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State Sen. Hernandez urges WesternU students to get involved

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State Sen. Ed Hernandez, OD (D-West Covina), spoke to WesternU students about the importance of being engaged while visiting the Pomona campus Wednesday, Dec. 6, 2017. (Jeff Malet, WesternU)

State Sen. Ed Hernandez, OD, D-West Covina, urged Western University of Health Sciences students to get angry and get involved to better their professions and their communities.

Hernandez talked about “The Importance of Being Engaged” with a lecture hall filled mainly with pharmacy and optometry students Dec. 6, 2017 in Pomona, Calif. Hernandez is an optometrist with offices in La Puente and Duarte. He is running for California Lt. Governor in 2018.

First, he shared his personal journey. He learned about optometry when his mother got him a job at the optometrist’s office where she worked. He attended local public schools and went to community college while working 35 hours a week. He then graduated from Cal State Fullerton and earned a scholarship to study optometry at Indiana University, where he met his wife.

They returned to his hometown of La Puente and started an optometry practice together. About 20 years ago, the California Legislature was locked in a budget impasse, so their practice received an IOU instead of a payment for seeing Medi-Cal patients.

He attended a California Optometric Association (COA) meeting to complain and see what recourse he had. He left the meeting as COA’s secretary/treasurer.

“That’s what I get for complaining,” Hernandez said. “But it has been the best experience for me. It has opened my eyes more than I could have ever imagined, all because I was angry and I realized the role government played in what I could and could not do.”

When he graduated from Indiana University in 1986, his scope of practice was much more limited than that of optometry students graduating now. He urged all students to get involved in their respective professional associations.

“The education you have right now, from pathology, to anatomy, to physiology, you are prepared to be a primary health care provider in this country,” Hernandez said. “The advancement of scope of practice that allows your profession to do what you’re doing is because of the associations that you join – the American Optometric Association at the national level and the California Optometric Association at the state level.” 

Hernandez authored Senate Bill 493, which expanded the scope of practice for pharmacists to include giving vaccinations, performing patient assessments and prescribing medications. Pharmacy is the most overeducated and underutilized profession we have in this country, Hernandez said. California has more than 40,000 pharmacists widely distributed throughout the state. Many underserved communities could benefit by pharmacists becoming care providers.

“You have the ability to be an integral part of the health care system in this country,” he said. “When you graduate you are going to move into a health care system where you can now direct patient interaction, work with physicians, alter medications, prescribe medications, and be able to give vaccinations.

“Don’t ever let anybody tell you who you are as a professional,” Hernandez said to all the students in the room. “You are well educated to do everything and anything you want when you graduate from your respective school. Obey the law and you can make a living and you can be very comfortable and you can give back to society by being a health care provider. But I’m going to challenge you to go to the areas where there is a greater need because that is where I really believe we can help.”


This Week@WesternU, Dec. 11-15, 2017

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Vincent Naimoli retires from WesternU board

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.”

Click here to read the full story.

 

State Sen. Hernandez urges WesternU students to get involved

State Sen. Ed Hernandez, OD, D-West Covina, urged Western University of Health Sciences students to get angry and get involved to better their professions and their communities.

Hernandez talked about “The Importance of Being Engaged” with a lecture hall filled mainly with pharmacy and optometry students Dec. 6, 2017 in Pomona, Calif. Hernandez is an optometrist with offices in La Puente and Duarte. He is running for California Lt. Governor in 2018.

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Research study
Please help us spread the word about a research study being conducted at WesternU.

Have you been diagnosed with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes for at least one year? If you are at least 18 years of age, you may qualify to participate in a clinical research study of an investigational, rapid acting diabetic medication. If eligible, you will receive at no cost:

 – Study-related medical examinations

 – Study-related investigational medication

 – Diabetes testing supplies

 – Compensation for time and travel (where permitted)

 – Diet and lifestyle counseling

For more information, or to find out if you qualify, please contact Albert Medina by phone at 909-469-8626 or by email at amedina@westernu.edu.

Click here to read more: http://ws.westernu.edu/WesternU-News/docs/SathananthanAirani-Advertisement-Study-4053776-efc15081-brochure.pdf

 

COMP professor to give talk
Dr. Vicki Wedel of COMP will be giving a talk at the Western Science Center in Hemet at 6 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 14. The talk is titled “Bones, Ballistics, and Blunt Force Trauma.”

 

Medical Anatomy Center news
Professor Brion Benninger, MD, MSc, was the invited Honorary Guest Speaker at the Annual Philippines Society of Anatomists conference Dec 1-2. He was introduced as a Medical Educational Futurist with innovative teaching methods which integrate evidence based medicine, theory and psychology with exponential technologies to approximately 42 of 50 medical schools in the Philippines. The title of his presentation was “Methodologies and Technologies of Teaching Anatomy for the New Millennium.” Dr. Benninger visited medical schools in and around Manila, where he discussed educational techniques and demonstrated various imaging technologies including handheld and wearable ultrasound, Sectra, augmented realities, and various simulation topics. Dr. Benninger is working with national medical education experts in the Philippines to develop a course that integrates technology, anatomy, imaging and simulation.

 

 

From the College of Graduate Nursing:

Kudos on accomplishments
Congratulations to Quannetta T. Edwards, PhD, MSN, MPH, FNP-BC, WHNP, AGN-BC, FAANP, and Ruth Trudgeon, DNP, MSN, RN, for their recent publication titled “Readmission rates, risk zones and demographic factors of healthy term breastfed newborns with hyperbilirubinemia: A retrospective chart review” in the online Research Reviews: Journal of Nursing and Health Sciences, 3(3),December 2017.

Congratulations to Dr. Ivy Tuason (CGN) and Dr. Fanglong Dong (GCBS) and their collaborator, Dr. Racidon Bernarte from Polytechnic University of the Philippines, on their recent publication: Tuason I, Bernarte, R, and Dong, F. The Relationship of Religion, Religiosity, and Parental Communication in the Sexual Behaviors of Filipinos Aged 18-25 Years in the United States and the Philippines. Asian Pacific Island Nursing Journal. 2017;2(4): 1-9.

 

 

From the Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences:

Kudos on accomplishments
Dr. Fanglong Dong, in collaboration with Dr. Redmond (PI), had a paper accepted for publication. Their study aimed to use national data to study the association between food insecurity and pre-hypertension, pre-diabetes. The citation is as follows: Redmond, M.L., Dong, F., Twumasi-Ankrah, P., Hines, R.B., Jacobson, L.T., Ablah, E., Johnston, J. & Collins, T.C.  Food insecurity and pre-hypertension, pre-diabetes in adult women: Results from the 2007-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.  Journal of Health Disparities Research and Practice (In Press). 

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Professor Teresa Y. Morishita published a chapter titled “Chapter 6: Backyard Poultry and Waterfowl” with her co-authors, Cheryl B. Greenacre and G. Lynne Luna, in the book, Exotic Animal Formulary, 5th Edition, published by Elsevier, pgs.376-430. This is a new chapter for the 5th edition of Exotic Animal Formulary and is the first comprehensive drug and medication formulary for backyard poultry and waterfowl. With the increasing interest in backyard poultry medicine, the authors hope that this will serve as a much-needed resource for veterinarians and their feathered patients.

CVM Associate Professor Babak Faramarzi, presented a talk at the American College of Veterinary Radiologist (ACVR) titled “Radiographic analysis of the forefoot of foals during the first year of life.” Collaborators include faculty from Cal Poly Pomona, Colorado State University, veterinary surgery hospitals as well as Dr. Dong (GCBS) and Allison Salinger, DVM 2018.

 

 

From University Advancement:

Alumni news
On Tuesday, Dec. 5, the Alumni Office hosted a lunch for the DPM Class of 2018, who were back on campus last week from their rotations. Director of Alumni Relations Russel Heskin briefly spoke to the soon-to-be graduates about staying connected and involved as alumni.

Last week saw two COMP alumni return to campus to speak with current students. On Monday, Dec. 4, Alexandra Myers, DO ’10, MSHS ’10, spoke about her career working in sports medicine in San Diego; and on Thursday, Dec. 7, Eric Hansen, DO ’99, spoke about his experiences opening and running his own solo practice in the high desert.

This Week@WesternU, Dec. 18-22, 2017

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WesternU View

The latest edition of WesternU View is now available. 

The Fall 2017 edition features a cover story on WesternU President Daniel R. Wilson, MD, PhD, speaking about the University’s future during the Inauguration/Convocation ceremony. It also features fascinating stories on Dale Carrison, DO ’87, who is a WesternU alum and an emergency room physician who was called to work on that fateful night in Las Vegas, October 1, 2017 and how the WesternU Eye Care Institute helped Jacob Green after he suffered a brain injury that affected his vision. You can view the magazine online at http://ws.westernu.edu/WesternU-News/public-affairs/wu-view-fall-2017/index.html.

Click here to view past editions of the View and other WesternU publications.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

WesternU COMP-Northwest medical students honor donor patients at annual memorial service
Western University of Health Sciences honored donor patients December 8 with a memorial service for the medical students’ first patients. As the first name and occupation of each donor was read aloud, students lit a candle in the donor’s honor.

“I’ve had the pleasure of working with many of your loved ones over the last few months,” Matthew Zeller, student body president for the WesternU COMP-Northwest Class of 2021, told a packed lecture hall of family members of donor patients. Zeller explained that the students refer to the donors as their “first patients.”

“This gift has not merely impacted those of us who worked with our first patients, but this gift will impact all of our future patients,” Zeller said. “Some may believe that the end of life is the end of someone’s impact on others, but this is not true with your loved ones.”

Click here to read the full story.

 

Kudos on accomplishments
Dr. Glen Kisby (COMP-Northwest) and Dr. Jacob Raber (Oregon Health Sciences University) were awarded (both as PIs) an R21 grant from the NIEHS. The focus of these studies is to determine if chronic exposure to second-hand cigarette smoke (SHS) is an important risk factor for mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a precursor for dementia. Dr. Raber will for the first time expose mice to second-hand cigarette smoke for a year and then examine its impact on cognition. Dr. Kisby’s lab will examine the brain of these mice for metabolic changes and associated pathological markers of MCI/dementia. Dr. Raber will purchase a state-of-the art smoke exposure machine to accurately deliver SHS to mice in order to replicate the human experience. Purchase of this smoke machine will provide future research opportunities between our labs to investigate the impact of other forms of tobacco smoke (e.g., hookah, e-cigarettes) and cannabis on the mature and developing human brain.  

