meet the Experts,” at the 2017 SCAVMA Leadership Conference held in August. The conference is a meeting of approximately 100 student leaders and faculty members from all 37 veterinary colleges represented in the SAVMA House of Delegates. Dr. Alcaraz was able to connect with other faculty and students. Dr. Alcaraz’s participation was well-received.

CVM Associate Professor Brian Oakley and two USDA colleagues, Rick Meinersmann, VMD, PhD, and Mark Berrang, PhD, recently had two projects funded through the USDA Agricultural Research Service. The first project funded for $20,200 uses bioinformatics tools developed by Dr. Oakley to design new PCR-based assays for detection and diagnostics of eukaryotic pathogens of poultry. The second project funded for $93,778 is in collaboration with the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, and will use a metagenomic DNA sequencing approach to characterize the gastrointestinal microbial communities of pre-antibiotic era chickens. The project team was recently granted access to specimens collected in 1887 and stored in ethanol since then at the Museum of Natural History. High-throughput sequencing of the GI microbial metagenome from these specimens will be compared to modern chickens to help understand how antibiotic usage and intensive husbandry practices may have altered the chicken GI microbiome.

CVM Professor Teresa Y. Morishita, DVM, PhD, Dipl. ACPV, has been appointed to the Assessment Development Committee of the International Council for Veterinary Assessment (IVCA). Dr. Morishita is one of 11 members on the IVCA’s Assessment Development Committee, which oversees the main content areas of the North American Veterinary Licensing Examination (NAVLE), selects and appoints NAVLE item writers each year and participates in item and form review meetings. The NAVLE is a requirement for licensure to practice veterinary medicine in all licensing jurisdictions in North America.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Kudos on accomplishments
Dr. Janice Hoffman presented three posters along with PharmD students and WesternU faculty, at Collaboration Across Borders, the IPE conference, held in Banff, Canada.

Janice Hoffman. “An Innovative Leadership Model for Healthcare teams” based off her work for her EdD.

“Development of interprofessional communication for graduate healthcare students through preclinical interprofessional education experiences” with Palak Desai and several WesternU faculty.

“Video conferencing vs. face-to- face collaboration: A comparison of different mediums in the development of interprofessional patient care plans” with Joanne Tran and Evelyn Nguyen, and Drs. Jaejin An and John Tegzes.

This Week@WesternU, Oct. 16-20, 2017

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A Tribute to Caring

WesternU will hold its annual fundraising gala “A Tribute to Caring” (ATC) Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017 at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California. Proceeds benefit student scholarships. WesternU will honor Inter Valley Health Plan, represented by President and Chief Executive Officer Ronald H. Bolding. Proceeds from ATC benefit student scholarships. Click here to visit the ATC website for more information and to purchase tickets: http://www.westernu.edu/tribute/#home

 

 

WesternU Western Diabetes Institute coordinator provides medical aid to earthquake victims in Mexico

A devastating magnitude 7.1 earthquake struck central Mexico on Sept. 19, 2017, killing more than 350 people and injuring more than 6,000.

Cesar Ochoa, CPT I, MD, PhD, clinical research coordinator for Western University of Health Sciences’ Western Diabetes Institute, grew up in Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico. He gathered friends and family members with medical skills and spent Sept. 21-25 in the cities of Jojutla and Zacatepec, which are close to his hometown and were heavily damaged by the earthquake. Most of the international relief efforts were focused on Mexico City, so Ochoa wanted to help these other areas that were also affected.

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Allied Health Professions:

Randall Lewis Health Policy Fellowship
The Department of Health Sciences is pleased to announce that two students in the MSHS Program have been accepted into the competitive Randall Lewis Health Policy Fellowship. Alison English will be placed at Healthy San Gabriel Valley/YWCA and Huyen Bui has been placed at the Western Riverside Council of Governments. 

The Randall Lewis Health Policy Fellowship provides a unique opportunity for MSHS students to work, on the ground, in communities that have critical needs.  Fellows are paired with specialists who, together, work to improve the health and vitality of community residents. 

The Fellowship spans the Fall and Spring semesters and provides a stipend that supports students while they work 15 to 20 hours per week at their placements.  Each Fellow’s work is focused on the needs of the target community and leadership is an integral component of the program. 

We are excited about this wonderful opportunity for our students and department.  Congratulations Alison and Huyen.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

National Veterinary Technician Week
October 15-21 has been designated National Veterinary Technician Week. As a member of the veterinary health care team, veterinary nurses/technicians are educated in the latest medical advances and skilled at working alongside veterinarians to give pets the best medical care possible. They work closely with the veterinarians, veterinary assistants, practice managers, and owners to provide essential care to all species of animals – pets with fur, feathers, scales or skin, according to the National Association of Veterinary Technicians in America.

WesternU would like to recognize and thank our vet techs for their service: Kim Holt, Annette Chavarria-Marron, LuAnn Peterson, Marlena Salinas, Brittany Bryan, Prisma Martinez, Elizabeth Villagran, Leslie Tortez, Annette Robles, Ada Leung and Nayaira Garcia.

Click here to read more about National Vet Tech Week:

http://ws.westernu.edu/WesternU-News/docs/NVTLR-COM-ClientBroch-VetTechs-022616.pdf

 

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Associate Professor Mohammad Mir published a manuscript titled “Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) nucleocapsid protein has dual RNA binding modes.” The manuscript reveals two RNA binding sites in the nucleocapsid protein of CCHFV. The two binding sites distinctly bind double and single stranded RNA. This unique binding mode may play a role in the packaging of viral genome and regulation of CCHFV replication in conjunction with RdRp and host derived RNA regulators. The manuscript is available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28922369

 

 

From the College of Dental Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CDM had a great presence at the annual Business and Financial Administration and Clinic Administration (BFACA) meeting in San Diego.

David Lazarchik, DMD, and Suzanne Adolphson, MSW, MHA, served as members of the planning committee for the meeting. 

Hubert Chan, DDS, and Alex Lee, DMD, presented their workshop, “Are Ye Sailing? Faculty Calibration with Augmented Reality,” to excellent reviews. 

Shirley Kang, DDS, successfully gave her first national meeting presentation, “How to Get an “A” in Chart Compliance.”

Suzanne Adolphson, MSW, MHA, presented her workshop, “Landing the Perfect Employee: Using the Best Hook Line and Sinker.”

Steven W. Friedrichsen, DDS, provided a presentation titled “Sailing To A Distant Shore” and served on the “Deans’ Panel” with two other Deans and a moderator for the presentation “Positive Disruption: Making Dynamic Changes in Dental Education.”

Nelida Rodriguez passed both her written and practical exam and is now an Expanded Function Registered Dental Assistant (RDA-EF). We are all very proud of her accomplishment and look forward to her assuming a new level of responsibility for patient care and support of the students’ educational experience in the WesternU Dental Center.

Yawen Peng, DMD, and Gary Pape, DDS, MA, recently earned MEd degrees from the University of the Pacific. The didactic program covered: theories and principles of cognition and learning; design of learning environments; fundamentals of course design; best practices in instruction; teaching strategies to develop critical thinking; best practices for clinical teaching; best practices for giving feedback; instructional plan design; philosophies of teaching; learner centered instruction; assessment principles and techniques; scholarship of teaching and learning; oral healthcare delivery systems; research design and methods.  Drs. Peng and Pape also completed an educational research project as a component of the degree requirements.  

On Oct. 2, Marisa Watanabe, DDS, MS, attended the DentaQuest Institute Disease Management Convening 2017 which focused on the experiences and lessons learned from disease management quality improvement initiatives. Furthermore, the Convening was held to discuss and cultivate the vision of disease management and solicit feedback from the oral health disease management leaders on processes and plans to spread quality improvement into different populations, both public health and private sectors, and dental institutions.

Elizabeth Andrews, DDS, MS, gave a presentation on Oct. 2, 2017 at the Collaborating Across Borders interprofessional health care education and collaborative practice conference in Banff, Canada.  The presentation, “Closing the Loop: Faculty vs. Peer Performance Feedback to Enhance Interprofessional Competencies,” described the DMD students’ performance in the IP TOSCE standardized patient activity which is unique to WesternU. The conference links educators, researchers, practitioners, students and patients from Canada and the United States in essential discussions around interprofessional health care education, practice, leadership and policy in North America.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Kudos on accomplishments
Medscape and theheart.org published breaking news from a session featuring Dr. Sheryl Chow and colleagues at the Heart Failure Society of America (HFSA) Annual Meeting, held Sept. 17, 2017 in Dallas Texas.

The session focused on prescribing pitfalls in heart failure with multiple comorbidities. 

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/886762?nlid=118371_3866&src=WNL_mdplsfeat_171010_mscpedit_card&uac=71092SN&spon=2&impID=1453480&faf=1

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Medical Anatomy Center news
Brion Benninger MD, Professor of Medical Innovation, Technology & Research and Clinical Anatomy, and MAC Executive Director, is teaching ultrasound to paramedics, EMTs and firefighters in Oregon by combining laptop ultrasound units with the newest hand held designed dual probe units by GE. They are the first firefighter/EMT/paramedic prehospital health care providers to receive this type of ultrasound instruction.

 

 

From the College of Optometry:

Reception in Chicago
On Thursday, Oct. 12, the College of Optometry hosted a reception at the Palmer House hotel in Chicago during the American Academy of Optometry’s annual conference. The event was attended by 78 alumni, students, faculty, staff, and friends, who enjoyed food, drinks, and networking.

