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Major Textbook on Research Methodology Published

Newswise How do you teach medical research? How do you design a good study or develop a workable hypothesis? How do you shape research to improve patient care?

These and many more questions are addressed in an authoritative textbook detailing the clinical research process, written by researchers and clinicians at SUNY Downstate Medical Center and other institutions. Principles of Research Methodology: A Guide for Clinical Investigators, published by Springer, is designed to help healthcare professionals successfully conduct scientific research and also help them to better evaluate research published in the medical media.

We believe that this comprehensive book, which spans the entire research process and focuses on the critical role of the research hypothesis, will prove a unique resource to medical students, physicians, and translational scientists, among others, who typically lack formal broad training in research methodology and wish to expand their knowledge base, said Phyllis Supino, EdD, professor of medicine and public health, and director of clinical epidemiology and clinical research in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at SUNY Downstate.

Dr. Supino, who has many years of experience studying and teaching research methodology, is editor of the book, along with Jeffrey S. Borer, MD, chair of medicine and chief of cardiovascular medicine at SUNY Downstate. Dr. Borer is also director of The Howard Gilman Institute for Heart Valve Diseases and the Cardiovascular Translational Research Institute, both located at SUNY Downstate.

The text familiarizes the reader with the logic of research design and hypothesis construction, the importance of research planning, the ethical basis of human subjects research, the basics of writing a clinical research protocol and scientific paper, the logic and techniques of data generation and management, and the fundamentals and implications of various sampling techniques and alternative statistical methodologies.

Written by medical scientists and methodologists who have extensive experience in biomedical investigation and in teaching key aspects of research methodology to medical students, physicians and other health professionals, the text integrates theory with examples and employs language that is clear and useful for a general medical audience. Each of the 13 chapters ends with Take-Home Points summarizing key information.

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SUNY Downstate Medical Center, founded in 1860, was the first medical school in the United States to bring teaching out of the lecture hall and to the patients bedside. A center of innovation and excellence in research and clinical service delivery, SUNY Downstate Medical Center comprises a College of Medicine, Colleges of Nursing and Health Related Professions, a School of Graduate Studies, a School of Public Health, University Hospital of Brooklyn, and an Advanced Biotechnology Park and Biotechnology Incubator.

SUNY Downstate ranks eighth nationally in the number of alumni who are on the faculty of American medical schools. More physicians practicing in New York City have graduated from SUNY Downstate than from any other medical school.

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Major Textbook on Research Methodology Published

Man is charged in death of child

BEAVERDALE A 25-year-old man is charged with assaulting and killing a young girl he was baby-sitting Friday in his Blanche Street home.

Patrick Lynn Burkett of Beaverdale was arrested after 22-month-old Raegan Panick was taken to Memorial Medical Center in Johnstown and then transferred to Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh with severe head and brain injuries.

State police say Burkett was watching Raegan while the childs mother was at work on Friday.

When the mother came home after 4:30 p.m., police say, she found the child was unresponsive. She had Burkett call for an ambulance.

Raegan was taken to Memorial Medical Center in Johnstown and then taken by helicopter to Childrens, where she was pronounced dead at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, the Allegheny County coroners office said.

Cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head.

Her manner of death was ruled a homicide.

Doctors at Childrens and at Memorial told police the babys injuries were consistent with an assault.

Dr. Clifford Neal at Memorial said she had bruising on her head, abdomen, upper thigh and groin area, according to the criminal complaint.

Dr. Jennifer Wolford at Childrens told police Raegan had a fractured skull, retinal hemorrhaging and a herniated brain.

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Man is charged in death of child

Four Kaiser Permanente Leaders Listed Among Diversity MBA Magazine’s Top 100 Under 50 List

OAKLAND, Calif., Aug. 13, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Four Kaiser Permanente leaders have been named to Diversity MBA Magazine's Top 100 Under 50 Diverse Executiveand Emerging Leaders list.

Nicole Barnett, assistant medical group administrator, and Anthony Barrueta, senior vice president of government relations, were recognized as Executive Leaders. L. Robert Garcia, director of finance communications and Sally Saba, MD, executive director of National Supplier Diversity, placed in the Emerging Leader category.

Diversity MBA Magazine, a quarterly publication that aims to serve the needs of multicultural professionals in corporate America, business students and entrepreneurs, will honor the Top 100 leaders in the publication's summer 2012 edition.