 

Research study
Please help us spread the word about a research study being conducted at WesternU.

Have you been diagnosed with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes for at least one year? If you are at least 18 years of age, you may qualify to participate in a clinical research study of an investigational, rapid acting diabetic medication. If eligible, you will receive at no cost:

 – Study-related medical examinations

 – Study-related investigational medication

 – Diabetes testing supplies

 – Compensation for time and travel (where permitted)

 – Diet and lifestyle counseling

For more information, or to find out if you qualify, please contact Albert Medina by phone at 909-469-8626 or by email at amedina@westernu.edu.

Click here to read more: http://ws.westernu.edu/WesternU-News/docs/SathananthanAirani-Advertisement-Study-4053776-efc15081-brochure.pdf

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Kudos on accomplishments
Dr. Emmanuelle Schwartzman was selected as a recipient of the ASHP (American Society of Health-System Pharmacists) Foundation 2017 Pharmacy Residency Excellence Preceptor Award. This award recognizes excellence as a residency preceptor. Dr. Schwartzman, who has been precepting residents since 2009, has served as a primary preceptor of her PGY1 residency for five years and in her role as Director of Residency and Fellowship Training for the past three years has served as a coordinator and mentor to all our post-docs in PPAD. The award was officially bestowed during the ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting, Dec. 3-7, 2017 in Orlando, FL.

The WesternU student chapter of the California Society of Health-System Pharmacists was awarded the ASHP Professional Development Award for 2017, recognizing exceptional professional development projects. Those selected for the award were asked to present their winning projects at the Student Society Showcase at the Midyear Clinical Meeting and were also provided a ribbon to display on their poster. Click here to read more.

Dr. Mark Nguyen co-authored a publication with his former resident, Nikki Zhu. Tanios MA, Nguyen HM, Cantillep AA, Nassiry A, Zhu JN. Effect of Sedatives and Analgesics Practices during Therapeutic Hypothermia Management Following Cardiac Arrest. Arch Emerg Med Crit Care2017;  2(3): 1031.

Dr. Sheryl Chow served as moderator for two Scientific Sessions at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in Anaheim, Calif. Nov. 10-14, 2017. “The Pendulum of Biomarkers for Heart Failure: Which way will it swing?” and “Emerging Science of Cardio-Oncology.”

As Chair of the AHA Clinical Pharmacology Committee of the Clinical Cardiology Council, she led the in-person meeting and also served as a member of the AHA Leadership Committee Meeting.

Dr. Cynthia Jackevicius has a recent publication. The first author, Dr. Aya (Fukuma) Ozaki, is a WesternU alum who Dr. Jackevicius mentored as a student in the WesternU Summer Research Fellowship Program in 2015 and since then in this ongoing project. The other co-author is Dr. Sari Nakagawa, who has been Dr. Jackevicius’ long-time collaborator in Japan. Ozaki AF, Nakagawa S, Jackevicius CA. Cross-cultural comparison of pharmacy students’ attitudes, knowledge, practice and barriers regarding evidence-based medicine. Am J Pharm Ed 2017; Published online ahead of print Dec 12, 2017. doi/pdf/10.5688/ajpe6710

http://www.ajpe.org/doi/pdf/10.5688/ajpe6710

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Assistant Professor Zarah Hedge was recently informed that she passed her specialty boards and is now a Diplomat of the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners with a Specialty emphasis in Shelter Medicine. Dr. Hedge is not only a 2009 grad of WesternU CVM, but she is in charge of the recently opened East Valley Animal Shelter.

CVM Associate Professor Miguel D. Saggese was invited again to Madrid, Spain by Improve International, a non-governmental organization with a goal to provide continuous professional development for veterinarians. Dr. Saggese lectured on several aspects of avian medicine Oct. 21-22. These lectures are part of a year-long course on exotic animal medicine aimed at veterinarians interested in becoming certified in Exotic Animal Practice. In addition to Dr. Saggese, who dictates all the modules on Avian Medicine, this program includes professors from the University of Georgia (USA), Universidad Nacional Autonoma (Mexico), the Centrol de Investigacion en Sanidad Animal (INIA-CISA), and the Facultat Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain, among others.

Dr. Saggese was invited to Bogotá, Colombia Nov. 1-4 to be one of the guest speakers at the 2nd Congreso Latino Americano de Medicina y Conservación de Especies Neotropicales and 3rd Conferencia Internacional Sobre Medicina de Animales Salvajes organized by Alvefas- Latin-American Wildlife Veterinary Association. On Nov. 1, Dr. Saggese gave a “Workshop on Emergency Medicine of Raptors.” In the following days, Dr. Saggese gave two guest lectures on “Infectious Diseases of Wild and Captive Raptors” and “Health Studies on Wild Raptors Populations.” Finally, on Nov. 4, as part of a special Symposium on Conservation Medicine, Dr. Saggese presented, “Conservation Medicine and Birds of Prey.”

On Nov. 7 and 12, Dr. Saggese attended the Raptor Research Foundation Annual conference held in Salt Lake City, Utah, where he presented a four-hour workshop “Handling and Taking Biomedical Samples in Raptors,” aimed to early-career raptor researchers, biologists, and students.

By the end of the 2017 RRF annual conference, Dr. Saggese finished his two-year term as RRF’s President, and received a Certificate of Officer Appreciation in recognition of his service.

Between Dec. 4-7, Dr. Saggese was invited by the Mexico City Zoos (Chapultepec, Aragon, and Coyote zoos), Mexico city, Mexico, to train their veterinarians and other staff on Raptor Biomedicine and Conservation. Dr. Saggese lectured on “Emergent Diseases of Raptors,” “Challenges in Raptor Conservation,” “Captive Raptors Management,” and “Raptor Toxicology” and provided recommendations about husbandry and biomedical management for the raptors held in captivity at these zoos.

 

 

From the Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences:

Kudos on accomplishments
GCBS Professor Q. Quinn Li with his collaborators recently published a research paper in The Plant Journal (in press; 2016 impact factor 5.9) titled “Alternative polyadenylation is involved in auxin-based plant growth and development.” In this article, they extended the understanding of functions of alternative polyadenylation in terms of hormonal responses in relationship with growth and development. This is the first dissection of 3’-untranslated regions of all transcripts that responding to hormonal treatment in the model plant Arabidopsis.

 

 

From the College of Dental Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
Joel M. Laudenbach, DMD, Assistant Professor of Oral Medicine & Geriatric Dentistry, Coordinator of the Advanced Oral Diagnosis Workgroup, College of Dental Medicine published the following: Adjunctive Cytologic Testing for Oral Cavity Lesions. Dental and Oral Health Expert Viewpoints, Medscape Dentistry, WebMD LLC. December 15, 2017.

 

 

From University Advancement:

Student Study Days
The office of Annual Giving held its fifth annual Student Study Days event on Monday, Dec. 11 and Wednesday, Dec. 13. Free snacks were provided to more than 250 happy and appreciative students to help them stay energized during their preparations for final exams. Free granola bars, chips sponsored by Frito Lay, fruit, hot chocolate, water and coffee were handed out.

Former WesternU COMP Dean Donald Krpan, DO, left lasting impact

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Dr. Donald Krpan at the College of Pharmacy inaugural ribbon cutting on Aug. 9, 1996. Photo courtesy of WesternU Archives.

Donald J. Krpan, DO, FACOFP, who served as dean and provost of Western University of Health Sciences’ College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) and championed the osteopathic profession, died on January 4, 2018, his family announced.

A funeral Mass will be held at 10 a.m. Friday, January 12, 2018 at Santa Clara de Asis, 22005 Avenida de la Paz, Yorba Linda, Calif. 92887. A lunch reception will immediately follow at the Yorba Linda Country Club, 19400 E. Mountain View Ave., Yorba Linda.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the American Osteopathic Foundation, 142 East Ontario Street, Suite 1450, Chicago, IL 60611.

Krpan served multiple roles at COMP and WesternU from 1988 to 2003, including professor of family medicine, director of post-graduate training, executive vice president for academic affairs and provost. Krpan was COMP dean when COMP’s current dean, Paula M. Crone, DO ’92, was an osteopathic medical student.

“The dean you have when you’re a medical student is the dean you hold on to for the rest of your career,” Crone said. “When I took over as dean he was one of the first to call me and lend his ear and his support and let me know he was there to back me up in any way he could.”

Krpan called her last week to wish her a happy new year and check in, Crone said. They talked regularly about COMP and the state of medical education and the profession.

“He was such a gentleman and such a strong contributor to the osteopathic profession,” Crone said. “After he left WesternU he didn’t lose his COMP roots. He always kept an eye on us. He was always there to support our students and our team.”

The osteopathic philosophy embraces humanistic care and having concern for the total patient. Krpan exemplified those principles in helping his students. COMP-Northwest Assistant Professor Robyn Dreibelbis, DO ’95, gave birth to her son, Kyle, three days into her second year of medical school at COMP. Krpan and WesternU President Philip Pumerantz arranged for the creation of a nursery above the lecture hall in the Health Sciences Center, allowing Dreibelbis to nurse her baby and care for him while following lectures on a live feed.

“They were definitely ahead of their time,” Dreibelbis said. “I walked in on the first day to a changing table, crib and rocking chair. It was remarkable. I will be forever grateful.”

A practicing family and emergency medicine physician for more than 20 years, Krpan was a 1967 graduate of the University of Health Sciences/College of Osteopathic Medicine in Kansas City, Missouri.

His involvement with the osteopathic profession was wide-ranging. He served as president of the Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons of California and Chairman of the Ethics Committee of the California Board of Osteopathic Examiners. He also served on the American Osteopathic Association (AOA) Board of Trustees and was AOA president in 2000-01. He was most recently executive director and consultant to the Osteopathic Medical Board of California, according to AOA.

COMP Vice Dean David Connett, DO ’84, said Krpan was his mentor and a “second dad” who helped steer him to COMP and osteopathic medicine. Krpan wrote him a letter of recommendation to be admitted to COMP. Krpan also served as the family physician to Connett’s father.

“He was really passionate about the osteopathic profession,” Connett said. “He was a giant. He was selfless. He was looking out for the profession, not himself. His fingerprints are all over where the profession is at today.”

Founding President Dr. Philip Pumerantz, 1932-2017

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Philip Pumerantz, PhD, founding president and president emeritus of the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) and Western University of Health Sciences (WesternU), passed away at his home in Upland, California, in the early morning hours of Tuesday, December 26, 2017.

Dr. Pumerantz, who at the time of his retirement in September 2015 was the second-longest-serving sitting president of a college or university in the United States, was 85.