 

 

From University Advancement:

Alumni news
On Monday, Oct. 9, the Alumni Office hosted a WesternU “Taste of Philadelphia” Dinner for 92 alumni, students, faculty, staff, and friends at the Hilton Garden Inn Center City in Philadelphia, Pa. during the American Osteopathic Association’s OMED Convention. Guests enjoyed drinks and the opportunity to socialize with one another, as well as dine on local favorites, including made-to-order cheesesteaks with all the fixings, tomato pie, fries, soft pretzels, salad, and carrot cake with Philadelphia cream cheese frosting. Pictures from the event can be found at https://www.facebook.com/COMPPomona/posts/2395415817369944.

WesternU’s “A Tribute to Caring” gala set for Nov. 4 at the Disneyland Hotel

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Inter Valley Health Plan President and CEO Ronald H. Bolding. (Jeff Malet, WesternU)

Western University of Health Sciences will hold its annual “A Tribute to Caring” gala Saturday, November 4, 2017 at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California.

Proceeds benefit student scholarships. Click here to read more about the event and to buy tickets: https://www.westernu.edu/tribute/

WesternU will honor Inter Valley Health Plan, represented by President and Chief Executive Officer Ronald H. Bolding. Inter Valley Health Plan is a not-for-profit, Medicare Advantage HMO health plan based in Pomona, California. It provides health insurance products for more than 25,000 people with Medicare throughout Riverside and San Bernardino counties and portions of Los Angeles and Orange counties. The HMO was formed in 1979 by Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center and local doctors.

Bolding joined Inter Valley Health Plan in 2006, and has seen the company through years of stability and success. He also serves on the company’s board of directors, where he continues to provide insightful strategies for improving and managing the health of the senior population. With nearly three decades of management and executive-level experience in the HMO business and health care fields, as well as Navy command experience, Bolding has held various executive-level positions.

He earned dual bachelor’s degrees in economics and history from Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin, and served 28 years in the United States Navy, including deployments aboard the USS Decatur during the Vietnam War and as a battalion commander lending stateside support during Operation Desert Storm. He retired from the U.S. Navy Reserve in 1998 with the rank of Captain.

A Tribute to Caring raises money for student scholarships and honors some of the most loyal supporters and advocates of WesternU.

“IVHP is now a pillar of the region with 25,000 members – and growing – spanning four counties,” said WesternU President Daniel R. Wilson, MD, PhD. “WesternU is pleased to honor and celebrate IVHP’s decades of service to our region.”

This Week@WesternU Oct. 23-27, 2017

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WesternU’s “A Tribute to Caring” gala set for Nov. 4 at the Disneyland Hotel

Western University of Health Sciences will hold its annual “A Tribute to Caring” gala Saturday, November 4, 2017 at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California.

Proceeds benefit student scholarships. Click here to read more about the event and to buy tickets:
https://www.westernu.edu/tribute/

WesternU will honor Inter Valley Health Plan, represented by President and Chief Executive Officer Ronald H. Bolding.

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

WesternU and LA Animal Services to celebrate opening of East Valley Spay/Neuter Center in Van Nuys
In partnership with the City of Los Angeles Animal Services and with generous support from Michelson Found Animals Foundation, Western University of Health Sciences College of Veterinary Medicine is excited to announce the opening of the WesternU East Valley Spay/Neuter Center. The clinic, located at the East Valley Animal Shelter in Van Nuys, will offer spay and neuter services to the shelter and local communities along with preventive care.

Click here to read the full story.

 

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Associate Professor Linda Kidd, DVM, PhD, DACVIM, recently delivered an invited lecture titled “Mechanisms of thrombosis in dogs with immune-mediated hemolytic anemia” at the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine (ACVIM) Advanced Continuing Education (ACE) Hematology and Immunology Conference in Las Vegas. She also served on two panels during the meeting. The ACVIM ACE courses are advanced courses designed for diplomates and residency trained candidates of the ACVIM and European Colleges of Internal Medicine.​

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
WesternU CPM Assistant Professor Rebecca Moellmer, DPM, Immediate Past President of CPMA, along with CPMA’s Board of Directors, made history in September when both the California Assembly and Senate floor voted to pass AB 1153. This means that DPMs in California can expand their scope to treat leg ulcers below the level of the tibial tuberosity. AB 1153 was signed by the governor in October after previous unanimous approval in House and Senate and will become law Jan. 1, 2018.

http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201720180AB1153.

 

 

From the Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences:

Kudos on accomplishments
Associate Professor Fanglong Dong, in collaboration with ARMC Emergency Department physicians (Drs. Neeki and Wong), and fourth-year COMP medical student Jake Toy, along with other collaborators, recently published a paper related to trauma patients. The main goal of the study was to assess the feasibility of using self-reported abdominal pain and abdominal tenderness on examination to bypass the use of CT scans.

Neeki MM, Hendy D, Dong F, Toy J, Jones K, Kuhnen, K, Yuen HW, Lux P, Sin A, Kwong E, Wong D. Correlating Abdominal Pain and Intra-Abdominal Injury in Patients with Blunt Abdominal Trauma. Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open. Sep 2017, 2 (1) e000109; DOI: 10.1136/tsaco-2017-000109.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Halloween workshop
The Office of Medical Simulation is holding a free Halloween workshop from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, Oct. 28, 2017 in HPC Suite 206. This event is open to WesternU students and employees and their children. Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Kudos on accomplishments
Dr. James Scott was an author of a recent Delphi expert panel study on the efficient and effective precepting of pharmacy students in acute and ambulatory care rotations. The panel included representatives from all California schools of pharmacy. The corresponding author is Katherine Knapp, Touro University – California, who was a former faculty member at the WesternU College of Pharmacy. Am J Health-Syst Pharm, 2017; 74:1570-8.

Dr. Janice Hoffman authored a book chapter, “Collaboration with a Geriatric Pharmacist,” in a book titled Primary Care for Older Adults, edited by Michael Wasserman and James Riopelle. https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-3-319-61329-1

At the American College of Clinical Pharmacy annual meeting held in early October 2017 in Phoenix, Ari., PPAD faculty were active in the following ways:

Dr. Cynthia Jackevicius was awarded the Outstanding Paper of the Year Award from the Cardiology PRN, for her article, Jackevicius CA, Tsakok M, Essebag V, Atzema C, Eisenberg MJ, Tu JV, Lu L, Rahme E, Humphries KH, Ho PM, Turakhia M, Behlouli H, Zhou L, Pilote L. Early nonpersistence with dabigatran and rivaroxaban in patients with atrial fibrillation. Heart 2017;1:1-8.

Posters presented: The first two were with AE students

Li NS, Bradley J, Gogineni HP, Ferry LH. Assessment of Pharmacological Guideline Implementation for Tertiary ASCVD Prevention in Women Veterans.

Haig VH, Sahi GS, Bradley C, Amina O, Davies ML, Gogineni HP. Evaluation of Stroke Severity Using NIHSS as a Predictor for Readmissions in a Veteran Population.

Sherman E, Aagenes K, Chuck S, Gill T, Schmoll M, Scott JD. Assessment of Professional Activities and Needed Resources of HIV-Specialist Pharmacists.

Committees and Service:

Dr. Cynthia Jackevicius participated as a member of the ACCP Publications Committee and the Cardiology PRN Research & Scholarship Committee.

Dr. Hyma Gogineni served as vice chair for ACCP 2019 Publications Committee

Drs. Scott and Jackevicius represented WesternU for the Residency and Fellowship Forum.

Several other faculty were also in attendance (Drs. Aranda, Chan, Chow and Wong).

Dr. Arezoo Campbell and her collaborator, Dr. Stephen C. Bondy from UCI, published the following: Bondy SC, Campbell A. Advances in neurotoxicology. Vol 1. Burlington: Academic Press; c2017.  Chapter 5, Aluminum and neurodegenerative diseases; p. 131-156.

 

 

From Institutional Research & Effectiveness (IRE):

IRE Fall Newsletter
Click here to read the IRE Fall Newsletter: http://www.westernu.edu/bin/oir/newsletters/issue_12_fall_1718.pdf

 

COMP students awarded service learning scholarship

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Third-year COMP students Jamila Rahmaan-Colder, MSMS ’14 and Eftikhar Akam, MSMS ‘15,  earned a California Community Service-Learning Program scholarships this year. (Jeff Malet, WesternU)

Third-year College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific students Jamila Rahmaan-Colder, MSMS ’14 and Eftikhar Akam, MSMS ‘15, are among 10 California medical students to earn California Community Service-Learning Program (CCSLP) scholarships this year. 

The California Wellness Foundation partnered with National Medical Fellowships to create service-learning opportunities. The scholarship program is designed to increase the number of qualified medical providers who make a commitment to improving access to high-quality health care in medically underserved communities in California.

The CCSLP program provides a $5,000 scholarship, which allows scholars to engage in 200 hours of self-directed community service, develop critical skills, and join an active collegial network, all while enriching their resumes with inimitable experiences, according to the National Medical Fellowship website.

Rahmaan-Colder and Akam created an afterschool cardiovascular health and wellness education program for sixth-graders at La Verne Science and Technology Charter School (LVSTC) in Pomona. The two taught heart health through lifestyle modification, including mindfulness, diet and exercise. They also led workshops focused on heart dissection, arteriosclerosis, diabetes, hypertension and strokes, and helped the sixth-graders host a special “walk to school day” where students and parents came to school early, walked around the track, and earned raffle prizes.

The sixth-graders also led workshops, teaching lower grades what they learned.

