Category Archives: Medical School Alumni

Ursuline distinguished alumni honored

Published: Mon, November 10, 2014 @ 12:00 a.m.

Staff report

youngstown

The 26th annual Dis- tinguished Alumni Awards were presented at the liturgy at the Feast of Saint Ursula Liturgy at Ursuline High School.

Each year, the award is given to graduates of Ursuline High School who have distinguished themselves by dedicated service to the school and community. This years recipients were Sister Mary Lee Nalley (55) and John Vitullo (71).

Sister Mary Lee was born on the East Side of Youngstown, a daughter of Joseph and Margaret Drummond Nalley. Her parents provided a Catholic education for their children, Patty Nalley Dempsey (57), Peggy Nalley McDonough (60), Patrick and Joseph (members of the Class of 1963).

Sister Mary Lee is a product of Immaculate Conception School. Upon graduating from Ursuline, she entered the Ursuline Sisters of Youngstown. She earned a bachelors degree in education from Youngstown State University. She also has a religious education certificate from the Diocese of Youngstown.

She taught at Immaculate Conception and St. Columba schools in Youngstown; St. Nicholas School in Struthers; and Our Lady of Lourdes in East Palestine. She serves as pastoral associate at St. Angela Merici Parish, the recently formed parish from Sacred Heart and Immaculate Conception.

For more than 40 years, Sister Mary Lee has ministered in a variety of capacities on the citys East Side.

She has worked primarily with children from disadvantaged families. Her work included both classroom teaching in the consolidated parish school and in the Christian Education Program on weekends and after-school hours.

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Ursuline distinguished alumni honored

LHS Distinguished Alumni feted

LOWELL -- There was something different about this year's Distinguished Alumni induction ceremony at Lowell High School.

It wasn't the caliber of the achievements of the honorees, and it wasn't just the time of day -- it was the roar of applause from every student in the auditorium.

Thursday afternoon's ceremony marked the first year in which students were able to attend during the school day, and it appears the intent of that change was achieved.

LHS Distinguished Alumni inducted five more graduates who went on to do extraordinary things, and students walked away inspired.

Honorees this year included:

* Michael J. Kuenzler, Class of 1979, who served as a Lowell police officer for many years and founded the department's Drug Abuse Resistance Education program.

* Robert J. Kilmartin, Class of 1976, a lawyer and decorated Marine colonel who spearheaded disaster-relief efforts in Sri Lanka and Indonesia after the 2004 tsunami and served in Iraq around the same time. He has also served as an assistant attorney general in Massachusetts and Kentucky.

* Marilyn Swartz-Lloyd, Class of 1962, who has spent 40 years identifying Boston's economic growth centers and working with stakeholders from all sectors to bring them success. She previously served as executive director of Boston's Economic Development and Industrial Corp.

* John J. Lardner, Class of 1949, a former Marine and Secret Service agent who served on presidential details from Dwight Eisenhower through Ronald Reagan, but had a special attachment to John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline. Following Kennedy's assassination, Jacqueline Kennedy personally requested Lardner for an extended assignment with her and the children.

* James F. Linnehan, Class of 1939, who served in the Navy during World War II and went on to be an assistant attorney general and one of the first commissioners of the Lowell Historic Park Commission.

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LHS Distinguished Alumni feted

I-PASS Reduces Medical Error Injuries During Patient Handoff by 30%

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Newswise Bethesda - Improvements in verbal and written communication between health care providers during patient hand-offs can reduce injuries due to medical errors.

Reported in the Nov. 6, 2014, New England Journal of Medicine, researchers at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center (WRNMMC) and the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences (USU) recognized this critical safety concern and teamed up with nine civilian hospitals to develop I-PASS, an original system of bundled communication and team-training tools for hand-off of patient care between providers. The study revealed a remarkable 30% reduction in injuries due to medical errors after its implementation across all 9 institutions.

According to the Joint Commission (a non-profit organization that accredits and certifies more than 20,500 health care organizations and programs in the United States and whose accreditation and certification is recognized nationwide as a symbol of quality that reflects an organizations commitment to meeting certain performance standards), ineffective hand-off communication is recognized as a critical patient safety problem in health care; in fact, an estimated 80% of serious medical errors involve miscommunication between caregivers during the transfer of patients. The hand-off process involves givers, those caregivers transmitting patient information and transitioning the care of a patient to the next clinician, and receivers, those care-givers who accept the patient information and care of that patient. In addition to causing patient harm, defective hand-offs can lead to delays in treatment, inappropriate treatment, and increased length of stay in the hospital.