“This is a tremendous loss.  Phil was a singular soul – most congenial yet indomitable and intrepid.  His passing will be keenly felt across the university community, throughout health professions education and the many communities WesternU serves,” said Daniel R. Wilson, MD, PhD, president of Western University of Health Sciences, who succeeded Pumerantz as the university’s top officer.

“WesternU owes its very existence to the vision, ambition, tenacity and philosophy of Philip Pumerantz. He helped resurrect osteopathic medicine in California, and then — with only ideas and effort — built what is now a university with the broadest array of graduate health professions colleges in America, and respected worldwide.  His is a success story unlike any other in higher education in the past century.”  

Philip Pumerantz was born on November 3, 1932, in New London, Connecticut, the son of Harry and Pauline Weiss Pumerantz.  After finishing high school and following the death of his father, Pumerantz became family patriarch and head of the household. To support his mother and two younger brothers, Pumerantz worked in a series of jobs in his hometown. He then served in the US Army in West Germany for two years during the Korean War. Upon returning to the States, and with his mother’s urging, Pumerantz became the first in his family to go to college. With the help of the GI Bill, he completed a bachelor’s degree in history at the University of Connecticut (UConn) in 1959, and started his first job as an educator: teaching history to students at Waterford High School in Waterford, Connecticut. With an eye on a career in education administration, in 1963, Pumerantz became a house principal at Tomlinson Junior High School in Fairfield, Connecticut. Over the next four years, as he worked after hours on his master’s and doctoral programs in education administration, his passion turned to higher educational pursuits. By 1967, he earned a PhD in education administration from UConn and joined the faculty at the University of Bridgeport (UB) School of Education in Bridgeport, Connecticut. At UB, he co-founded the College of Continuing Education and served as an educational consultant for a group of educators in Puerto Rico to establish a junior college that ultimately became the Caribbean University. In the early 1970s, Pumerantz began consulting for the American Osteopathic Association (AOA) in Chicago, and by 1976, became their director of education. He was instrumental in revising college accreditation standards and overseeing the founding of several new osteopathic medical schools.

Because of his unique knowledge, experience, and leadership abilities, at the age of 45, he was recruited by a small cadre of osteopathic physicians in California, who were looking to rebuild the profession following its 1974 rebirth, by establishing the first osteopathic medical school in the state since the merger of 1962. In 1977, at an abandoned outdoor shopping mall in downtown Pomona, COMP was born.

Since then, COMP was joined by eight sister colleges encompassing allied health professions; pharmacy; graduate nursing; veterinary medicine; dental medicine; podiatric medicine; optometry; and graduate biomedical sciences, and was ultimately restructured into what it is today: Western University of Health Sciences (WesternU). In only its 40th year, WesternU has become a state-of-the-art establishment of higher education in the health care professions spreading out across a 25-acre campus – much of it composed of remodeled former Pomona Mall stores – that anchors downtown Pomona.

Today at WesternU, more than 3,900 students are enrolled in 21 programs in Pomona as well as a campus in Lebanon, Oregon. There are now over 15,000 WesternU alumni in practice around the world who carry Pumerantz’ philosophy of delivering humanistic, compassionate care.

Dr. Pumerantz received numerous accolades, including UConn’s 1995 Distinguished Alumni Award; the 1995 Dale Dodson Award for national leadership from the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine; the 2010 Distinguished Educator Award from the Boy Scouts of America; the prestigious Ellis Island Medal of Honor in 2011; and the 2013 Northwest Osteopathic Medical Foundation’s Founders Award for Exceptional Accomplishment.

He is the co-author of four college textbooks in education and an author of numerous published papers.

He is survived by his wife of 57 years, Harriet Krinsky Pumerantz; their three children: Andrew (and wife, Dana), Beth, and Richard (and wife, Brigitta); five grandchildren: Zachary, Alexander, Clarice, Shayna, and Zoë; as well as a brother, Howard Pumerantz.

This Week@WesternU, Jan. 22-26, 2018

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Celebration of Life for Dr. Pumerantz

A Celebration of Life for Founding President Philip Pumerantz, PhD, will be held at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 28, 2018 in HEC Lecture Hall I. Those unable to attend will be able to video stream it live at: https://youtu.be/uyCTLQmB2Y4

Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

CASE honors WesternU RxBound publication
Western University of Health Sciences’ RxBound magazine won the CASE District VII Award of Excellence Silver Award in Special Constituency Magazines.

RxBound is a joint effort of the College of Pharmacy (COP), University Advancement and University Public Affairs, and is published biannually for alumni, faculty, students and friends of the College of Pharmacy.

Click here to read the full story.

 

Kudos on accomplishments
Congratulations to the following Pharmaceutical Sciences faculty and their collaborators on their most recent accomplishments:

Dr. Lyna Luo and her collaborators, postdoctoral fellow Dr. Wesley Botello-Smith, MSPS Alumni Abdelaziz Alsamarah and Payal Chatterjee, College of Veterinary Medicine faculty and staff Dr. Jijun Hao, Dr. Chen Xie, and GCBS faculty Dr. Jerome Lacroix published: Botello-Smith WM, Alsamarah A, Chatterjee P, Xie C, Lacroix JJ, Hao J, Luo Y. Polymodal allosteric regulation of Type 1 Serine/Threonine Kinase Receptors via a conserved electrostatic lock. PLOS Computational Biology. 2017;13(8):e1005711. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005711. Link to Article

Dr. Arezoo Campbell and her collaborators, Dr. Steven Bondy (UCI), MSPS Alumni Bishop Bliss and Kevin Tran, Dr. Constantinos Sioutas (USC) published two articles: Bondy CS, Campbell A. Water Quality and Brain Function. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018;15(1). doi: 10.3390/ijerph15010002. Link to Article

Bliss B, Tran KI, Sioutas C, Campbell A. Ambient ultrafine particles activate human monocytes: Effect of dose, differentiation state and age of donors. Environmental Research. 2018;161:314-20. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2017.11.019.

Congratulations to the following Pharmaceutical Practice and Administration faculty and their collaborators:

Drs. Jaejin An and Craig Cheetham published an article based on a study with Kaiser Permanente Southern California and Genentech. An J, Niu F, Turpcu A, Rajput Y, Cheetham TC. Adherence to the American Diabetes Association retinal screening guidelines for population with diabetes in the United States. Ophthalmic Epidemiology. 2018:1-9.

http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/VA6dFzbPwQqZWKWRnPBY/full

Dr. Josephine Aranda published an article she worked on during her fellowship year at Purdue where she was involved with Indiana’s statewide residency teaching certificate program committee. Folz HN, Sprunger TL, Sheehan AH, Aranda J, Bozymski KM, Ramsey DC, Gonzalvo JD. Factors associated with mentor satisfaction among teaching and learning curriculum program participants [published online ahead of print Jan 12, 2018]. Curr Pharm Teach Learn. 2018. doi.org/10.1016/j.cptl.2018.01.001

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877129717301624

Dr. Cynthia Jackevicius recently wrote an Editorial that was just published: Elephant in the Room: Cost of Proprotein Convertase Subtilisin/Kexin Type 9 Inhibitors. Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes. 2018;11:e004425. doi: 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.117.004425 http://circoutcomes.ahajournals.org/content/11/1/e004425.extract?cpetoc

She was Commenting on this paper: Prior Authorization Requirements for Proprotein Convertase. Subtilisin/Kexin Type 9 Inhibitors Across US Private and Public Payers  Jalpa A. Doshi, Justin T. Puckett, Michael S. Parmacek and Daniel J. Rader Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes. 2018;11:e003939. doi: 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.117.003939 http://circoutcomes.ahajournals.org/content/11/1/e003939.abstract?cpetoc

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

Dean’s Distinguished Lecture
5:30 p.m. Thursday, March 1, 2018 in the Health Education Center, Lecture Hall 1.

David M. Carlisle, MD, PhD, will present “Sisyphus and the Sailboat – The Course Toward Universal Health Insurance in the U.S.”

Click here to view a flier.

 

Kudos on accomplishments
CPM Professor Jonathan Labovitz, DPM, FACFAS, CHCQM, published an article in the Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association with Neil Patel, PhD, from the Office of Institutional Research and Effectiveness and Israel Santander, an alum who graduated in 2017 and is now a first-year resident at MedStar Health Washington Medical Center. Labovitz J, Patel N, Santander I. Web-based Patient Experience Surveys to Enhance Response Rates: A Prospective Study. J Am Podiatr Med Assoc 2017; 107(6): 516-521. Click here to view the article online.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Kudos on accomplishments
Matt Wedel, PhD, of COMP and CPM gave a public lecture on Thursday, Jan. 18 at the Western Science Center in Hemet, Calif. titled, “Dinosaurs versus whales: what is the largest animal of all time?”

 

Medical Anatomy Center news
Professor Brion Benninger, MD, MSc, has conducted several invited workshops and/or presentations at National Conferences and medical schools in China, Korea and the Philippine Islands during the past seven months as a Medical Education Futurist describing the philosophy and infrastructure for the future of integrating simulation, anatomy and imaging. His goal is to develop and create efficient evidence based e-learning. He is participating in creating a GUI (graphic user interface) program which integrates ultrasound with clinical examinations for smart phone operating systems.

Celebration of Life for Dr. Pumerantz

This Week@WesternU, Jan. 29-Feb. 2, 2018

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Celebration of Life for Dr. Pumerantz

A Celebration of Life for Founding President Philip Pumerantz, PhD, will be held at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 28, 2018 in HEC Lecture Hall I. Those unable to attend will be able to video stream it live at: https://youtu.be/uyCTLQmB2Y4

Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Optometry:

WesternU Eye Care Institute – Los Angeles to hold grand opening Jan. 31
Western University of Health Sciences will hold a grand opening for its Eye Care Institute – Los Angeles from 3 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, January 31, 2018 at 2080 Century Park East Suite 800, Los Angeles, California, 90067.

The ECI-LA office is unique in that is was designed to fill the unmet need left by the closure of the Center for the Partially Sighted in 2017, said WesternU College of Optometry Chief of Vision Rehabilitation Services Linda Pang, OD, FAAO.

“Our new office aims to be a comprehensive rehabilitation center for those with visual impairments,” she said. “The services include low-vision evaluations, adaptation to vision or field losses post traumatic brain injury and stroke, training in daily living skills, evaluation of assistive electronic devices, orientation and mobility training, occupational therapy and counseling for patients and their families.”