“Our goal was to see if a simple intervention could lead to an impact on the cardiovascular health disparity in Latino and African-American communities in Pomona,” Rahmaan-Colder said. “We believe that this project was successful and that we can use this model, with some modifications, at other schools to continue to bridge health care disparity gaps.”

Mentors for the project were WesternU Associate Vice Provost of Academic Development Elizabeth Rega, PhD, and LVSTC Principal Dolores Lobaina. Click here to learn more about the scholarship.

Mike Quick retires from WesternU Board of Trustees

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Mike Quick

A longtime friend of Western University of Health Sciences and an independent-pharmacy advocate has retired from the WesternU Board of Trustees.

Mike Quick, who worked for AmerisourceBergen for 50 years, retired from the Board of Trustees in September 2017 after serving for more than 13 years.

Quick was instrumental in organizing the AmerisourceBergen/Good Neighbor Pharmacy Scholarship Golf Classic, which ran for 10 years and raised $500,000 for scholarships benefiting WesternU students interested in going into independent pharmacy. He also helped establish a $20,000 GNP Scholarship Endowment and facilitated AmerisourceBergen becoming one of the College of Pharmacy’s strongest corporate sponsors.

“Mike Quick was a special friend to the College of Pharmacy, in part because of our commitment to the independent ownership track and our success in preparing students for leadership in independent community pharmacy,” said College of Pharmacy Dean Daniel Robinson, PharmD. “As a member of the Board of Trustees, he was passionate about keeping student tuition in check so students have lower debt on graduation. Students across the University have benefitted from the extraordinary measures our board has taken to minimize tuition increases. We are all grateful for Mike’s contributions.”

Quick joined AmerisourceBergen, the parent company of Good Neighbor Pharmacy, in 1963. AmerisourceBergen is the leader in global pharmaceutical sourcing and distribution services, with more than 20,000 associates and more than 150 company-owned offices around the world.

Quick started in sales and rose to vice president of sales and marketing for the west region. He was a key member of the team that started Good Neighbor Pharmacy and the company’s Home Health Care program. He retired in 2014 as the National Vice President for Retail.

“I figured it was time to move on and enjoy retirement and let someone else come in and take my place,” Quick said about retiring from the board.

Prior to joining the board, Quick was invited to tour the WesternU campus in Pomona, and his first impression was that WesternU was a first-class organization, he said.

“It was a really pleasant experience to see the growth of the university and the way its prestige grew,” Quick said.

Health care university boards often have members with backgrounds in academics and medicine, Quick said. He wanted to bring a different viewpoint to WesternU’s board.

“What I thought I could do for the board, which I think I did, was bring a view from the outside, from industry,” Quick said. “One of my main goals was to make sure students going to pharmacy school realized the importance of independent pharmacy. I think I accomplished that.”

“Mike Quick has been a tremendous asset to the board,” said WesternU Board of Trustees Chairman Richard Bond, DO, DrPH. “His contribution has enhanced the College of Pharmacy’s ability to provide exposure of our students to private practice. He has leadership in fund raising and scholarships for pharmacy students. We will miss his input and guidance on the board.”


This Week@WesternU, Oct. 30-Nov. 3, 2017

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WesternU’s “A Tribute to Caring” gala set for Nov. 4 at the Disneyland Hotel

Western University of Health Sciences will hold its annual “A Tribute to Caring” gala Saturday, November 4, 2017 at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California.

Proceeds benefit student scholarships. Click here to read more about the event and to buy tickets: https://www.westernu.edu/tribute/

WesternU will honor Inter Valley Health Plan, represented by President and Chief Executive Officer Ronald H. Bolding.

Click here to read the full story.

 

Mike Quick retires from WesternU Board of Trustees

A longtime friend of Western University of Health Sciences and an independent-pharmacy advocate has retired from the WesternU Board of Trustees. Mike Quick, who worked for AmerisourceBergen for 50 years, retired from the Board of Trustees in September 2017 after serving for more than 13 years. Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

WesternU celebrates opening of East Valley Spay/Neuter Center in Van Nuys
Western University of Health Sciences held a grand opening for its East Valley Spay/Neuter Center in Van Nuys Oct. 26, 2017, celebrating a partnership that will provide veterinary student training and protect public health.

Click here to read the full story and to view a slideshow.

 

 

From the College of Graduate Nursing:

College of Graduate Nursing provides health screenings at 5K run/walk
Students, faculty and staff from the College of Graduate Nursing and the WesternU chapter of the American Association for Men in Nursing (AAMN) participated in the first Pomona 5K Run/Walk Saturday, Oct. 21, 2017. AAMN members performed health screenings, blood pressure checks and BMI measurements for the race participants and for community members in attendance. CGN also had 14 runners and walkers participate in the race. Click here to view photos: https://news.westernu.edu/college-of-graduate-nursing-provides-health-screenings-at-5k-runwalk/

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

COMP students awarded service learning scholarship
Third-year College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific students Jamila Rahmaan-Colder, MSMS ’14 and Eftikhar Akam, MSMS ‘15, are among 10 California medical students to earn California Community Service-Learning Program (CCSLP) scholarships this year. 

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Dental Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
Joel M. Laudenbach, DMD, co-hosted the International Pemphigus & Pemphigoid Foundation’s 20th Annual Patient Conference with Dr. Sergei Grando (UC Irvine Immuno-Dermatologist) on Sept. 15-17, 2017 at the Hyatt Regency Newport Beach. Dr. Laudenbach participated in a dermatology-oral medicine discussion about the interdisciplinary roles and challenges that providers and patients encounter when making rare oral-systemic diagnoses and co-managing rare immunobullous diseases. In addition, Dr. Laudenbach presented the WesternU CDM efforts related to “Changing the Way Rare Diseases are Taught.”  Dr. Laudenbach also provided a workshop with Dr. Nancy Burkhart (Texas A&M College of Dentistry) on “Oral Care” for patients with immunobullous diseases.  For more information about this event, please click here.

 

 

From University Advancement:

Alumni news
On the afternoon of Wednesday, Oct. 25, the Alumni Office hosted another Sudden Snack event on the Esplanade near Ethan Allen Park and distributed nearly 600 Twix Ice Cream Bars to students. This event, now in its sixth year, is designed to increase awareness of the Alumni Association among current students, as well as to acknowledge the students’ hard work; and it is timed to coincide with the end of the first-year students’ IPE small group meetings… one of the few times that such a large group of students seem to all be on the same schedule. On campus students received an email from Director of Alumni Relations Russel Heskin around 2:45 p.m. (just before the IPE meetings begin), inviting them to come out that afternoon to enjoy a little treat. Pictures from the event can be seen at https://westernu.smugmug.com/WesternU-Alumni/Sudden-Snack-Fall-2017.

 

 

From Learning Enhancement & Academic Development (LEAD):

LEAD Celebrates Their Very Own Nightmarish Artists
LEAD’s Wellbeing Initiative hosted a lunch hour Halloween celebration on Oct. 25. Students took a few moments during their coveted lunchtime to exorcise their blood, sweat and fear of preparing for and taking exams by drawing out hidden medical Halloween imaginations from the depth of their beleaguered brains. A raffle unearthed prizes of hearts, brains and T-shirts for those who artfully used their black magic skills. Appropriately disgusting snacks and Martha’s toxic Halloween Infused Water whet students’ appetites and inspired haunting masterpieces. These frightful images with a (medical) twist will be on display throughout November in LEAD’s RENEW space and on https://www.facebook.com/WesternULEAD/

WesternU alum recounts Trauma Center scene following Las Vegas shooting

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University Medical Center Chief of Staff Dale Carrison, DO ’87. (Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Dr. Dale Carrison got a phone call, threw on his scrubs and headed to the University Medical Center (UMC) Trauma Center in Las Vegas, knowing he was headed into carnage.

It was shortly after 10 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 1, 2017 when the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) called College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) alumnus Carrison, DO ’87, and told him about a mass shooting at the Route 91 Harvest festival in downtown Las Vegas.

Carrison is a seasoned emergency room doctor, and his Las Vegas hospital is a busy setting inside a popular nightlife destination hotspot. He’d seen 10 to 20 patients come in from a bus accident before — but nothing on the scale of the shooting, which left 59 people dead and hundreds more wounded after Stephen Paddock, 64, opened fire on country music concertgoers from his 32nd-floor Mandalay Bay hotel room.

“We have an 11-bed trauma center and there were probably 40 to 50 people being tended to,” Carrison said. “Walking into (the trauma center), what impressed me the most was that everybody that needed care was getting care, there were providers everywhere, and so many people came from every place. It was just amazing. The numbers were huge. It was a pure MASH unit.”

Carrison is chief of staff and chair of emergency medicine at UMC. He’s also the medical director for LVMPD and Clark County Fire Department, and is a professor and chair at University of Nevada Las Vegas School of Medicine. He also is the former chair of the Nevada Commission on Homeland Security.

Carrison said blood was everywhere when he arrived at the hospital with Dr. John Fildes, the UMC trauma medical director.

“My job at that point is not patient care, but organization and administration,” Carrison said. “We made sure the incident command center was set up. We had 18 people in chairs, with extremity injuries primarily. Well, they don’t need to be in the trauma center, and we determined they needed to go to the emergency department or another part of the hospital.”

UMC is a Level 1 trauma center. Carrison said that when the shooting occurred, nine patients already were in the center and needed to be moved. One had a broken neck. “We still needed to take care of them in the middle of this chaos,” he said.