"We're pleased these four leaders have been recognized for their achievements and leadership within the organization and their communities," said George Halvorson, chairman and chief executive officer of Kaiser Permanente. "We're more successful as an organization when we leverage and learn from the different backgrounds and unique perspectives of our diverse workforce. We truly believe that diversity within our organization helps us better understand and meet the needs of our members."

"We are humbled by the success of our Top 100 Under 50 recognition program," says Pam McElvane, publisher and CEO of Diversity MBA Magazine. "We aspired to recognize high potential and seasoned executives for their outstanding leadership within their companies and communities.We believe that celebrating individuals that value higher education is a unique recognition in aligning leadership and education."

Awardees will be honored at Diversity MBA Magazine's sixth annual Business Leaders Forum and Awards Gala. The gala will be held Sept. 20-21 at the Palmer House Hilton Hotel in Chicago.

More information about Kaiser Permanente's honorees can be found below:

Nicole Barnett is assistant medical group administrator for Kaiser Permanente's East Bay Area, where she provides leadership to the departments of medical secretaries, medical legal, health education, eye care services, and clinic operations in Richmond, Pinole and Alameda, Calif.

Barnett participates in Kaiser Permanente's volunteer program, often facilitating local outreach efforts and recruiting volunteers from her facilities and departments. Under her leadership, the Kaiser Permanente Pinole (Calif.) Medical Office received the distinction of Business of the Year in 2011 for outreach efforts. Barnett serves as the leader of the Mount Calvary Baptist Church Health Ministry, which seeks to improve the health of members and the community through health education, screenings and connections to local health care resources.

Barnett earned her doctorate in health sciences from Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. She currently is an adjunct professor of nursing at Dominican University in San Rafael, Calif. and has taught masters-level courses on Transitions in Nursing, Healthcare Policy and Healthcare Economics.

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Four Kaiser Permanente Leaders Listed Among Diversity MBA Magazine's Top 100 Under 50 List

CVS Pharmacy robber demands Oxycodone

Dust Storm in East Valley Dust Storm in East Valley

A monsoon dust storm moved into the East Valley, Mesa-Tempe area Saturday afternoon.Blowing dust and high winds can make driving hazardous this time of year, so please use caution while on the road.

A monsoon dust storm moved into the East Valley, Mesa-Tempe area Saturday afternoon.Blowing dust and high winds can make driving hazardous this time of year, so please use caution while on the road.

A few businesses near 43rd Avenue and Camelback were evacuated Saturday as a precaution after different pool chemicals accidentally mixed inside a truck trailer.

A few businesses near 43rd Avenue and Camelback were evacuated Saturday as a precaution after different pool chemicals accidentally mixed inside a truck trailer

They are one of the biggest rock bands in history, and certainly the most recognizable. Friday night, KISS mania took over the valley.

They are one of the biggest rock bands in history, and certainly the most recognizable. Friday night, KISS mania took over the valley.

Its monsoon season in the southwest, and in the summer, that means extreme rain, strong winds, and even thunder and lightning. But this phenomenon is now giving birth to another.

Its monsoon season in the southwest, and in the summer, that means extreme rain, strong winds, and even thunder and lightning. But this phenomenon is now giving birth to another.

ICE agents are searching for a woman they say filmed herself in pornographic videos with children.

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CVS Pharmacy robber demands Oxycodone

CMU adds two staff members in College of Medicine admissions office

MOUNT PLEASANT, MI The Central Michigan University College of Medicine added two staff members to admissions as student enrollment is underway.

Chris Austin is director of admissions and Jennifer Paulke is assistant director of admissions. They started earlier this month.

Austin, a CMU graduate, has worked at CMU since 1997 in admissions and alumni relations. His new job duties include recruiting students, managing the medical school admissions office and marketing.

Paulke, a Michigan native, comes from Florida Gulf Universitys College of Medicine where she was assistant director of admissions. At CMU, she will be responsible for recruitment and community involvement with schools in Michigan.

As assistant director of admissions, Paulke will be responsible for recruitment and community involvement particularly with the universities, colleges and school systems in Michigan. She will work with the director and the admissions staff in all aspects of medical student admissions.

CMU's medical school will open in 2013 with its first class of 60 students. The students will spend two years at the Mount Pleasant campus before beginning clinical training in Saginaw in Covenant HealthCare and St. Mary's of Michigan through CMU Healthcare, formerly Synergy Medical Education Alliance.

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CMU adds two staff members in College of Medicine admissions office

Ninth annual alumni games are set

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The ninth annual Cobre/Silver Alumni Baseball/Softball games will be held Saturday, Aug. 18, at 6 p.m., at the Ben Altamirano Sports Complex.