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Allied Health Professions:

Kudos on accomplishments
College of Allied Health Professions Associate Dean Dee Schilling, PT, PhD, has been named a Distinguished Fellow of the National Academies of Practice in Physical Therapy. A Distinguished Practitioner, Scholar or Policy Fellow within NAP is a very high honor that acknowledges the recipient’s outstanding achievements. Click here to read more.

College of Allied Health Professions Associate Dean for Research Donna Redman-Bentley, PT, PhD, was named an Elite Reviewer for 2017 for the Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Elite status designation reflects the number, timeliness and quality of the recipient’s reviews for the archives in 2017 as judged by the editors. Dr. Redman-Bentley has been named an Elite Reviewer two years in a row.

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

Dean’s Distinguished Lecture
5:30 p.m. Thursday, March 1, 2018 in the Health Education Center, Lecture Hall 1.

David M. Carlisle, MD, PhD, will present “Sisyphus and the Sailboat – The Course Toward Universal Health Insurance in the U.S.”

Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Kudos on accomplishments
John T. Pham, DO, has been named Vice Dean of COMP-Northwest. Dr. Pham was a founding member of the COMP-Northwest faculty, serving as an integral part of the start-up team. Dr. Pham assumed the role of Vice Chair of the Department of Family Medicine in 2015 and has served as Chair of the COMP-Northwest Admissions Committee for the past four years. 

He succeeds Paul Evans, DO, who has recently retired.

His Oregon roots in medical education were planted when he began his residency training at Eastmoreland Hospital in Portland. Dr. Pham was the Family Medicine Chief Resident, and later started his family medicine practice in Portland. He has earned many recognitions and accolades throughout the years, including national recognition as the 2007 American Osteopathic Association Mentor of the Year. He currently serves as the pre-medical advisor for the Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons of Oregon. He has held numerous leadership roles including President of the Northwest Osteopathic Medical Foundation.

Dr. Pham is an active participant in multiple local organizations including the Optimist Club, the Strawberrians, and six years as a Lebanon Ambassador of Goodwill. His community service and volunteer heart is well known throughout the state of Oregon.

Jeremiah Scott, PhD, of COMP Medical Anatomical Sciences, gave an invited lecture on January 18 to vertebrate anatomy students at the W.M. Keck Science Department, Claremont McKenna, Pitzer, and Scripps Colleges. The talk was titled “The Anatomy of Bipedalism.”

 

 

From the Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences:

Kudos on accomplishments
Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences Professor Q. Quinn Li, PhD, with his associate scientists, recently published a research paper in Scientific Reports (impact factor 4.2; 2018; 8:770) titled “Transcriptome profiling during mangrove viviparity in response to abscisic acid.” In this article, the hormonal responses in development of a special group of plants were portraited in terms of their transcriptome dynamics.  The hormone was implicated to play a role, but this is the first direct evidence at the molecular level.

On another publication, Dr. Li and his collaborators developed a bioinformatics pipeline to extract poly(A) information from massive free RNA-seq datasets. The protocol will enable interested researchers to gain additional information about transcriptome diversity and RNA processing information on their own datasets, or any RNA-seq from a depository.  This work, “APAtrap: identification and quantification of alternative polyadenylation sites from RNA-seq data” was published in Bioinformatics (impact factor 7.3; in press; DOI:10.1093/bioinformatics/bty029).


This Week@WesternU, Feb. 5-9, 2018

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Celebration of Life for Dr. Pumerantz

A Celebration of Life for Founding President Philip Pumerantz, PhD, will be held at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 28, 2018 in HEC Lecture Hall I. Those unable to attend will be able to video stream it live at: https://youtu.be/uyCTLQmB2Y4

Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

College of Podiatric Medicine Class of 2018 earns 100 percent Pass Rate on National Board of Podiatric Medical Exam
WesternU College of Podiatric Medicine (CPM) Class of 2018 students achieved a 100 percent pass rate for the American Podiatric Medical Licensing Examinations (APMLE) Part II Written and Part II Clinical Skills Patient Encounter (CSPE) given by the National Board of Podiatric Medical Examiners.

All 34 students from the class passed on their first try, which is itself a first for WesternU CPM.

Click here to read the full story.

 

Dean’s Distinguished Lecture|
5:30 p.m. Thursday, March 1, 2018 in the Health Education Center, Lecture Hall 1.

David M. Carlisle, MD, PhD, will present “Sisyphus and the Sailboat – The Course Toward Universal Health Insurance in the U.S.”

Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Graduate Nursing:

CGN receives state funding to address medically underserved areas, mental health needs
The Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development awarded Western University of Health Sciences’ College of Graduate Nursing $132,000 from the Song-Brown program to support its Family Nurse Practitioner program. The College of Graduate Nursing (CGN) was one of 11 programs within California to receive an award.

This award will augment the College’s primary care education and further prepare nurse practitioners with additional skills to address the mental health needs of the state’s population, said Christine Magladry, DNP, RN, FNP, interim director of CGN’s Family Nurse Practitioner program.

“California residents will truly benefit from this award, as it supports education and training of the next generation of health care providers” she said. “The award increases primary care services for Californians in medically underserved areas.”

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Kudos on accomplishments
Dr. Cynthia Jackevicius along with former WesternU COP faculty Drs. Lama Nazer and Olivia Phung and past Advanced Elective student Purvi Vira, published the following: Vira P, Nazer L, Phung OJ, Jackevicius CA. A longitudinal evidence-based medicine curriculum and its impact on the attitudes, knowledge and behavior of student pharmacists. Am J Pharm Ed 2018; Published online ahead of print Jan 24, 2018. doi/pdf/10.5688/ajpe6510.

Dr. Jackevicius was also interviewed and quoted in this article in Pharmacy Today:

http://www.pharmacytoday.org/article/S1042-0991(17)31940-0/pdf

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Medical Anatomy Center news
Professor Brion Benninger, MD, MSc, Professor of Medical Innovation, Technology & Research and Clinical Anatomy was the invited keynote speaker at the Australian & New Zealand Association of Clinical Anatomists (ANZACA) December 2017 in Auckland, New Zealand. He was asked to speak of Clinical Anatomy as a health care futurist and
Innovator. His presentation challenged current curricula and teaching methods by providing integrated new approaches and emerging technologies addressing health maintenance, safer and expedited rehabilitation, simulation and e-learning. He coined and defined Dynamic Clinical Anatomy as an umbrella term encompassing new and/or evolving landmarks, artifacts, and real time structural/spatial displacement created from the interaction between emerging technologies and their fluidity with the human body, emphasizing clinical importance. He invited everyone to be part of the paradigm shift of how we teach, train and update health care to individuals, health care teams, communities and globally.

 

 

From the Pumerantz Library:

Exhibit & Family Fun Day @ the Pumerantz Library
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) traveling exhibit “Pictures of Nursing: the Zwerdling Postcard Collection” will arrive on Feb. 12, 2018 and remain on display in the Pumerantz Library until March 23, 2018. The College of Graduate Nursing is collaborating with the Pumerantz Library on showcasing this invaluable and evolving occupation and exploring the cultural values of this profession through historical postcards. For more information about the Zwerdling Postcard Collection please visit the NLM’s exhibit page.

The Pumerantz Library is delighted to announce a Family Fun Day to be held in the library’s lobby on Saturday, March 10, 2018. Nurses will be on hand to demonstrate their skills and there will be crafts and fun things to do from 1 to 4 p.m. We are looking forward to seeing you and your children.

For more information please contact Mary Helen Ellis at mellis@westernu.edu or by phone at extension 5321.

 

 

From University Advancement:

Alumni news
On the afternoon of Wednesday, Jan. 31, the Alumni Office hosted another Sudden Snack event on the Esplanade near Ethan Allen Park and distributed nearly 600 giant cookies 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. 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://www.facebook.com/WesternUniversityofHealthSciences/posts/1776325032400281.

 

This Week@WesternU, Feb. 12-16, 2018

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Celebration of Life for Dr. Pumerantz

A Celebration of Life for Founding President Philip Pumerantz, PhD, will be held at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 28, 2018 in HEC Lecture Hall I. Those unable to attend will be able to video stream it live at: https://youtu.be/uyCTLQmB2Y4

Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

Charles R. Drew University president headlines College of Podiatric Medicine Dean’s Lecture
The College of Podiatric Medicine Lester J. Jones Dean’s Distinguished Lecture will feature Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science (CDU) President and CEO David M. Carlisle, MD, PhD. He will talk about “Sisyphus and the Sailboat – The Course Toward Universal Health Insurance in the U.S.”

The lecture, which is open to the public, begins at 5:30 p.m. Thursday, March 1, 2018 in Western University of Health Sciences’ Health Education Center, Lecture Hall 1, 701 E. Second St., Pomona, California 91766.

“The goal is to bring scholars to our institution that will expose students to areas of interest that will help them develop their expertise even further,” said College of Podiatric Medicine Interim Dean Lester J. Jones, DPM, MS Ed. “We are bringing the best and the brightest to further expose our students to that type of academic intellectualism.”

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Rx5000 5K Run/Walk
The College of Pharmacy will hold its inaugural Rx5000 5K Run/Walk at 8 a.m. Saturday, March 3, 2018 in Frank G. Bonelli Park, 120 E. Via Verde Drive, San Dimas.

Funds raised at this event will aid student scholarships, community health fairs, student mentorship and career development programs. Click here for more information.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Kudos on accomplishments
COMP Professor of Anatomy and Associate Vice Provost for Academic Development/Academic Affairs Elizabeth Rega, PhD, and COMP Assistant Professor of Anatomy Thierra K. Nalley, PhD, were invited to participate in The Raymond M. Alf Museum’s Discovery Days Event: Women in Paleontology on Feb. 10, 2018. This annual event celebrates the many outstanding paleontologists who are women in the Southern California region and honors International Day of Women and Girls in Science. 

Dr. Rega was a featured speaker for the event and gave a talk titled “Anatomy and Animation:  The Paleontology Connection.” The talk explored the connections between animation and the anatomy of creatures, both living and fossil.  Images and videos of the author’s extensive history of consulting for the animation and gaming industry were shown.

Dr. Nalley discussed her research on the evolution of bipedality and modern human vertebral morphology in fossil human ancestors. Visit the museum website for more information: http://www.alfmuseum.org/event/discovery-day/. ​

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Professor Jose Peralta is the corresponding author on a manuscript recently accepted for publication in the Journal of Animal Welfare Science Ethics and Law. Peralta JM, Melco AL, Alcaraz A. A case-based approach to teaching animal welfare in a veterinary curriculum. JAWSEL (accepted January 2018).