Carrison described prioritizing and triaging the trauma center bluntly: Two patients had wounds that were not survivable. They needed to be moved out of trauma to free up beds for other patients who could survive. Nursing staff provided comfort to the two patients – whom Carrison described as expectant — and they were moved. 

Trauma surgeons went from patient to patient stabilizing them, returning later for surgeries if necessary. The trauma center was a chaotic bloodbath, Carrison said. The operating room floors around the resuscitation beds were covered in blood that needed to be cleaned up for each ensuing patient.

There were an amazing amount of wounds, a lot of shrapnel wounds from the projectiles bouncing off the ground, a lot of extremity injuries from that,” Carrison said. “Extremity injuries that were vascular, which makes them life-threatening injuries. We can leave the tourniquet on for an hour or so if somebody has been shot in the belly or in the chest, and the ones that need to go to the OR go first. Triage is incredibly important.”

While emotions were riding high for Carrison, he said he is a veteran of the trauma center experience and could handle it. His concerns were for his residents and younger emergency physicians who had never been through something like the shooting.

“I want to make sure my medical students and residents know counseling is OK,” said Carrison. “It’s OK to be upset and ask for help. There is no stigma for asking for help after something like this.”

Carrison’s career in medicine started late in life. While a midshipman at the United States Naval Academy, he sustained a serious shoulder that cut short his career in the service. Afterward, he became an Orange County deputy sheriff, then was recruited by the FBI, where he worked for five years.

He left the FBI to help his father run auto parts stores, and became partially paralyzed as the result of a scuba diving accident. During his recovery, he realized he wasn’t happy working in retail and decided to pursue a career in medicine.

He attended Cal State University San Bernardino and received his master’s degree in biology in 1983. He started at COMP in 1983, and was the oldest medical student at the time — 43 — when he began. He was class president in 1987 and was the graduation speaker during Commencement.

“COMP gave me the opportunity to go to medical school and become a physician, and I’m forever grateful for that,” He said.

Carrison, now 78, has advice for aspiring emergency room physicians.

“ER physicians are an interesting specialty because we have to know so much about everything,” he said. “We have to know a lot about a lot of things. Understand that you are human, absolutely have to be a good communicator, and always have to be prepared for the worst and get ready to do your best. It sounds trite, but it’s absolutely true.”

Carrison said his amazement about how the Las Vegas community came together during the shooting and its aftermath reminded him of a quote from the 1984 movie “Starman.”

“’You are a strange species. Not like any other. And you’d be surprised how many there are. Intelligent but savage. Shall I tell you what I find beautiful about you?’” Starman said. “’You are at your very best when things are worst.’”

Student’s path through PHCL and SHPEP will help lead her back to WesternU

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Crystal Sin’s goal is to become an optometrist, and Western University of Health Sciences has been there to offer support, guidance and training every step of the way.

Sin was first introduced to science and medicine – and the WesternU campus – when she enrolled in the Pomona Health Career Ladder (PHCL) as a Palomares Academy of Health Sciences student. She came to Saturday PHCL sessions for six years and learned a variety of concepts related to health, science and disaster preparedness from WesternU students in the Pipeline program.

“Pomona Health Career Ladder was extremely helpful in paving a path by informing me about the background and responsibilities of various health professions,” Sin said. “The PHCL program inspired me to pursue optometry.”

She added, with a smile, “Dissecting a cow eye piqued my interest in optometry.”

She graduated from Palomares as valedictorian in 2015. Now a junior at Pitzer College, she returned to WesternU in summer 2017 as part of the Summer Health Professions Education Program (SHPEP).

Sin is one of two students who graduated from PHCL and completed the six-week SHPEP program at WesternU. Genna Hampton, a junior at the University of La Verne, also completed the program.

SHPEP encourages underrepresented students to enter health professions. WesternU was one of 13 institutions nationwide that hosted the program.

Sin’s journey of struggling with vision started early: She’s needed glasses since first grade. She never experienced clear vision until she was a sophomore in high school, when she was properly prescribed new glasses.

She said that before getting new glasses she needed help to see the chalkboard, and asked friends and teachers to help her with notes and navigating campus.

“When I got my new prescription, I was really surprised how everything was so much clearer. It really amazed me that this was what normal people see on a daily basis,” Sin said. “I’d never seen to that extent until the 10th grade. I thought this was a life-changing event because from then on I was able to stand up for myself a little bit more and be more independent.”

Click to view slideshow

Click to view slideshow

Palomares Principal and PHCL Director Dr. Camille Ramos-Beal said the work she does for the school and the program has been

symbiotic, because it helps support the local community by providing resources, activities, and opportunities for young people to pursue their interests in the health sciences and medical fields.

“I believe that through the connections and opportunities at Palomares and PHCL, Crystal was engaged with WesternU and industry partners in a way that other traditional high school settings are not able to,” Dr. Ramos-Beal said. “I am looking forward to the ways that our organizations will continue to cultivate and develop the talent that is in our community. As William Butler Yeats said, ‘Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.’

“By offering different opportunities to our students, we stoke student interest to grow into passion,” she added.

Sin said Ramos-Beal always supported her in her scientific pursuits, and kept her informed about health-related events.

“She introduced me to the PHCL and the SHPEP program. Without her guidance, I am not sure I would be standing where I am today,” Sin said.

In 2015, Sin interned in an optometry office in Chino, California ­– at Drs. Hensen & Perlman Optometry – under the guidance of Roberta Perlman, DO, FAAO, who also is vice president of the Pomona Unified School District Board of Trustees. Sin trained WesternU College of Optometry student Jennifer Huynh, who was on rotation, to use the electronic health record program to input patient information. They keep in touch regularly and Sin sees her as a mentor.

“Jennifer inspires me to keep pursuing optometry by providing insight and advice on how to approach the applications for optometry school and what the academic lifestyle of an optometry student is like,” Sin said.

Sin said she attended SHPEP to increase her knowledge of health sciences and engage with a cadre of health professions students, WesternU faculty and other prospective medical students. In doing so she learned about Interprofessional Education, a foundational experience for WesternU students that teaches them how to work as part of a cohesive health care team. She said the interdisciplinary health care working environment she was exposed to will strengthen her character to better serve her future patients.

WesternU hosted the SHPEP program thanks to a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. WesternU matched funding to cover the cost for students. SHPEP provided opportunities for rising college sophomores and juniors interested in medicine and dentistry, optometry, physical therapy, nursing, physician assistant and other health professions.

“Students of Crystal’s generation are the future of health care,” said WesternU Associate Vice Provost of Academic Development Elizabeth Rega, PhD. “WesternU introduced SHPEP Scholars to our very best faculty, who themselves crafted an intensive, case-based interprofessional program. For most students, this was a transformative experience.”

Students attending WesternU SHPEP came from across the United States. Of the 80 undergraduate students, 40 percent were from the Southwest, including California, Arizona and Hawaii. Texas, New York and North Carolina contributed the greatest numbers of non-regional students. More than 73 percent were female; one-third of the students self-identified as Latino, one-quarter as African-American.  

College of Optometry Associate Professor Tiffenie Harris, OD, FAAO, who teaches diagnostic procedures to WesternU students during second-year curriculum, helped teach the optometry rotation to SHPEP students and had Sin during the first-week rotation.

Harris was excited to learn that Sin is eager to become an optometrist because WesternU has an excellent program available to her in her hometown.

“It’s an exceptional chance for her to get to know faculty that could be her future instructors down the road,” Harris said. “I also think this is a wonderful opportunity for her to engage with current WesternU and SHPEP students. She will experience what student life is like on campus as well as see the caliber and quality of the great people we look for (as applicants to the college).”

As a first-generation student, Sin said WesternU helped shape her interest in the medical field, inspiring her to pursue her dreams of becoming an optometrist helping children with vision problems.

“I want to be an optometrist so that I can provide patients from all cultural backgrounds and financial statuses the sight to see the world with eyes unclouded,” Sin said.

WesternU honors Inter Valley Health Plan at “A Tribute to Caring” gala

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Click to view slideshow

Supporters have helped Western University of Health Sciences attain new levels of innovation, cutting-edge research and clinical excellence.

With a “steampunk” theme reflecting the role of innovation through the years, WesternU held its annual “A Tribute to Caring” gala Saturday, November 4, 2017 at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California. About 600 guests helped WesternU raise more than $320,000.

WesternU students make many personal and financial commitments to becoming the very best healers they can be, so all the support provided at ATC will be used for scholarships that will help them meet those commitments, said WesternU Vice President for University Advancement Diane Abraham, PhD, CFRE. “You are, quite literally, helping our students make their dreams come true,” she said.

Health professions education, like health care, is constantly changing, and it requires a nimble and adaptive mindset that WesternU has always embodied, Abraham said.

“Part of what makes our university so special is our commitment to strategic growth, innovation and entrepreneurial spirit,” Abraham said. “Campus resources like our Virtual Reality Learning Center and our new Center for Innovation promise to yield knowledge, inventions and applications that will develop more creative health professionals and enhance our university’s reputation as a leading-edge institution. Thank you for your generous support and I hope you will be excited about investing in our very bright future.”

WesternU honored Inter Valley Health Plan, represented by President and Chief Executive Officer Ronald H. Bolding, with its Access to Caring Award. This award is given to a person or organization that has made a difference in advancing health care access and availability to underserved people in our community.

Inter Valley Health Plan is a not-for-profit, Medicare Advantage HMO health plan based in Pomona, California. It provides health insurance products for more than 25,000 people with Medicare throughout Riverside and San Bernardino counties and portions of Los Angeles and Orange counties. The HMO was formed in 1979 by Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center and local doctors.