SILVER CITY The ninth annual Cobre/Silver Alumni Baseball/Softball Classic will take place at the Ben Altamirano Sports Complex on Saturday, Aug. 18, at 6 p.m.

The event is sponsored by AmBank, Morning Star, Gila Regional Medical Center, and New Mexico State Senator Howie Morales. Proceeds from the event will be donated toward Grant County s efforts of cancer prevention awareness

Former students/coaches of Silver High School and Cobre High School will once again have an opportunity to showcase their school colors and diamond skills, even organizer Artie Sanchez said. The same players will also get a chance to get reacquainted with good memories and friends.

Sanchez said last year more than 100 former players and coaches participated in the event, which raised more than $1,000 to benefit the Gila Regional Medical Cancer Center.

There will be two hardball games. The first is for players who graduated from 1995 to 2012. The second is for players who graduated from 1980 to 1994.

Female athletes who graduated from either school will also have an opportunity to get in on the action as there will be an exhibition alumni fast-pitch softball game.

Senior players will also play in a fast-pitch softball game, and it s open to players who attended either school from 1979 and before.

In addition to the alumni games, the ninth pair of inductees to the Grant County Hall of Fame will be honored. Nominations are being accepted for the GCHOF until Aug. 16 for an

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Ninth annual alumni games are set

Travis Mills’ absence casts shadow over Vassar High School alumni game

By Bill Petzold Vassar Pioneer Times

A portrait of Army Sgt. Travis Mills is placed in a prominent position on the sideline as former Vassar High School students stretch out prior to the start of the second half of the alumni football game Saturday, August 4 at Vassar High School.

In a perfect world, Mills could have been on the field at Vassar High School, strapping on the pads for one more game on the gridiron where he was a star athlete for the Vulcans.

Instead, Mills is recovering at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Mills was injured in the line of duty April 10, losing parts of all four limbs during his third tour of Afghanistan when he stepped on an improvised explosive device.

The portrait did little to fill the gap left by the absence of the vivacious, talented and fun-loving Mills. Instead, it served as a tribute to a missing teammate and a dose of reality on the same field where Mills and his teammates dreamed big and worked together for greatness.

I think what (Mills former teammates) were all thinking about and talking about was it was the first time they played a game without him; it was the first time they got pads and he wasnt in the locker room getting dressed, Vassar assistant football coach Bill Germain said. Germain scored the sole touchdown in the Vulcans 6-0 victory over Elkton-Pigeon-Bay Port.

A lot of them just thought it was different with him not being around, Germain said. Hes just a big piece of what theyve always connected with football. Football is the smell of the grass, its the pop of the pads, and its Travis doing whatever Travis did around them, saying what he said. So there was still the grass, still the pads, but there was no Travis. It was just very emotional for some of those guys.

Mills former teammates Roger Bacon and Mike Hecht, both Class of 2005, played in the game. Hecht, who has stepped up to help with a number of fund-raising efforts for Mills family, said playing a game without Mills made it a game like no other.

I think everybody wanted to say something about it, and I dont think anybody knew what to say, Hecht said. I said, Ive never been a leader before, I never had to be because Travis was always the leader for my team, I never had to be that guy. I told them, Today Im more than willing to give this a shot if you guys are willing to follow me. It felt good just having that picture of Travis down there, I knew in a way there was at least some part of him down there.

In a moving show of sportsmanship, Laker High donated its entire share of the gate receipts and a bit more to the Mills Family Fund. The Lakers received $300 for their participation. Instead of putting that money towards equipment for their own program, they handed a check for $305 back to Vassar players.

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Travis Mills’ absence casts shadow over Vassar High School alumni game

Leisurely attitude awaits runners in upcoming Royal Oak event

By JIM EVANS For The Oakland Press

A runner takes part in the inaugural Royal Oak cross country alumni run. The third annual event will be held Thursday, Aug. 16, in Quickstad Park. (Submitted photo)

ROYAL OAK No, the waiver will not be four type-written, single-spaced pages.

Nor will Royal Oak High School boys cross country coaches Ryan Piippo and Dave Barnett be flanked at the third annual alumni run by both ample medical staff and legal representation in the form of the entire Sam Bernstein Law Firm clan.

A waiver? We dont even bother with having people fill out a registration form, said Barnett, laughing.

The intent of the Royal Oak High School cross country alumni run is good will, not litigation. That run will be held Thursday, Aug. 16, at the high school course in Quickstad Park. Race time is 7 p.m., but participants are asked to arrive early to check in.