The manuscript describes use of cases to teach animal welfare in a student-centered approach. This has been used in the veterinary curriculum in Veterinary Issues and Clinical Skills courses.

This paper fulfills two of Dr. Peralta’s interests: mentoring veterinary students in scholarly activities, and the advancement of education in animal welfare. Ashley Melco, DVM Class of 2019, has participated in several animal welfare research projects with Dr. Peralta and collaborated in the drafting of this manuscript. Dr. Ana Alcaraz, CVM Professor, has expanded her interest in veterinary education for the last five years and is an active member of the Western Regional Teaching Academy, and has also contributed to this publication.

 

 

From the College of Optometry:

WesternU holds Eye Care Institute – Los Angeles grand opening
Western University of Health Sciences’ College of Optometry held a grand opening celebration for its Eye Care Institute – Los Angeles Jan. 31, 2018. Click here to read more and to view a ribbon-cutting photo.

 

 

From the Pumerantz Library:

Exhibit & Family Fun Day @ the Pumerantz Library
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) traveling exhibit “Pictures of Nursing: the Zwerdling Postcard Collection” is on display in the Pumerantz Library until March 23, 2018. The College of Graduate Nursing is collaborating with the Pumerantz Library on showcasing this invaluable and evolving occupation and exploring the cultural values of this profession through historical postcards. For more information about the Zwerdling Postcard Collection please visit the NLM’s exhibit page.

The Pumerantz Library is delighted to announce a Family Fun Day to be held in the library’s lobby on Saturday, March 10, 2018. Nurses will be on hand to demonstrate their skills and there will be crafts and fun things to do from 1 to 4 p.m. We are looking forward to seeing you and your children.

For more information please contact Mary Helen Ellis at mellis@westernu.edu or by phone at extension 5321.

WesternU professor, students publish textbook chapters

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They gathered around the book excitedly, flipping through the pages until, on page 135, the result of a year of late-night revisions and lab work paid dividends: their names in print as authors of a textbook chapter on HIV/AIDS.

College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) Associate Professor Vishwanath Venketaraman, PhD, mentored several Western University of Health Sciences students in writing recently-published textbook chapters:

  • Nutrition, Immunity, and Infection, edited by Philip C. Calder and Anil D. Kulkarni and published by CRC Press, includes a chapter, “Glutathione, Immunity and Infection” written by Enrique Vera Tudela, Manpreet Singh and Vishwanath Venketaraman. Tudela and Singh are fourth-year COMP students. The book can be found online here: https://www.crcpress.com/Nutrition-Immunity-and-Infection/Calder-Kulkarni/p/book/9781482253979
  • HIV/AIDS: Oxidative Stress and Dietary Antioxidants, edited by Victor Preedy and Ronald Ross Watson, was published in November 2017 by Academic Press: https://www.elsevier.com/books/hiv-aids/preedy/978-0-12-809853-0
    • “Selenium supplementation, antioxidant effects, and immune restorative effects in Human Immunodeficiency Virus (chapter 17) was written by Justin Dong, Anand Muthiah, Parveen Hussain, Miya Yoshida and Vishwanath Venketaraman. Dong and Yoshida are fourth-year COMP students. Muthiah is Venketaraman’s former lab volunteer.
    • “Opportunistic Infections in HIV Individuals and Enhanced Immunity by Glutathione” (chapter 12) was written by Alexis Alejandre, Leslie Gonzalez, Parveen Hussain, Judy Ly, Anand Muthiah, Tommy Saing, Anddre Valdivia, and Vishwanath Venketaraman.

Parveen Hussain and Alexis Alejandre were Master of Science in Medical Sciences students in the Graduate College of Biomedical Sciences (GCBS) when they worked on their chapter during the 2015-16 academic year. Leslie Gonzalez and Judy Ly were students in GCBS’s Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences program. All four are now second-year COMP students. They expressed interest in becoming DOs, and Venketaraman encouraged them to publish in order to help them attain their goals.

College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) Associate Professor Vishwanath Venketaraman, PhD, shows off a textbook featuring collaborative efforts with COMP students from left, Parveen Hussain, Judy Ly, Leslie Gonzalez and Alexis Alejandre (Wilson). (Jeff Malet, WesternU) Click to view larger image

“I thought it would be nice to involve them for the simple reason that if the publication comes out, it’s going to benefit them in terms of getting into residency programs,” Venketaraman said. “Having a research publication is looked at with great respect by the program directors of residency programs.”

The team created a Google doc that everyone contributed to. They would message each other and ask for others to read over their work.

“We would keep giving each other deadlines,” Ly said. “We just kept reading it over and over again, working with everyone’s schedule.”

“It really taught us how to work effectively in a team and to have critical thinking skills,” Hussain said. “People have different styles of approaching the topic, so ensuring that we are presenting this one cohesive message is something that can be challenging. I’m happy to see it turned out well, but it was a lot of hard work.”

The students said they were inspired by Venketaraman’s dedication to his research, and said his mentorship went beyond helping with the book chapter.

“He told us, ‘If in the middle of the night you have questions, call me. If you have issues, call me. If you’re feeling anxiety and you feel like you’re going to break down and cry right now, call me,’” Ly said.

And his support continues to this day. “One weekend before every exam, he wishes us the best of luck,” Ly said.

The book chapters are based on research Venketaraman’s lab has been working on for decades.

“Our previous research publications have been recognized and the scientific community has been getting in touch with us either to contribute a research article, a review article or a book chapter,” Venketaraman said. “It is exciting to be part of this big project that involved world-renowned researchers. I feel very humbled about it.”

This Week@WesternU, Feb. 20-23, 2018

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Celebration of Life for Dr. Pumerantz

A Celebration of Life for Founding President Philip Pumerantz, PhD, will be held at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 28, 2018 in HEC Lecture Hall I. Those unable to attend will be able to video stream it live at: https://youtu.be/uyCTLQmB2Y4

Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

WesternU professor, students publish textbook chapters
They gathered around the book excitedly, flipping through the pages until, on page 135, the result of a year of late-night revisions and lab work paid dividends: their names in print as authors of a textbook chapter on HIV/AIDS.

College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) Associate Professor Vishwanath Venketaraman, PhD, mentored several Western University of Health Sciences students in writing recently-published textbook chapters.

Click here to read the full story.

 

AAHPSA at Hawaiian Gardens health fair
This past weekend, 22 students from the Asian-American Health Professions Student Association (AAHPSA) volunteered at a free health fair in Hawaiian Gardens, serving a predominantly Asian Pacific Islander and Hispanic population. The clinic was held in conjunction with UCLA undergraduate and medical volunteers, with WesternU COMP students providing free glucose, cholesterol, and osteopathic manipulation screenings and WesternU College of Optometry students providing basic vision screenings. Under the preceptorship of Dr. Redding and Dr. Pollak-Lazzaro from COMP and Dr. Tassinari from Optometry, AAHPSA addressed the concerns of more than 30 patients.

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

Charles R. Drew University president headlines College of Podiatric Medicine Dean’s Lecture
The College of Podiatric Medicine Lester J. Jones Dean’s Distinguished Lecture will feature Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science (CDU) President and CEO David M. Carlisle, MD, PhD. He will talk about “Sisyphus and the Sailboat – The Course Toward Universal Health Insurance in the U.S.”

The lecture, which is open to the public, begins at 5:30 p.m. Thursday, March 1, 2018 in Western University of Health Sciences’ Health Education Center, Lecture Hall 1, 701 E. Second St., Pomona, California 91766.

“The goal is to bring scholars to our institution that will expose students to areas of interest that will help them develop their expertise even further,” said College of Podiatric Medicine Interim Dean Lester J. Jones, DPM, MS Ed. “We are bringing the best and the brightest to further expose our students to that type of academic intellectualism.”

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Rx5000 5K Run/Walk
The College of Pharmacy will hold its inaugural Rx5000 5K Run/Walk at 8 a.m. Saturday, March 3, 2018 in Frank G. Bonelli Park, 120 E. Via Verde Drive, San Dimas.

Funds raised at this event will aid student scholarships, community health fairs, student mentorship and career development programs. Click here for more information.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Associate Professor Babak Faramarzi presented at the 2017 American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP) convention in San Antonio, Texas. His presentation was titled “Conformational changes in the feet of growing foals: An overview.” Collaborators included Allison Salinger (DVM 2018) and Dr. F. Dong (GCBS).

 

 

From University Advancement:

Alumni news
The Alumni Office has a new and updated online alumni population map showing where our U.S. alumni live by county. The map is also interactive, such that if you hover your mouse over a state, a count of alumni in that state will appear; and if you click your mouse on a state, a list will display on the right side of the screen showing the count of alumni in each of that state’s counties.

 

 

From the Pumerantz Library:

Exhibit & Family Fun Day @ the Pumerantz Library
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) traveling exhibit “Pictures of Nursing: the Zwerdling Postcard Collection” is on display in the Pumerantz Library until March 23, 2018. The College of Graduate Nursing is collaborating with the Pumerantz Library on showcasing this invaluable and evolving occupation and exploring the cultural values of this profession through historical postcards. For more information about the Zwerdling Postcard Collection please visit the NLM’s exhibit page.

The Pumerantz Library is delighted to announce a Family Fun Day to be held in the library’s lobby on Saturday, March 10, 2018. Nurses will be on hand to demonstrate their skills and there will be crafts and fun things to do from 1 to 4 p.m. We are looking forward to seeing you and your children.

For more information please contact Mary Helen Ellis at mellis@westernu.edu or by phone at extension 5321.

Oregon osteopathic pre-med clubs earn national recognition

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WesternU COMP-Northwest integral to formation of new clubs

Two Oregon universities’ Pre-Student Osteopathic Medical Association clubs earned national recognition last week from their parent organization, SOMA. Both clubs formed last year with the help of medical students from Western University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific-Northwest.

“These Pre-SOMA clubs allow for more exposure to the osteopathic profession on college campuses. As the only osteopathic medical school in Oregon, we are proud to celebrate their success,” said John T. Pham, DO, Vice Dean of WesternU COMP-Northwest. Pham also is advisor for the SOMA club at COMP-Northwest. “The Pre-SOMA clubs at Oregon State University and the University of Oregon are an ideal partnership for COMP-Northwest’s SOMA club.”