In 2009, the company implemented its signature annual “Helping Hands Week” program. For one week, employees volunteer their time to support the Plan’s mission of health and vitality in the communities they serve. Each year, Inter Valley Health Plan and its employees actively support more than 40 charitable and community organizations.

“I am greatly honored and fantastically appreciative of the fact that this honor has come to Inter Valley Health Plan,” Bolding said. “We know that just providing a business environment that works efficiently is not sufficient to have a life that is meaningful. We look for things that are purpose driven, and we get that in partnership with many organizations, and certainly WesternU is one of those.”

Several WesternU students attended ATC and were able to meet some of the donors who contributed to student scholarships. Second-year College of Podiatric Medicine student Samantha Zdanowicz said receiving scholarships as an undergraduate helped her and her family a lot. She is the first person in her family to graduate from a four-year college, and she is appreciative of the support.

“You are investing in our future,” she said. “Hopefully we will be donating to this event as alumni.”

Special thank you to our Silver Sponsors: Dr. Hong Shue Chen, Inter Valley Health Plan, the Sarkaria Family and Wells Fargo Bank.

This Week@WesternU, Nov. 6-10, 2017

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WesternU honors Inter Valley Health Plan at “A Tribute to Caring” gala

Supporters have helped Western University of Health Sciences attain new levels of innovation, cutting-edge research and clinical excellence.

With a “steampunk” theme reflecting the role of innovation through the years, WesternU held its annual “A Tribute to Caring” gala Saturday, November 4, 2017 at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California. About 600 guests helped WesternU raise more than $320,000.

Click here to read the full story and to view a slideshow.

 

 

From the College of Allied Health Professions:

WesternU Physician Assistant Class of 2017 earns 100 percent pass rate on boards
The Western University of Health Sciences Physician Assistant Class of 2017 achieved a 100 percent pass rate on the Physician Assistant National Certifying Examination (PANCE). All 96 students in the Class of 2017 passed their first time taking the test, which is a first for WesternU’s PA program, which is part of the College of Allied Health Professions.

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Kudos on accomplishments
Dr. Sam Shimomura has been recognized by the California Society of Health-System Pharmacists (CSHP) with the CSHP Lifetime Honorary Membership Award. This is only the 11th time in its 46-year history that CSHP has given this award.

Click here to read more from College of Pharmacy Dean Dan Robinson, PharmD, FASHP.

Also at CSHP Seminar 2017: Dan Nguyen, PharmD ’18, received the 2017 Student Leadership Award recognizing pharmacy students’ involvement in and contribution to CSHP and the profession of pharmacy.

Marvin Ortiz, PharmD ’18, received the John J. Carbone Memorial Scholarship, awarded to future pharmacy leaders who desire a career in health-system pharmacy management.

The WesternU CSHP Chapter received the 2016 Student Chapter of Distinction Award. Ten students presented nine posters in the Poster Session. The college participated by having a booth at the Residency Showcase and also on the Exhibit Floor. The College of Pharmacy hosted a dinner for more than 80 students, faculty, alumni, staff, preceptors and friends of the college at Battista’s Hole in the Wall restaurant on Oct. 27.

Dr. Micah Hata received a three-year accreditation for his community practice PGY1 in collaboration with Ralphs Pharmacy.

Drs. Janice Hoffman and Mark Nguyen received positive feedback on their mid-cycle evaluation and continue on in their six-year accreditation cycle. Dr. Hoffman’s residency is with Jewish Home for the Aging and Dr. Nguyen’s residency is with St. Mary’s Medical Center.

Kudos to the three directors and their residents, and to Dr. Schwartzman, for her leadership and support of our programs.

Dr. Janice Hoffman had a recent publication on the model she developed in her EdD program. Deborah Schreiber & Janice Hoffman. Simen-Schreiber Leadership Model for Healthcare Teams. Imperial Journal of Interdisciplinary Research. Vol- 3, Issue- 10 (2017). http://www.onlinejournal.in/IJIRV3I10/074.pdf

WesternU College of Pharmacy is proud to have been part of the Pomona Health Career Ladder program on Oct. 28, 2017. About 40 local high school juniors and seniors had the unique opportunity to create watermelon-flavored lip balms in the pharmacy compounding lab. The students were amazed at how fast and simple the process was, and we hope this interactive activity encourages them to pursue a career in pharmacy. Special thanks to Dr. Mireles for facilitating the compounding activities and to student pharmacists Rita Semerjian, Wilson Wong, Ani Arsenyan, and Anthony Sengul for their wonderful assistance. Click here to view a Facebook gallery that includes the lip balm activity.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Kudos on accomplishments
COMP-Northwest OMSII James Stanek won first place in the American College of Physicians (Oregon Chapter) Regional Medical Student Poster Competition in the basic science category. The competition was held in Salem, Oregon. Stanek’s poster was titled, “Morpholino Probes For Rapid Pathogen Detection,” and the authors were Stanek J, Powell J, Mata J, McQuistan T, Smythe C, Summerton J, Squier T, Xiong Y. This competition largely involves residents and medical students from Oregon Health Sciences University. The research was supported by Erkkila Foundation and GeneTools, LLC, and carried out primarily in the laboratory of Drs. Mata and Squier of Basic Medical Sciences. Stanek has been invited to present his poster at ACP’s national meeting to be held in New Orleans in April 2018.  

 

WesternU COMP-Northwest medical students’ research featured at annual symposium
The WesternU COMP-Northwest Research Club will host a Research Symposium from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 9, at the medical school, 200 Mullins Drive, Lebanon, Oregon. The symposium will feature five student-led research projects from COMP-Northwest. Click here to read more. 

 

Medical Anatomy Center news
Brion Benninger, MD, MSc, Professor of Medical Innovation, Technology & Research and Clinical Anatomy presented an innovative imaging technology to OMS I’s during their Medical Anatomy course which he has termed as “DynaStatic Imaging anatomy.” They were the first students to receive this technology worldwide. Click here to read more.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Professor Lyon Lee was co-author on a published article in the Journal of Veterinary Medical Sciences, “Prediction of arterial blood gas values from venous blood gas values in Asiatic black bears (Ursus thibetanus) anesthetized with intramuscular medetomidine and zolazepam-tiletamine.” Professor Yeon at Gyongsang National University in Korea was a co-collaborator.

CVM Professor Jose M. Peralta and Assistant Professor Zarah Hedge hosted the third annual Animal Welfare Symposium recently at the College of Veterinary Medicine. It was a full day of discussions and presentations on important and current animal welfare issues. Veterinary presenters included Drs. Gary Weitzman, Barry Kipperman, Michael Blackwell, Holly Cheever, Jim Reynolds and Ahne Simonsen. Participants included 55 students, 21 veterinarians and four veterinary technicians. The students came from 10 different veterinary schools: Auburn, Tuskegee, Oregon State, Tufts, UC Davis, MidWestern, UPenn, Kansas State and Texas A&M. The event was sponsored by the Humane Society Veterinary Medical Association and WesternU CVM. The officers of the SC-HSVMA who assisted in the organization of the event included Clinson Lui, Erika Budde, Rikki Boswell-Jones, Emily Fecso and Sam Antillon.

 

 

From University Advancement:

Alumni news
On Monday, Oct. 30, the Alumni Office hosted a lunch for members of the DVM Class of 2018, who were back on campus last week. About 100 students enjoyed a pizza lunch as they reconnected with one another after being apart the past few months.

WesternU to play key role in Care Harbor LA, one of the largest free clinics in the country

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COMP Chair of Family Medicine Dat Trinh, DO  ’03, shakes hands with patient Lloyd Stronach, 68, from West Los Angeles, at the January 2017 Care Harbor LA clinic. (Jeff Malet, WesternU)

Care Harbor Los Angeles is returning Nov. 17-19, 2017, providing free medical, dental, vision and preventative care to thousands of Southern California residents who could not otherwise afford these services.

Western University of Health Sciences will once again a play key role in delivering services to Care Harbor patients during the event at The REEF Exposition Hall, 1933 South Broadway, Los Angeles. Students and faculty members from the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP), College of Podiatric Medicine, College of Optometry and College of Allied Health Professions will provide care and leadership.

The previous clinic, held Jan. 20-22, 2017 at The REEF, attracted more than 2,100 patients who received approximately 16,000 essential health care services, according to Care Harbor’s Report on Results. Nearly 2,600 volunteers contributed their services. The value of care delivered was estimated at about $1.9 million based on Medicare reimbursement or mean regional costs.

Care Harbor is working closely with Los Angeles County to reach out to homeless shelters with the hope of providing services to 150 to 300 homeless patients during the three-day event, said COMP Assistant Dean of Clinical Education Natalie A. Nevins, DO, MSHPE, who serves as Care Harbor LA’s medical director.

“We want to make sure patients who have not previously utilized Care Harbor services will have access,” Nevins said.

Care Harbor emphasizes continuity of care. Certified insurance navigators provided by L.A. County help educate and enroll patients into the coverage programs available to them. In January 2017, 312 patients were connected to clinics with locations and capabilities more suited to their needs, according to Care Harbor.

“If they have any type of medical problem and do not have a primary care doctor, they are assigned a medical home before they leave the event,” Nevins said.

WesternU’s College of Optometry will be co-leading Care Harbor’s vision section with UCLA’s Jules Stein Eye Institute faculty. More than 40 WesternU optometry students are signed up to volunteer. WesternU and UCLA will provide comprehensive eye exams to patients.