Runners should gather in the parking lot that is situated at Lexington Boulevard and Marais Avenue.

The Welcome Mat is out for all former Royal Oak Dondero, Royal Oak Kimball and Royal Oak High School runners, as well as interested community members.

To paraphrase the inscription on the Statute of Liberty: "Give Piippo and Barnett your tired, your huddled masses yearning to catch their breath

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Leisurely attitude awaits runners in upcoming Royal Oak event

Top 10 Drugstore/Pharmacy Makeup

06-08-2012 16:30 Simones 'Top 10' Video..... .....And channel..... My Max Factor 'Ageless Elixir' Foundation Video..... Go to my blog for pictures, extra information & more..... Facebook page..... Twitter..... Personal (Non-makeup) Youtube Channel..... Non-makeup twitter ..... Website (Makeup) ..... E-mail ..... Thanks for Watching!!! Siobhán. xx

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Top 10 Drugstore/Pharmacy Makeup

Emeli Sandé’s long journey from med school to the Opening Ceremonies

Before her debut album hit No. 1 in the U.K., and before she started penning tracks with the likes of Alicia Keys and playing to North American arenas with Coldplay, Emeli Sand would enter talent competitions at the medical school where she studied in Glasgow.

Everyone else came out, she recalls. There were breakdancers all med students have a hidden talent. Everyone played something. In my third year, they said, We would prefer if you didnt come back.

Her erstwhile competitors could see that with her sweet and boomingly soulful voice, she was in a different league and yet for years, record labels turned her down. They just didnt see it, she says. They could hear the songs were good, but I dont know that they understood: Theres this med student. Shes not from the BRIT School [a performing-arts academy in London whose alumni include Adele and Amy Winehouse]. Her success, in the end, wasnt your normal pop star story, but hopefully it made [labels] see that if you want something to stick, you have to do something different.

On the morning after an opening set for Coldplay at Torontos Air Canada Centre, Sand smiles as she lounges on a leather couch in the screening room of a Yorkville hotel so posh it has carports at the front and rear to accommodate decoy celebrity vehicles. Her dyed-blond hair done up in a sideways-apostrophe quiff, she wears her glamour with a touch of funkiness, and she hardly comes across as entitled. She speaks in a soft Scots burr about being grateful for every opportunity shes been given thus far, including singing at the Olympics Opening Ceremony, with a rumoured slot in the Closing Ceremony on Aug. 12 as well (her lips are sealed as to specifics, but she allows that being selected means the world to her).

On this continent, she remains much of an unknown quantity: Onstage before Coldplay, she sang as people were still filing into the venue. Her short and winsome set mixed her pop, gospel, R&B and dance-music leanings and seemed to win her some new fans. You just have to come completely unassuming and start afresh, she says.

Sand is the daughter of a Zambian father and a Cumbrian mother, who met in the 80s as students in Sunderland, in northeast England. There, she says, they got a lot of abuse for being together, and [with] their families it was quite difficult as well. I guess thats made me very strong in who I am, knowing what theyve struggled through just because they felt it was right.

The family moved to tiny Alford, in Aberdeenshire, where her father started teaching and directing a secondary school choir. When she was a child, he introduced her to the likes of Anita Baker and Cline Dion all these massive vocalists and her habit of wandering around the house belting out Mariah Carey tunes convinced her parents she had talent. But even though she signed a publishing deal to write songs at age 16, she also had a passion for science; she enrolled in medical school, aiming to be either a psychiatrist or a neurologist. I really was a geek, she says. It was exciting for me! As she studied, her relatives would send recordings of her singing to people in radio and TV. She landed a gig singing a hook on a hit single by rapper Chipmunk, but the video was shot on a day when was writing an exam; unperturbed, the label hired an actress to mime her part.

Sand started shopping herself around to record companies a process so frustrating that it inspired her to write the song Clown, with lyrics about performing for unappreciative people. Labels responses were sadly predictable: Everybody said, Thats a great song for this person and this person, but they didnt want to sign me.

Finally another guest spot with grime artist Wylie convinced Virgin Records to take her on. Having completed a neuroscience B.Sc. (but not the full med-school training), she abandoned her studies and moved to London, taking with her the discipline she had learned from counting cells in microscopes, and an interest in how music affects the brain. As she worked on her own album, she began writing songs for big names such as rapper Tinie Tempah and X Factor superstar Susan Boyle, always aiming to stretch singers out of their comfort zones.

It made me realize that I must keep doing things that are a surprise to me

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Emeli Sandé’s long journey from med school to the Opening Ceremonies