Students with WesternU COMP-Northwest’s SOMA club reached out to Oregon State University’s pre-med advisor to gauge interest, and made contact with Coby Cates, a BioHealth Sciences student at OSU. Cates, Dr. Pham, and second-year WesternU COMP-Northwest medical student Kyle Bertram met last summer to discuss formation of the club. “That was really the beginning of something special, and it has helped students both at OSU and UO,” Cates said. He founded and subsequently became president of the Pre-SOMA club at OSU. The club was recognized this month by the parent organization, SOMA, as the Pre-SOMA Chapter of the Year.

Bertram serves as student advocacy officer for the WesternU COMP-Northwest SOMA club. Together with second-year medical student Beth Kobza, the students worked closely with OSU’s newly-formed Pre-SOMA club to help guide them through the first year.

WesternU COMP-Northwest students hosted OSU students at a casting workshop last year, and plan to host more workshops. The school’s SOMA club hopes to tap into pre-medical events hosted by Osteopathic Physicians & Surgeons of Oregon as a way to increase workshops for Pre-SOMA members.

“The most exciting part of this whole experience was when we got several WesternU students to participate in the SOMA event National Osteopathic Night Out,” Bertram said. “Roughly 12 to 15 students went to Corvallis to meet with about 20 OSU students. We had several undergraduate students tell us they never even considered or were aware of osteopathic medicine, but now because of Pre-SOMA they plan on applying to WesternU, and are excited for the possibility of becoming osteopathic physicians.”

OSU Pre-SOMA served as the impetus for the UO club. The president of UO’s Pre-SOMA club, Lisa Huynh, was awarded Officer of the Year honors by SOMA. Huynh has been accepted into the WesternU COMP-Northwest Class of 2022.

Cates and Huynh plan to travel to Washington, D.C. next month to accept the awards at SOMA’s annual spring convention.

“Pre-SOMA clubs helps promote the profession because students that interact with the clubs will understand osteopathic principles and practices and can use that knowledge when applying to DO schools,” Pham explained. “It’s exciting to see these local chapters formed at in-state colleges, and I am very impressed with the COMP-Northwest SOMA Club for their leadership in spearheading these Pre-SOMA clubs.”

WesternU Founding President Philip Pumerantz leaves unique and ongoing legacy

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Click to play slideshow

In bringing to life his “impossible dream,” Western University of Health Sciences Founding President Philip Pumerantz, PhD, impacted the lives of thousands in his university family and touched millions through the healers he helped train.

WesternU faculty, staff and students joined community leaders and family February 28, 2018 at a Celebration of Life for Dr. Pumerantz, who passed away Dec. 26, 2017. Through inspirational words and personal stories that brought laughter and tears, they testified to Dr. Pumerantz’s humanism, vision, and the importance of family – both the support he received from his own family and the WesternU family he created.

Dr. Pumerantz founded the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) in downtown Pomona in September 1977. COMP became Western University of Health Sciences in 1996 and was joined by eight additional colleges, as well as a campus in Lebanon, Oregon. Dr. Pumerantz retired in September 2015 and took on the role of President Emeritus.

WesternU President Daniel R. Wilson, MD, PhD, said succeeding Dr. Pumerantz was akin to taking over the Globe Theatre after Shakespeare’s departure. Dr. Pumerantz was a remarkable man who had an indomitable quality but was also very sweet, Wilson said. He was a man of ready action, but also had a big heart.

“I hope we can achieve half or even a tenth of what he has achieved,” Wilson said. “And I use the present tense because although he is gone from us, his achievements live and thrive and will have a very bright future.

“All the remarkable good that he achieved will live after him and shine brightly,” Wilson added. “Phil, WesternU celebrates you and your remarkable life even as you look down on us with a cute grin and eyes a-twinkle, and I really want to thank you for building this wonderful institution.”

Osteopathic leaders Ethan Allen, DO, and Donald Dilworth, DO traveled to Chicago to recruit Dr. Pumerantz to lead COMP. They gifted him a brightly colored “California” tie as an enticement to take on this unique challenge. His son, Richard Pumerantz, PhD, who served as master of ceremonies, wore the tie to the Celebration of Life.

“As an emblem of his commitment, he continued to wear it. He wore it at many events and religiously wore this tie to every Commencement ceremony in particular because of its importance,” Pumerantz said. “It was only appropriate today that I wear it so that everyone have an opportunity to see his commitment, even to the end, and his belief in the family of WesternU.”

COMP Dean Paula Crone, DO ’92, said she remembered how much pleasure and pride Dr. Pumerantz took in handing out diplomas to WesternU graduates at Commencement. WesternU has graduated more than 14,000 health professionals.

“He truly loved his students and he loved his graduates,” Crone said. “He loved the fact that he got to stand up there on that stage with his deans and see the future of health care walk before him and know that he helped to create it and helped to shape it.

“His impact will always be felt by every patient treated by a WesternU graduate and by every subsequent trainee who goes on to train others,” she added. “Multiply 14,000 by all the patients our WesternU graduates see. You can appreciate the multiple millions of lives that this one man’s legacy already represents. These are lives changed, lives impacted, lives saved. A very proud legacy indeed.”

Dr. Pumerantz established WesternU with humanism as its core principle. College of Pharmacy Associate Professor and alumnus Micah Hata, PharmD ’07, said he first defined humanism as treating patients as a human being with feelings and emotions rather than as a medical condition or a problem to solve. But spending time with Dr. Pumerantz taught him that humanism means much more.

“It meant developing relationships with the people around you. It was not only seeing someone as an individual human being, but inviting them to be part of your community,” Hata said. “And he didn’t just preach this philosophy, he lived it.

Dr. Pumerantz was excited to learn Hata and his wife were having triplets, and after their birth he always asked how they were doing, Hata said.

“Dr. P, I know my story is one of many and I appreciate the opportunity you have given me as one of your students and one of your faculty. But what I appreciate most is you didn’t see me as just another student, or just another alumnus or just another faculty member or even just another employee,” Hata said. “You took a sincere interest in me as a person and made me feel like a part of your and Mrs. P’s community. And that to me is being humanistic. And it’s how I try to interact with my patients each and every day. So rest assured that your legacy lives on. And it is something I will try to teach my students and to my kids. Thank you, Dr. P, and wherever you may be, whatever adventure you’re tackling next, Godspeed my friend.”

Dr, Pumerantz served as a mentor, friend and partner to many community leaders in Pomona and beyond. University of La Verne President Devorah A. Lieberman, PhD, said Dr. Pumerantz invited her to his office soon after she became president in 2011.

“He talked to me about what does it mean to be a university president. What does it mean to always focus on the mission of your institution and on the students of your institution,” Lieberman said. “And he began that day to talk to me as a friend, a mentor, a colleague and a peer. I’ll never forget that, because his reaching out made me feel welcome in this community and showed me that I had someone to whom I could turn when I had difficult situations. And someone who would be honest with me, tough with me but always support me.

“So when I think of Phil I think of a remarkable visionary, a remarkable president, a remarkable, forward-thinking and kind man,” Lieberman added. “This man will not just be remembered for all that he has accomplished. He will be remembered for how he’s made every single one of us feel. We’ll miss you Phil.”

College of Pharmacy student Tricia Tahara-Stoller, PharmD ’20, sang “The Impossible Dream,” from the musical “Man of La Mancha.” Dr. Pumerantz played the musical soundtrack every day while completing his doctoral program, Richard Pumerantz said.

Dr. Pumerantz was told after completing his Army service that he was not smart enough for college. But his mother encouraged him to become the first in his family to graduate from college, Richard Pumerantz said.

“So he went to college and he listened to this song as inspiration that he could dream these impossible dreams,” Pumerantz said. “A man who was told it couldn’t be done, we are now honoring today.”

WesternU Deputy Chief Operating Officer and College of Allied Health Professions Dean Stephanie Bowlin, EdD, PA, said Dr. Pumerantz encouraged her and many others to dream big, be visionaries and to look far into the future without any limits. She and many others praised the true partnership between Dr. Pumerantz and his wife, Harriet.

“Their devotion to one another, to family, to community and the work they shared created the foundation from which WesternU has grown and will continue to grow for generations to come,” Bowlin said. “Their legacy of humanism, excellence, and health care will endure through every faculty, administrator, staff, student and alum. At this time, we tend to be sad at the loss of a great man. But as friends of Dr. P and Harriet, we honor him most by choosing instead to be happy for having known him. We are blessed with the opportunity to continue to realize his vision for WesternU and forever be grateful to have been a part of his legacy.”

The “Pumerantz Partnership” between Dr. and Mrs. Pumerantz brought WesternU to where it is today, said WesternU Vice President for Enrollment Management and University Student Affairs Beverly A. Guidry, EdD, who then addressed Harriet directly.

“So much of who we are as a university was forged in COMP’s earliest days, when you worked side by side with Dr. Pumerantz to ensure that the college would succeed for years to come. And that it would always be a warm, welcoming, sophisticated, sublime environment for every person who joined the university family,” Guidry said.

She presented a WesternU flag, one of the first created after COMP became WesternU, to Harriet Pumerantz.

“I am honored to present this flag to you, Mrs. Pumerantz, on behalf of a grateful university community and on behalf of all those blessed by the compassion, expertise and human touch of a Western University of Health Sciences healer,” Guidry said. “Your shared vision, your shared determination, your endless hours of sacrifice and work, your high standards, all are the foundational fabric of this university, as essential to what we are today as gold and brown thread are to this flag. We are here now because you were there then, and we thank you and we love you.”

Richard Pumerantz closed by saying that he always encouraged his father to write down the story of WesternU so future generations could learn from it.

“Some people write with parchment. Some people write with ink. Some people write chiseled in stone,” Pumerantz said. “What my father wrote was lives. Every one of you. So his story continues on forever because you are all parts of his life.”

This Week@WesternU, March 5-9, 2018

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WesternU Founding President Philip Pumerantz leaves unique and ongoing legacy

In bringing to life his “impossible dream,” Western University of Health Sciences Founding President Philip Pumerantz, PhD, impacted the lives of thousands in his university family and touched millions through the healers he helped train.

WesternU faculty, staff and students joined community leaders and family February 28, 2018 at a Celebration of Life for Dr. Pumerantz, who passed away Dec. 26, 2017. Through inspirational words and personal stories that brought laughter and tears, they testified to Dr. Pumerantz’s humanism, vision, and the importance of family – both the support he received from his own family and the WesternU family he created.

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

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

WesternU College of Podiatric Medicine Dean’s Lecture focuses on universal health insurance
Attaining health care coverage for everyone in the U.S. seems an impossible task. But it is a moral issue that needs to be resolved in order for our society to progress, according to Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science President and CEO David M. Carlisle, MD, PhD.