“It’s excellent experience to work together,” said College of Optometry Director of Community Outreach Kristy Remick-Waltman, OD, FCOVD. “This is an interprofessional experience. We see the patient as a whole person and we provide total care.”

VSP is donating frames and will fill prescriptions along with K-Mars Optical. Patients who need glasses will receive free prescription glasses, which they can pick up three weeks after the clinic.

The College of Optometry encourages students to volunteer for philanthropic reasons and to gain experience, said College of Optometry Manager of Clinical Education Programs Kelee Visconti.

“For us it’s really good experience. We emphasize lifelong volunteering,” Visconti said. “Also, our students need volume. They are going to see a lot of patients at Care Harbor.”

Longitudinal Chronic Care Course sets the foundation for COMP’s Longitudinal Tracks Programs

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Elysia Chin, DO ’17, presents her LC3 capstone project reflecting on the four years she spent with Sherryl, her LC3 patient. (Thomas A. Fox, WesternU).

It started with Oreos.

College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific graduate Elysia Chin, DO ’17, was paired with a WesternU Western Diabetes Institute (WDI) patient as part of COMP’s Longitudinal Chronic Care Course (LC3). Chin spent four years with Sherryl, who was diagnosed with diabetes and had many other health issues. The first time Chin visited Sherryl at her assisted living facility in Claremont, Sherryl broke out a bag of double-stuffed Oreos.

“I told her, ‘Sherryl, you’re not supposed to have that at the dining table,’” Chin said. “She sneaks me a couple and she says, ‘Well, since I can’t have them then I guess you can have them.’ She’s always been a little mischievous that way.”

Sherryl had suffered a stroke 10 years prior, had coronary artery disease and had suffered a pulmonary embolism. In her first year in the LC3 program, Chin would visit Sherryl every week, have a meal with her and check her blood pressure.

“With a patient dealing with so many chronic issues, it’s easy to feel down and discouraged,” Chin said. “It’s important to start with small goals that could be accomplished. She would show me her plate and tell me, ‘I made a good choice today. I chose wheat toast instead of the dinner roll.’ She knew what the right decision was. She just wanted incentive to do them.

“The real strength in our relationship was not necessarily working on health goals. We were able to be companions,” Chin added. “A lot of the time when we talked, it had very little to do with health care and more to do with her mood, talking about things that made her laugh and made her spunky personality come out. That offered her more encouragement and more indirect help with her health because her spirits were better.”

***

The LC3 program pairs COMP students with a patient for all four years of the students’ schooling.

“This program is centered around pairing a student with an individual patient that is living with a chronic disease with the goal of gaining the patient’s perspective of living with that disease and also giving them an environment to begin communicating with patients, sharing in their individual patient’s view of what type of health care they would like to see, and also serving as a health care coach to improve their overall care,” said COMP Assistant Dean of Longitudinal and Experiential Learning Edward Barnes, MD, FACP.

The COMP Class of 2017 was the first class to complete the four-year LC3 program.

“They are very near and dear to my heart because I’ve seen them grow, and they’ve also helped LC3 grow,” Barnes said. “They took the risk on a pilot program that had no real foundation at the time and they helped build it into the success that it has become today.

“Just listening and hearing their stories and their encounters with their patients have been so touching,” Barnes added. “They’ve also done capstone works where they’ve actually painted pictures. They’ve written poems about their interactions with their patient. They’ve written letters directly to their patients. Some of them have done research that has been award-winning and recognized nationally. So I’m very proud of our 2017 LC3 students.”

COMP Class of 2017 students were the first to join the four-year LC3 program. (Thomas A. Fox, WesternU)

The LC3 program is now one of a growing number of Longitudinal Track Programs on COMP’s two campuses in Pomona, California and Lebanon, Oregon. COMP also offers the Lifestyle Medicine Track, the Global and Community Health Track and the Rural Health Track. Other tracks are in development or just starting, such as the Applied Anatomy Track.

“With the introduction of the Longitudinal Tracks Program, we immerse them into the community very early in their training, and with that immersion they get experiences with patients, they get experiences with different communities, they get experiences in kitchens. We found that by making them eager about their general interest, it’s really benefited their performance in the classroom,” Barnes said. “We’ve also found that they are able to retain empathy a little bit better, because when you’re in a classroom environment, you’re not always ready to then flip a switch and start speaking to patients by the time you hit your third year of training. So it’s important our students are out there engaging, interacting and practicing a lot of the skills they’re learning in the classroom.”

COMP graduate Serena Shen, DO ’17, was paired with a WDI patient who has lived with type 1 diabetes most of her life. Her patient could not always afford to buy insulin. She juggled a couple of jobs. They would text each other weekly, and Shen would ask about her diet and sugar levels.

“She was very open with me. She was a very friendly person,” Shen said. “We did talk about her, what’s going on with her life, the struggles she was facing. We also talked about my life. I was trying to get to know her better as she got to know me better.”

Shen joined LC3 because she wanted to know more about her patients than just their medical condition.

“With LC3 you get the opportunity to get to know a patient really well. Medicine is only a tiny part of their life,” she said. “They have a lot of other stuff to deal with. I think it’s a really cool program. It’s like gaining another friend.”

Sometimes her patient’s insurance wouldn’t go through. She would miss appointments or medication. But she’s pulled herself together and is in a positive place, Shen said.

“So many times we just see patients maybe 10 to 15 minutes during an appointment. You can make small talk, but you’re not actually getting to know them,” Shen said. “With the LC3 program, you really get to know a patient and understand the trouble they go through with a chronic disease like diabetes, and the practical aspects of how to work with the disease.”

Serena Shen, DO ’17, presents her LC3 capstone project. (Thomas A. Fox, WesternU)

The Longitudinal Tracks are voluntary, extracurricular programs for COMP students. They give their free time to meet with patients, teach cooking classes and travel overseas to provide care to underserved communities.

“They come in on evenings, Saturdays and their lunch time,” Barnes said. “We spend a lot of time together really trying to grow experiences. When we started the Longitudinal Tracks programs, we had about 30 students enrolled that first year and now we have upwards of 350 students on both campuses enrolled. Each year we have to turn a significant number of students away as we grow the number of programs we have.

“So for the future we’re looking toward growing programs in the areas of military medicine. We’re also looking to add programs in biomedical/clinical research. Finally we’re looking at health care leadership as a possibility, too,” Barnes said. “And these ideas really come from the students and what they’re eager to learn more about. And the beauty of it is they help us build each and every one of these Longitudinal Tracks Programs so they put their own personal touch on them.”

***

Sherryl was diagnosed with glioblastoma in August 2016. She moved in with her daughter and granddaughter for hospice care, and her family decided not to have any rules anymore.

“There were no restrictions on what she could and couldn’t eat, so I brought a pack of Oreos for her,” said Chin, who visited Sherryl every week until her death a month later.

“It was an extremely humbling experience. I felt honored and really overwhelmed. Her family was so open to me being there and being part of such intimate discussions and encounters,” she said. “I’m more grateful to Sherryl. She allowed me to be there with her in the end. I hope I was able to bring her some happiness and great conversations and laughter.”

“Every time I saw her during her month in hospice we made sure to talk about everything fun. We reminisced about our old memories and little inside jokes. She told me about her favorite things and her upbringing,” Chin said. “That month was just a celebration of her life. She helped me to see death doesn’t have to be so grim. It could be a celebration of someone’s life, all they have gone through and endured, the happy and bad times.”

Chin graduated in May 2017 and is in the first year of a family medicine residency at Loma Linda University Medical Center in Loma Linda, California.

“I would say this experience definitely cemented my decision to go into family medicine and primary care,” Chin said. “Because of the type of relationship I built with Sherryl, that’s what I want with every single patient going forward. I know it’s not always going to be the case, but I’m still a bright-eyed, bushy-tailed, fresh graduate and I hope I never lose that. I definitely want to be able to develop these types of relationships with my patients and their families and their loved ones, because I think a powerful way to get people to care about their own health is if you show you actually care about them on all levels.”


This Week@WesternU, Nov. 13-17, 2017

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WesternU honors Inter Valley Health Plan at “A Tribute to Caring” gala

Supporters have helped Western University of Health Sciences attain new levels of innovation, cutting-edge research and clinical excellence.

With a “steampunk” theme reflecting the role of innovation through the years, WesternU held its annual “A Tribute to Caring” gala Saturday, November 4, 2017 at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim, California. About 600 guests helped WesternU raise more than $320,000.

Click here to read the full story and to view a slideshow.

 

WesternU to play key role in Care Harbor LA, one of the largest free clinics in the country

Care Harbor Los Angeles is returning Nov. 17-19, 2017, providing free medical, dental, vision and preventative care to thousands of Southern California residents who could not otherwise afford these services.

Western University of Health Sciences will once again a play key role in delivering services to Care Harbor patients during the event at The REEF Exposition Hall, 1933 South Broadway, Los Angeles. Students and faculty members from the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP), College of Podiatric Medicine, College of Optometry and College of Allied Health Professions will provide care and leadership.

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Optometry:

WesternU College of Optometry studies role of interprofessional interaction in treating diabetes
Researchers at Western University of Health Sciences College of Optometry recently found that doctors of optometry play an important role working with other kinds of health care providers to take care of people with diabetes.

Most doctors of optometry who were surveyed – about 97 percent – interact with other health care professionals at least once a year, and even more regularly than every year, for patients with diabetes. Further, doctors of optometry who interact with other providers more regularly were more likely to be satisfied with their health care role, and are more likely to believe that team-based care makes a difference in patient outcomes.

The article, “Factors associated with regular interprofessional interaction by doctors of optometry in management of patients with diabetes mellitus,” by College of Optometry Associate Professor Kierstyn Napier-Dovorany, OD, College of Pharmacy Assistant Professor JaeJin An, BPharm, PhD, and College of Optometry Dean Elizabeth Hoppe, OD, MPH, DrPH, was published in the Journal of Interprofessional Education and Practice.

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Dental Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
Assistant Professor Keith Boyer, DDS, completed his third and final examination for certification by the American Board of Endodontics and is now a Diplomate, the highest attainable level in the specialty. Congratulations on this exciting accomplishment Dr. Boyer.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Kudos on accomplishments
OMS-I Megan Messinger attended the New York release of a book she co-authored, Tortall: A Spy’s Guide, which was published by Penguin Random House. The book is a companion volume to Tamora Pierce’s No. 1 New York Times bestselling young adult fantasy novels​.

 

 

From the Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences:

Kudos on accomplishments
Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences Assistant Professor Jerome Lacroix, PhD, was awarded, as a single PI, a NIH R21 grant from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke to investigate the molecular mechanisms of ultrasound neurostimulation. If successful, this technology could achieve non-invasive neurological treatment for various brain diseases. The direct cost awarded amount to $275,000 for a period of two years.

Dr. Lacroix and Dr. Lyna Luo (COP) were awarded (both as PIs) a supercomputer allocation grant from the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC). This highly competitive award will allow them to use ANTON2, the only supercomputer in the world that is specifically designed to simulate biological molecules at atomic details. Dr. Lacroix and Dr. Luo will study the molecular binding mechanism of a small molecular agonist to its protein target, the Piezo1 ion channel. Understanding this mechanism will help the design of future drugs that may help treat peripheral neuropathies and visceral pain. This award is made possible by the PSC, the NIH, and the generous loan of the ANTON2 computer by D.E. Shaw Research, LLC.

 

 

From University Advancement:

Alumni news
On the evening of Tuesday, Nov. 7, more than 40 alumni, students, staff, guests and their children enjoyed a Candy Cane Making Demonstration at Logan’s Candies in Ontario, Calif. Attendees enjoyed a warm, freshly made sample while they watched and learned how the company makes candy canes by hand; and later, each attendee was given the opportunity to shape their own candy cane to take home. Pictures from the event can be found online at https://westernu.smugmug.com/WesternU-Alumni/CandyCane.

 

 

From the Pumerantz Library:

Stacked!
Click here to view the latest edition of Stacked!, the Harriet K. & Philip Pumerantz Library newsletter.

WesternU serves the community at Care Harbor Los Angeles

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Click to view slideshow

Lawndale resident Eleanor Mateo came to Care Harbor Los Angeles – one of the largest free health clinics in the country – for the first time Friday, Nov. 17, 2017. She has Medi-Cal but no vision or dental insurance and she was going to get both her eyes and teeth checked. She hasn’t seen a dentist in 15 years.

“I am so grateful for all of this,” Mateo said. “It makes me want to cry. It’s so unbelievable. I’m so happy.”

Care Harbor LA, which ran Nov. 17-19, 2017 at The Reef in downtown Los Angeles, provided free medical, dental, vision and preventative care to an estimated 1,000 patients per day. Several Western University of Health Sciences faculty, staff and students volunteered their time to help provide this care.

Second-year College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) student Brooke Atkinson said Friday she performed Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment on a patient, who responded, “This is the best I’ve felt in awhile.” Atkinson also volunteered at Care Harbor as a first-year student, where she mainly shadowed second-year students.

“I felt lost last year, so I feel a little more comfortable going through the physical exam this year,” she said. “This helps me remember why I’m doing this, instead of being in class all day. I think it’s awesome that we’re able to send our patients to all the care they need. I think it’s a really great event.”

If a patient does not have a primary care doctor, they are assigned a medical home before they leave Care Harbor, said COMP Assistant Dean of Clinical Education Natalie A. Nevins, DO, MSHPE, who serves as Care Harbor LA’s medical director. Every patient who needs mental health services will be seen while they are here.

“This is a unique event in that we are not just saying, ‘Have a nice day today and we don’t care what happens to you the rest of your life,’” Nevins said. “We want to bring them into our community and take care of them through our community partners, which are our free clinics and federally-qualified health centers.

“If any part of our world is suffering, then we are all suffering,” Nevins said. “Which means it is our responsibility. We are our brother’s and sister’s keepers. For those who are not fortunate enough to have all the services they need, our job is to uplift them to be equal to us, never below us. That is what we are here to do today and every day.”

WesternU’s College of Optometry co-led Care Harbor’s vision section. Artesia resident David Vasquez, 35, had his vision checked by WesternU students. He is uninsured and would not be able to get new prescription glasses without this event.

“It helps out more than they can possibly imagine,” Vasquez said. “Everyone is very friendly and very kind.”

Third-year College of Optometry student Ryan Lopez used a tonometer to measure interocular pressure and an autorefractor to take an estimate of patients’ prescriptions.

“It’s been really rewarding and really beneficial,” Lopez said. “We’re helping a lot of people and we’re getting a lot of experience at the same time. You meet people from all walks of life. It’s interesting to see where everyone comes from.”

The vision section had about 40 College of Optometry faculty, staff, students and alumni volunteering Friday morning. All patients attending Care Harbor who needed corrective lenses received free prescription glasses via VSP and K-Mars Optical.

“It’s a great experience for students because they’re doing full exams. They’re seeing a lot of patients and enhancing their skills,” said College of Optometry Associate Dean of Clinical Affairs Raymond Maeda, OD, FAAO. “More importantly, hopefully they will volunteer at more events like this when they’re out of school.”

The College of Podiatric Medicine had more than 25 students, faculty and residents scheduled to volunteer throughout the weekend, and the College of Allied Health Professions (CAHP) also had several volunteers, including CAHP Dean Stephanie Bowlin, EdD, PA, and CAHP Associate Dean of Assessment and Strategic Collaborations Tina Meyer, DHSc, PA-C.

CAHP students in the Physician Assistant Education program worked closely with medical students and faculty from COMP and UCLA to treat patients. COMP Assistant Professor Steven Lam, DO, MSHPE, explained to a group of PA students how to assess a patient’s musculoskeletal problems.

“In my program we haven’t gotten to that yet, so it’s nice to get exposed to it early,” said first-year MSPA student Jeslin Guzman. “There are so many people who don’t have access to these services. That’s why these events are important. I’m excited to be part of it.”

At the beginning of her morning shift, Meyer consulted with first-year COMP student Oscar Salaiz about a patient. Meyer said she has not been in clinical practice for a few years, focusing more on administrative duties in the college, so she enjoys this opportunity to treat patients and work with others in a clinical setting.

“It’s such a great, collegial experience. It brings us back to our roots to what medicine is all about, why most of us got into medicine in the first place,” Meyer said. “We didn’t get into it for the layers of bureaucracy. We got into it to be team players and to work on behalf of other people. It’s a little bit like coming home. We are getting back to doing what we all love to do.”

This Week@WesternU, Nov. 27-Dec. 1, 2017

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Center for Innovation launched at WesternU COMP-Northwest campus

In an effort to pair technology and innovation to address current and future issues in health sciences education and health care, Western University of Health Sciences has established the WesternU Center for Innovation, which made its debut during an Innovation Expo on the COMP-Northwest campus.

Paula M. Crone, DO, Dean of the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific and COMP-Northwest, opened the Innovation Expo to students and the community, painting a picture of health care’s future. “Predictive medicine, personalized medicine and targeted treatments – these are all examples of innovation and ideas that led to improved techniques and processes,” she said. “When I dream about the future and what is really out there for patient care, it doesn’t look like anything we are doing now. It doesn’t look anything like how patient care is delivered in the United States of America.”

Click here to read the full story.

 

#Giving Tuesday

November 28 is #GivingTuesday, an international day of giving generated by social media outlets and collaboration. #GivingTuesday follows the popular shopping days of Black Friday and Cyber Monday. While many focus on their holiday and end-of-year giving, we invite you to show WesternU your support on #GivingTuesday on campus at Ethan Allen Park from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Join us at our booth for a chance to win a prize on our spinning wheel and challenge fellow colleagues to a few rounds of Cornhole! There will also be a giving booth with an Iron & Kin Coffee Co. station where you can receive a hot or cold regular or specialty coffee drink for the first 100 participants who come out and donate. Remember, no gift is too small. Give back to WesternU on Tuesday, November 28 by following this link: https://commerce.cashnet.com/WesternU.GivingTuesday

 

16th Annual Trends in Autism Education Forum

“FACE-ing Autism with Animal Therapies & Inclusion” will take place from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, December 2, 2017 on the first floor of WesternU’s Health Education Center, 701 E. Second St., Pomona.

World-renowned author and psychologist Dr. Aubrey H. Fine will talk about the human-animal bond. He specializes in treating children with learning disabilities and developmental disorders. There will be a panel of speakers discussing animal therapies, a resource fair, holiday arts and crafts and photo opportunities with a “special” Santa Claus. To RSVP, email face@westernu.edu or call 909-646-0855.

Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences:

GCBS alumna publishes paper in Neuron, one of the most prestigious journals in Neuroscience
Kristie Conde, MSBS ’15, is currently a PhD student in the Department of Neuroscience and Cell Biology at Rutgers University Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, N.J. She recently published a manuscript in the journal Neuron titled “Enhanced AMPA Receptor Trafficking Mediates the Anorexigenic Effect of Endogenous Glucagon-like Peptide-1 in the Paraventricular Hypothalamus.”