Carlisle presented “Sisyphus and the Sailboat: The Course Toward Universal Health Insurance in the U.S.” at the College of Podiatric Medicine Lester J. Jones Dean’s Distinguished Lecture March 1, 2018 at Western University of Health Sciences in Pomona, California.

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

 

 

From the College of Dental Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
Joel M. Laudenbach, DMD, Assistant Professor of Oral Medicine & Geriatric Dentistry, Coordinator of the Advanced Oral Diagnosis Workgroup, presented two courses and one workshop at the Chicago Dental Society 153rd Midwinter Meeting in Chicago, Ill. on Feb. 23-24, 2018: “Oral Cancer Screening & Lesion Recognition: Improve Your Diagnostic & Management Skills,” “Oral Manifestations & Clinical Implications of Systemic Diseases,” and “Oral Lesion Biopsy & Adjunctive Device Techniques Workshop.”

Irina Vukmanovic Nosrat, DDS, was recently awarded her Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Neuroscience for her research thesis “On functions of neurotrophic factors in taste buds and teeth.” We are extremely pleased for, and proud of Dr. Vukmanovic Nosrat for her hard work and accomplishment. Please join us in congratulating her for this significant achievement.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Oregon osteopathic pre-med clubs earn national recognition
Two Oregon universities’ Pre-Student Osteopathic Medical Association clubs earned national recognition last week from their parent organization, SOMA. Both clubs formed last year with the help of medical students from Western University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific-Northwest.

“These Pre-SOMA clubs allow for more exposure to the osteopathic profession on college campuses. As the only osteopathic medical school in Oregon, we are proud to celebrate their success,” said John T. Pham, DO, Vice Dean of WesternU COMP-Northwest. Pham also is advisor for the SOMA club at COMP-Northwest. “The Pre-SOMA clubs at Oregon State University and the University of Oregon are an ideal partnership for COMP-Northwest’s SOMA club.”

Click here to read the full story.

 

Kudos on accomplishments
Housecall Doctors Medical Group, which serves as a rotation site for third and fourth-year COMP students, hosted an international resident, Dr. Alex Kelleher of Waterford, Ireland, as part of a global exchange program. “We are honored and proud that Dr. Kelleher has chosen Housecall Doctors Medical Group as one of his elective training sites, and hope to increase awareness of population-based in-home residentialist care both in the U.S. and internationally,” said Dr. Norman Vinn, founder of Housecall Doctors Medical Group. Click here to read more.

 

Medical Anatomy Center news
Professor Brion Benninger, MD, MSc, was the guest speaker and coordinator of an all-day mixed simulation training session at the Eastern Oregon Emergency Medical Services annual conference in Pendleton, Oregon Feb. 15-18, 2018. Dr. Benninger designed and taught a one-day mixed simulation training symposium which included his signature andragogical learning strategies incorporating cognitive load theory, color psychology, high-fidelity prototypes and special prepared donor cadaver towards eFAST ultrasound training techniques and mediums using classic and innovative probes.

Click here to read more.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Associate Professor Brian Oakley has been funded by a competitive extramural grant to serve as a visiting professor at Lille University in northeastern France. Dr. Oakley spent a busy week in Lille delivering lectures to undergraduate and master’s level students and gave an invited research seminar that was simulcast to Laval University in Quebec, Canada.

CVM Associate Professor Mohammad Mir served in a study section of the Department of Defense (US Army Medical Research and Material Command). The study section was tasked to review applications focused on lethal virus countermeasures in the FY19 Military Infectious Disease Research Program (MIDRP). Applications were reviewed from Jan. 15-Feb. 15, 2018, and the final discussion of reviewed applications took place on Feb. 21, 2018.

Dr. Mir published a review article titled “Hantavirus induced Cardiopulmonary Syndrome: A public Health Concern.” The article discusses recent advances in hantavirus disease and provides critical information for clinicians that helps in correct diagnosis during the early stages of viral infection to improve the prognosis of this viral illness.

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Ray Symposium
The 2018 Ray Symposium will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday, April 19, 2018 in HEC Lecture Hall 1. The featured speaker is Alan I. Leshner, PhD, who served as Chief Executive Officer of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and Executive Publisher of the journal Science from December 2001 through February 2015, when he became CEO Emeritus. Click here for more information and to register.

 

RxBound
Click here to read the latest edition of RxBound, the College of Pharmacy’s magazine: http://ws.westernu.edu/WesternU-News/flip-book/rx-bound-winter-2018-extended/index.html

 

 

From the Pumerantz Library:

Exhibit & Family Fun Day @ the Pumerantz Library
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) traveling exhibit “Pictures of Nursing: the Zwerdling Postcard Collection” is on display in the Pumerantz Library until March 23, 2018. The College of Graduate Nursing is collaborating with the Pumerantz Library on showcasing this invaluable and evolving occupation and exploring the cultural values of this profession through historical postcards. For more information about the Zwerdling Postcard Collection please visit the NLM’s exhibit page.

The Pumerantz Library is delighted to announce a Family Fun Day to be held in the library’s lobby on Saturday, March 10, 2018. Nurses will be on hand to demonstrate their skills and there will be crafts and fun things to do from 1 to 4 p.m. We are looking forward to seeing you and your children.

For more information please contact Mary Helen Ellis at mellis@westernu.edu or by phone at extension 5321.


Connett is first from WesternU appointed to ACOFP Board of Governors

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COMP Vice Dean David Connett, DO.

College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) Vice Dean David Connett, DO ’84, will become the first Western University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific faculty member to be inducted into the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians (ACOFP) Board of Governors.

Connett will be inducted during a ceremony on March 22, 2018, during the ACOFP 55th Annual Convention & Scientific Seminars at the JW Marriott Hotel in Austin, Texas.

Connett is Immediate Past President of ACOFP of California, which is the state society to the national ACOFP association. He will represent the western United States in his new role on the board.

“This is a great honor and I thank COMP Dean Paula Crone (DO ’92) for allowing me to pursue these sorts of activities,” Connett said. “I think it helps represent WesternU on a national front and on a stage with primary care as the leading organization in the American Osteopathic Association (AOA).”

Connett said he’s joining the board to help make changes to how national board exams are taken for family medicine practice and to help transition the AOA and Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) into a single accreditation system.

College of Dental Medicine (CDM) Associate Dean of Simulation, Immersion and Digital Learning Environments Robert Hasel, DDS, introduced Connett to a high-powered, adaptive learning software from RealizeIt. CDM has been using the platform to teach students in a flipped classroom environment, and Connett was inspired to create and program an intellectual learning engine for the board certification process. Now it’s part of his initiative for ACOFP.

ACOFP is a professional medical association that represents more than 22,000 practicing osteopathic family physicians, residents and students throughout the U.S., according to its website.

ACOFP counts among its membership ranks many faculty in the COMP Department of Family Medicine, which is chaired by Dat Trinh, DO ’03, MSHPE ’03.  Click here to view the list of faculty in the department.

Connett said former COMP Dean Donald Krpan, DO, was an inspiration to him, helping guide him into and through medical school and medical politics.

Several leaders from the ACOFP of California were instrumental in helping Connett earn an appointment to the Board of Governors: President Mark Shiu, DO; Treasurer/Convention Chair Steven H. Barag, DO; Board Member at Large Steven D. Kamajian, DO; and Emeritus Board Member Martin Jay Porcelli, DO. In addition, ACOFP Vice President Robert C. DeLuca, DO, was influential with his counsel, Connett said.

WesternU’s East West Scholarship Dinner to honor longtime pharmacy educator

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College of Pharmacy Professor Sam Shimomura, PharmD, (fifth from left) with students from his “Pharmacy Related Apps and Social Media” elective seminar on Jan. 10, 2018.

Western University of Health Sciences will honor a longtime pharmacy educator at its annual East West Scholarship Dinner on Saturday, April 7, 2018 at the Hilton San Gabriel, 225 West Valley Boulevard, San Gabriel, California 91776.

The East West Scholarship Dinner raises money to provide scholarships each year to WesternU students in graduate nursing, osteopathic medicine, pharmacy, physical therapy, physician assistant education, optometry, podiatric medicine, dental medicine and veterinary medicine. Applicants from all ethnic backgrounds are selected based on academic excellence, community service and financial need.

To date, more than 300 WesternU students have received awards totaling more than $425,000.

This year’s dinner will honor College of Pharmacy Professor Sam Shimomura, PharmD. He has served the College of Pharmacy since 1996 as one of its first faculty members. He previously worked 26 years at UC San Francisco and holds emeritus status for his years of outstanding service to that institution. Shimomura received his PharmD in 1970 from UCSF.

“Dr. Sam,” as he is referred to by students, alumni and colleagues, received the California Society of Health-System Pharmacists (CSHP) Lifetime Honorary Membership Award, only the 11th person to receive the honor in the society’s 46-year history.

From 1989 to 1992, Dr. Sam served on the CSHP Board of Directors as president-elect, president, and past president. He also served on the Board of Directors of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) from 1999 to 2002. In 1995 he received the CSHP Pharmacist of the Year Award and in 2006, the Distinguished Service Award.  Dr. Sam is a Fellow of both CSHP and ASHP.

“In his 48 years as an educator, mentor, and colleague, Dr. Sam has touched the lives of so many and has had a truly remarkable impact on CSHP, the profession and pharmacy education,” said WesternU College of Pharmacy Dean Daniel Robinson, PharmD, FASHP.  

Click here to visit the East West Scholarship Dinner website to buy tickets or become a sponsor: http://www.westernu.edu/east-west/.

This Week@WesternU, March 12-16, 2018

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WesternU’s East West Scholarship Dinner to honor longtime pharmacy educator

Western University of Health Sciences will honor College of Pharmacy Professor Sam Shimomura, PharmD, at its annual East West Scholarship Dinner on Saturday, April 7, 2018 at the Hilton San Gabriel, 225 West Valley Boulevard, San Gabriel, California 91776.

The East West Scholarship Dinner raises money to provide scholarships each year to WesternU students in graduate nursing, osteopathic medicine, pharmacy, physical therapy, physician assistant education, optometry, podiatric medicine, dental medicine and veterinary medicine. Applicants from all ethnic backgrounds are selected based on academic excellence, community service and financial need.

To date, more than 300 WesternU students have received awards totaling more than $425,000.

Click here to visit the East West Scholarship Dinner website to buy tickets or become a sponsor: http://www.westernu.edu/east-west/.

Click here to read the full story.