Ji Liu, Kristie Conde, Peng Zhang, Varoth Lilascharoen, Zihui Xu, Byung Kook Lim, Randy J. Seeley, J. Julius Zhu, Michael M. Scott, Zhiping P. Pang.

Neuron, Volume 96, Issue 4, p897–909.e5, 15 November 2017.

This work was a natural extension of research she was conducting in the laboratory of Dr. Ed Wagner, Professor of Basic Medical Sciences in COMP, for her master’s dissertation.

A video is available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PoXyR5hWUoA

 

 

From the College of Optometry:

WesternU, Sight Savers America to provide assistive devices to children with severe visual impairment
Western University of Health Sciences and Sight Savers America are partnering to provide eight children with Freedom Scientific Onyx HD Electronic Video Magnifiers (EVMs) to help them complete schoolwork, see their loved one’s faces and keep up with the academic demands of their fully-sighted peers at school.

The recipients are between the ages of 7 and 16 and live in Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Orange and Ventura counties. They will receive their EVMs and learn how to use them from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday, November 30, 2017 at WesternU’s new Century City Eye Care Institute at 2080 Century Park East Suite 800, Los Angeles, California, 90067.

Click here to read the full story and to watch a video.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

AAHPSA heath fair
On Saturday, Nov. 18, 40 students from the Asian-American Health Professions Student Association (AAHPSA) volunteered at a free health fair in Monterey Park, serving a predominantly Chinese-American population. This annual clinic was held in conjunction with UCLA undergraduate and medical volunteers, with WesternU-COMP students providing free osteopathic manipulative diagnoses, glucose, and cholesterol screenings. Under the preceptorship of Dr. Steven Lam, Dr. David Redding, and four OMM pre-doctoral teaching fellows (Raymond Truong, Peter Lee, Christina Bohr, and Eric Cam), AAHPSA addressed the concerns of more than 150 patients. Next semester, AAHPSA volunteers will continue to take their clinical training and their unique osteopathic skills to patients in other areas of Southern California. 

The event was covered by the World Journal Chinese news. The Chinese can be translated roughly through a Google Chrome browser.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Assistant Professor Jijun Hao has been notified by the Journal of Applied Biomedicine of the acceptance of his publication, “DMH4, a VEGFR2 inhibitor, effectively suppresses growth and invasion of lung cancer cells.”

This Week@WesternU, Dec. 4-8, 2017

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From the College of Optometry:

WesternU, Sight Savers America help visually-impaired children read, play and thrive
Covina resident Mackenzie Martinez, 16, received training on his new Freedom Scientific Onyx HD Electronic Video Magnifier (EVM) at the Western University of Health Sciences Eye Care Institute, Los Angeles Nov. 30, 2017. The EVM allowed him to magnify text to make reading easier and even allowed a closer look out the window, a view that included Beverly Hills High School and the Hollywood sign.

“This makes my life so much easier,” Mackenzie said. “I’ll use it for reading, homework and lots of other stuff. This is a real Christmas gift. I’m very thankful for a device like this.”

Mackenzie was one of nine children with severe visual impairments who received free EVMs through a partnership between WesternU and Sight Savers America.

Click here to read the full story and to view a slideshow.

The event was also covered by CBS2 News and the Los Angeles Daily News.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Kudos on accomplishments
Congratulations to Dr. Lyna Luo and her collaborators, MSPS Alumnus Payal Chatterjee and Abdelaziz Alsamarah, MSPS Student Han Zhang, postdoctoral fellows Drs. Wesley M. Botello-Smith and Li Qian, Cal Poly Pomona Student David Kent and GCBS Faculty Drs. Michel Baudry and Jerome Lecroix, on their most recent, high impact publication (Impact Factor of JACS is 13.858): Chatterjee P, Botello-Smith WM, Zhang H, Qian L, Alsamarah A, Kent D, Lacroix JJ, Baudry M, Luo Y. Can Relative Binding Free Energy Predict Selectivity of Reversible Covalent Inhibitors? Journal of the American Chemical Society. 2017. doi: 10.1021/jacs.7b08938. Link to Abstract

Congratulations to Dr. Peter Oelschlaeger, his former lab member, Cal Poly Pomona alum Joon S. Kang, MS, and their collaborators on their most recent publication: Xiang Y, Chang Y-N, Ge Y, Kang JS, Zhang Y-L, Liu X-L, Oelschlaeger P, Yang K-W. Azolylthioacetamides as a potent scaffold for the development of metallo-β-lactamase inhibitors. Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters. 2017;27(23):5225-9. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bmcl.2017.10.038.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishment
CVM Professor Malika Kachani attended the 27th Congress of the World Association of Echinococcosis in Algiers, Algeria, in October and contributed a podium presentation, “The natural history of cystic echinococcosis in untreated and albendazole-treated patients.” The co-authors were Eberhard Zeyhie, Nadia Solomon, Thomas Romig, Peter Kern and Calum N.L. Macpherson.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Kudos on accomplishments
Matt Wedel, PhD, of COMP and CPM, had a chapter of his book Sauropod Dinosaurs: Life in the Age of Giants reprinted in the Fall 2017 issue of Prehistoric Times magazine, which is available on newsstands and at http://www.prehistorictimes.com/​.

Dr. Vicki Wedel of COMP Anatomy gave an invited talk at the Austrian Academy of Sciences’ Institute for Oriental and European Archaeology as part of a seminar on New Approaches to Burnt Human Bones and Teeth​. Dr. Wedel presented “Expanding Method and Theory in Cementum Analysis” and she had the privilege of closing the seminar when participants went to the Department of Forensic Medicine at the Medical University of Vienna. Dr. Wedel held a microscope workshop identifying season at death in Bronze age burials from Eastern Austria.

Dr. Vicki Wedel hosted Dr. Margie Dell’s class of advanced anatomy students from Santa Monica College for a tour and talk on “Forensic Medicine: Applied Anatomy.”

 

Medical Anatomy Center news
Brion Benninger, MD, MSc, Professor of Medical Innovation, Technology & Research and Clinical Anatomy developed an Extended Focused Assessment Sonography in Trauma (eFAST) education manual to train novices. He is establishing and promoting a primary eFAST survey, secondary eFAST survey and maintenance eFAST survey. He integrated human surface anatomy, ultrasound probe windows, probe positioning, direction of scanning body regions with video links. It is designed for novices and for self-teaching as well as maintenance of ultrasound knowledge and skills. He demonstrated three different ultrasound systems (laptop system with classic linear and phased array probes, GE hand held dual probe system and wearable ultrasound with dual finger probe). The primary objective was to create a manual which would be tailored for visual learners using anatomy ratios and planes applied to variable human habitus revealing the desired ultrasound spaces and/or organs. The manual is ready for novices, but he will be adding further exponential technologies with video links to the manual. It will be available for WesternU students in 2018.

 

 

From University Advancement:

#GivingTuesday
Thank you to all who gave to WesternU on #GivingTuesday. We are overwhelmed with the support of the students and staff who came out to donate. We also want to thank Iron & Kin Coffee Co. for their partnership in our #GivingTuesday efforts. The philanthropic tradition of giving back to WesternU has allowed so many students to pursue their dreams of becoming health care professionals, and we thank you for continuing that tradition on #GivingTuesday.

Click here to view a Facebook photo gallery.

 

 

From the Pumerantz Library:

Holiday cards for hospitalized children
Come to the Pumerantz Library and fill out a holiday card for a child in the hospital. Cards and pens will be provided. Stop by any time during regular library hours through Dec. 10. Cards will be available on the library’s first and second floor.  For more details please contact reference@westernu.edu or 909-469-5323 and ask for Reference.

Vincent Naimoli retires from WesternU board

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Vincent J. Naimoli, MBA, LHD (Hon.)

Entrepreneur and Tampa Bay Rays founder Vincent J. Naimoli, MBA, LHD (Hon.), has retired from the Western University of Health Sciences Board of Trustees after serving more than eight years.

“We are appreciative of the time he contributed to the board. He made great efforts to be here on regular basis, despite the long distance he had to fly from Florida,” said WesternU Board of Trustees Chairman Richard Bond, DO, DrPH. “He was always very supportive of the university and he brought his business expertise to help us in our marketing.”

Naimoli joined the board in August 2009. During his years of service, WesternU saw tremendous growth with campus expansion in Pomona, California and the opening of a new campus in Lebanon, Oregon. The board also oversaw the hiring of President Daniel R. Wilson, MD, PhD, in 2016 following the retirement of Founding President Philip Pumerantz, PhD.

“I am very proud of Dr. Pumerantz, as well as the board finding a great successor in Dr. Wilson,” Naimoli said. “I appreciate Richard Bond’s leadership of the board and also the progress on new campuses.”

Naimoli has been president, vice president, chairman, or CEO of some of the biggest names in American business, notably Continental Can Company, Doehler-Jarvis, The Regina Company and the Electrolux Corporation. He was founder, chairman, president and CEO of Anchor Glass Container Corporation.

In 1995, Naimoli and his business partners were awarded a Major League Baseball franchise for the St. Petersburg, Fla., area. The Tampa Bay Devil Rays played their inaugural season in 1998; in 2008, the Tampa team – now known simply as the Rays – won the American League Championship and qualified for the World Series. Naimoli stepped down as managing general partner in 2005, and retains the titles of founder and Chairman Emeritus of the club.

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