 

WesternU, U of R sign linkage agreement to enhance diversity in the health care workforce

Leaders from Western University of Health Sciences and the University of Redlands (U of R) will collaborate to enhance diversity in the health care workforce, emphasizing health provision to the medically underserved and creating opportunities for populations underrepresented in health care fields.

The two schools’ presidents and other administrators formalized their memorandum of understanding and linkage agreement during a ceremony Wednesday, March 7, 2018, on the WesternU campus in Pomona, California.

Click here to read the full story.

 

 

From the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific:

Connett is first from WesternU appointed to ACOFP Board of Governors
College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) Vice Dean David Connett, DO ’84, will become the first Western University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific faculty member to be inducted into the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians (ACOFP) Board of Governors.

Connett will be inducted during a ceremony on March 22, 2018, during the ACOFP 55th Annual Convention & Scientific Seminars at the JW Marriott Hotel in Austin, Texas.

Click here to read the full story.

 

Clinical trial
Clinical trial available for individuals with Type 2 Diabetes! This involves taking the oral agent liposomal glutathione, a natural antioxidant already present in the human body. $100 will be offered to eligible participants! If you are an individual with Type 2 Diabetes with no history of TB, HIV or liver function abnormalities, and are on no medications/on oral medications only, please contact research coordinator Albert Medina (amedina@westernu.edu, 909-469-8626) or principal investigator Dr. Vishwanath Venketaraman (vvenketaraman@westernu.edu) for further information.

 Click here to view a flier.

 

 

From the College of Podiatric Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
College of Podiatric Medicine Professor and Foot and Ankle Center Medical Director Jonathan Labovitz, DPM, FACFAS, CHCQM, gave a lecture at the UCSF-Fresno Multidisciplinary Update in Internal Medicine: Diabetes Symposium on March 9, 2018. The lecture was “The High-Risk Diabetic Foot.”

 

 

From the College of Allied Health Professions:

Kudos on accomplishments
The American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties held a recognition ceremony on February 21, 2018 in New Orleans, La., for their 2017 clinical specialists.

We are proud to announce that College of Allied Health Professions alumni Grant Hirayama, PT, DPT ’13, is now a Board Certified Clinical Specialist in Orthopaedic Physical Therapy and Lindsey Liggan, PT, DPT ’13, and Winne Ma, PT, DPT ’12, are Board Certified Clinical Specialists in Women’s Health Physical Therapy.

 

 

From the College of Veterinary Medicine:

Kudos on accomplishments
CVM Associate Professor Babak Faramarzi recently published a manuscript titled “Quantitative analysis and development of the hoof in Arabian foals from birth to one year of age” in the Veterinary Comparative Orthopedics and Teratology Journal (30 (6)403-412). Co-authors include Student Doctor Allison Salinger (DVM 2018), Dr. F. Dong (GCBS) and veterinary specialists from Cal Poly and Colorado State Universities. Citation: Faramarzi, B., Salinger A., Kaneps, A., Nout-Lomas, Y.S., Greene, H. and Dong, F. (2017).

 

 

From the College of Pharmacy:

Rx5000
On behalf of WesternU College of Pharmacy, thank you so much to all who came, ran, walked, volunteered and in any way supported the inaugural Rx5000 on Saturday, March 3, 2018! With the perfect running weather, we had more than 300 people gathered at Bonelli Park in San Dimas, CA for this amazing event.

Click here to read more.

 

 

From the Pumerantz Library:

Exhibit & Family Fun Day @ the Pumerantz Library
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) traveling exhibit “Pictures of Nursing: the Zwerdling Postcard Collection” is on display in the Pumerantz Library until March 23, 2018. The College of Graduate Nursing is collaborating with the Pumerantz Library on showcasing this invaluable and evolving occupation and exploring the cultural values of this profession through historical postcards. For more information about the Zwerdling Postcard Collection please visit the NLM’s exhibit page.

Clinical researcher and health entrepreneur joins WesternU board

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Sean P. Stanton, BS, CRC

An accomplished clinical researcher and health entrepreneur has joined the Western University of Health Sciences Board of Trustees.

Sean P. Stanton, BS, CRC, has more than 20 years of experience managing clinical research studies. He co-founded Compass Research in 2004 and turned it into one of the premier research sites in the world. In 2016, Compass Research joined Bioclinica Research, a leading international clinical trial services provider. Stanton serves as Bioclinica’s Global Chief Operating Officer.

Stanton previously co-founded Clinical Neuroscience Solutions, where he served as Vice President and Chief Operating Officer and managed a large staff throughout the Southeast. He also served as Clinical Research Coordinator at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry. He earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from the University of Cincinnati. After graduation, Stanton was hired as the first research associate of future WesternU President Daniel R. Wilson, MD, PhD.

“Over the last 20 years he has built Compass into the largest privately owned clinical trials company in the United States, which is remarkable,” Wilson said. “He built a company from scratch based purely on his own ideas and initiative. He has not just clinical research knowledge but also entrepreneurial skills and contacts in medically related industries. And he is unchanged for all his success. He is still an enthusiastic, modest, down-to-earth individual with boundless ideas and energy as well as a strong moral compass.”

Stanton’s introduction to WesternU was attending the University’s “A Tribute to Caring” annual fundraising gala. He immediately saw WesternU poised on an exciting trajectory for growth. In his interactions with WesternU faculty, staff and students he found them to be happy, committed to being great, collaborative, and results-oriented.

“They engage with smiles and laughs. Each person I met enjoyed what they do,” Stanton said. “Each person showed pride in what they were working on. For me, being on a team requires this, and we have to be committed to the cause. I did not sense a closed system. They want to openly engage in sharing and creating ideas through innovation and strategy to do great things.”

Stanton said he is excited to join the WesternU Board of Trustees and is looking to add value on every level. He expects to grow, prosper, educate, learn and laugh out loud.

“I see so much potential in what I can offer, from business strategy to engaging with the community to create a center of excellence clinically,” Stanton said. “Most of all I see a place for clinical trial learning in the colleges. This is the bridge from bench to bedside, and WesternU has it all.”

“We are excited to have Mr. Stanton join our board,” said WesternU Board of Trustees Chairman Richard Bond, DO ’82, DrPH. “His extensive background in research and outreach will be a welcome addition to our current board, and we hope he can give us some insight into how we can expand our research program at WesternU.”

WesternU has the basic clinical and academic pieces in place to grow robustly and in new directions, Stanton said.

“The industry-sponsored work will grow exponentially. This research is both scientifically gratifying and financially rewarding,” he said. “My goal would be to have a nationally recognized clinical trial center of excellence in five years. I also want us to create an educational platform for students to be able to be clinical trial trained when they complete their education.”

“Sean Stanton’s enthusiasm for the University’s mission is contagious,” said WesternU Board of Trustees Vice Chair Linda Crans, BS. “Based on the depth of his knowledge and experiences with clinical research and his innovative thinking, Sean will provide valuable insight to Board discussions and planning.”

Stanton and his wife, Charlet, have four children – Savana, Alexis, Brooks and Briana – as well as two dogs, two turtles and one spiny-tailed lizard.

“There is nothing more important to me than family. We’re Catholic, and although I am not always the most reliable to Mass, spirituality is critically important to me,” Stanton said. “Fitness and health are emphasized in my home. I am on a competitive cycling team and use this not only to stay healthy, but also to work with a group of people as a team outside of work.”

Stanton supports a number of causes, including the Global Alzheimer’s Platform Foundation, local arts, and neurodegenerative diseases.

“I am man for others. Although I have been fortunate in life, I believe this has happened by putting my needs last,” Stanton said. “Somehow it always works out, because I get more out of seeing people grow through my support.”

WesternU celebrates Match Day

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Click to view slideshow

Four years of hard work comes down to one moment, one envelope. Inside is a dream realized.

Western University of Health Sciences’ College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific held Match Day celebrations on its Pomona, California and Lebanon, Oregon campuses March 16, 2018. COMP students joined other medical students across the country in learning where their residency match would take them.

COMP Dean Paula Crone, DO ’92, offered a “pre-toast” to students prior to the opening of their match envelopes. She reminded them that at the end of every action is a patient.

“May you embrace your destination wherever your match may be taking you. Know that you are needed where you are going and that you are going where you are meant to be,” Crone said. “Know that you’ll always have a home with us no matter where you go in the future. We are all so proud of you and we are all so proud of your accomplishments already. Congratulations Class of 2018.”

When the clock struck 9 a.m., the students opened envelopes containing their residency locations. Hugs, tears of joy and selfies followed.

 
Fourth-year COMP student Lauren Van Woy was happy to match into her first choice – an emergency medicine residency at Kaiser San Diego, where her fiancé is already a resident and where her family lives.

When applying for residencies, it’s important to apply broadly, she said, and to keep an open mind during interviews and learn more about different programs and what they have to offer. During those few months, students will find what they’re looking for and should follow their hearts when ranking programs.

“Go with what makes you happy,” she said. “Ultimately, it’s your life.”

Van Woy has been interested in emergency medicine since working as an ER scribe prior to attending medical school.

“You get to treat the people that need it the most,” she said. “You see everyone, no matter if they have health insurance. You feel like you’re really helping people.”

COMP is once again producing a large number of primary care physicians: 121 of the 207 students (58 percent) who matched in Pomona as of March 18 are going into primary care, which includes internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics, and OB-GYN. A total of 102 COMP-Northwest students participated in the Match, and more than half (55) landed programs in primary care. 

After the students opened their envelopes, they were invited to the front of the lecture hall to announce their name, specialty residency program and location. Their information was pinned to an electronic map displayed on the lecture hall screens.

Medical residency programs can range from three to seven years, depending on the specialty. For example, family practice is three years, while neurosurgery is seven. Following residency, physicians can set up practices in their community of choice.

COMP Vice Dean David Connett, DO ’84, said he stood before this class four years ago and asked them, “What is it you’re going to do when you grow up?”

“That question was answered today,” he said. “For the rest of your career, based on what happens today forward, every graduate will be saving lives. Very few other graduate ceremonies can say that.”

Fourth-year COMP student Sheila Attaie, DO ’18, said she has wanted to become a doctor since she was 10 years old. From cradle to grave, her family doctor took care of her entire family, and helped them through a difficult time, she said. She matched into a family medicine residency at UC Davis.

The matching process was fun, she said. She met a lot of amazing, inspiring people, but ultimately wanted to go home.

“I felt I could have the strongest connection to the community where I grew up and where my parents live,” Attaie said. “When my parents and family get sick, they go to UC Davis. No one is going to care more than the people who grew up there. This is the actualization of the dream I have had since I was 10.”

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