As the first military hospital to adopt the I-PASS hand-off bundle, which includes training in team communication skills, a verbal hand-off process organized around the verbal mnemonic I-PASS (Illness severity, Patient summary, Action List, Situational awareness and contingency planning, and Synthesis by receiver), a written or computerized hand-off tool that reflects the verbal mnemonic, a faculty development and observation program, and an institutional dissemination campaign, Walter Reed Bethesda has now implemented I-PASS for use across multiple disciplines to create an institutional transition of care policy.

According to one of the lead investigators COL Clifton E. Yu, Chief, Graduate Medical Education at Walter Reed Bethesda, Not only is Walter Reed National Military Medical Center the only military hospital to be involved in the study, but we are also the only study site that was not a major childrens hospital. Taking advantage of that fact, we decided to work towards adapting the curriculum for dissemination across multiple clinical areas, to include adult medicine, surgery, and nursing environments. As our successful institutional roll out is evolving, we are setting the national standard and precedent for the use of I-PASS in all clinical and nursing domains where transitions of patient care typically occur.

Training in team communication skills is a critical element of the I-PASS Hand-off Bundle and, given the DoD Patient Safety Programs longstanding interest and expertise in this area through their initial development of the TeamSTEPPS program (Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety, now jointly sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality), it seemed a natural fit to have WRNMMC and USU investigators take the lead on developing this aspect of the I-PASS curriculum. After completing training as a TeamSTEPPS Master Trainer, I was able to leverage my new knowledge and skills in order to adopt key elements of TeamSTEPPS into the team communication skills training for I-PASS. As it happens, our inclusion of TeamSTEPPS components into I-PASS dovetails perfectly with WRNMMCs current roll out of full TeamSTEPPS training hospital wide, said Army Maj. (Dr.) Jennifer Hepps, assistant professor of Pediatrics at USU.

We were able to use the expertise of USUs Val G. Hemming Simulation Center to create roleplays and videos simulating handover scenarios. These simulations helped to teach faculty and residents the best practices in transitions of care between patient teams, said Joseph Lopreiato, M.D., MPH, professor of Pediatrics and associate dean of Simulation at USU. Thanks to the support from the USU administration, our Simulation Center was able to contribute to this groundbreaking research that will go a long way toward reducing medical errors in the transitions of patient care.

Patients are at the center of everything we do," said Brig. Gen. Jeffrey B. Clark, director of the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. "By quickly adopting the IPASS transitions of care principles for all healthcare teams, we simultaneously bring state of the art healthcare to our patients and teach the next generation of healthcare team members what right looks like.

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I-PASS Reduces Medical Error Injuries During Patient Handoff by 30%

Middletown Police Dept

Penn State Harrisburg has presented Alumni Achievement Awards to five graduates with impressive professional accomplishments.

The awards were presented at a dinner on Thursday, Oct. 16 at the university.

The alumni who received awards were:

Peter G. Gurt, president of Milton Hershey School, a 1997 masters degree recipient from the universitys School of Behavioral Science and Education.

Prior to becoming president, Gurt served as the schools senior vice president and chief operating officer. An alumnus of Milton Hershey, Gurt has served in a succession of roles there, including vice president of student life, vice president of administration and assistant varsity girls basketball coach.

He also served as a relief houseparent for 10 years with his wife, in addition to his regular duties.

Gurt also served as a Milton Hershey School Alumni Association Board officer and was president of the William E. Dearden Alumni Campus Advisory Board.

Gurt also serves on the Board of Directors of the World Childrens Center in Atlanta and the Commission for Accreditation, the body responsible for independent schools in Pennsylvania.

In 2009, the Coalition for Residential Education named Gurt Administrator of the Year. He is also a member of the Hershey Rotary Club.

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Middletown Police Dept

Alumni United

VOL. 129 | NO. 216 | Wednesday, November 05, 2014

By background, Maria Lensing perhaps doesnt fit the expected parameters of someone quick to defend Memphis and eager to take on the challenge of revitalizing a local universitys alumni association.

She moved here from Lima, Peru, at age 14, when her family brought her little brother to St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital for treatment of his leukemia. Now, at age 35, she is a vice president with AT&T and has a five-state territory that would allow her to live in Nashville or Atlanta or Miami, if that were her desire.

Maria Lensing is the inaugural chair of CBUnited, the rebranded alumni association at Christian Brothers University that is working to reconnect with the universitys graduates.

(Daily News/Andrew J. Breig)

But it isnt her desire, and the way she speaks on behalf of Memphis suggests that she will be a dynamic force in her role as the inaugural chair of Christian Brothers Universitys newly renamed/rebranded alumni association, CBUnited.

For example, she doesnt much care for the glitz of Miami not as a mother of two young sons hoping to instill values consistent with CBUs Lasallian tradition of a holistic education. And Nashville? Bring that up at your own risk.

Tell me, whats the big difference between Nashville and Memphis? she said. Youre more expensive and you have a couple of country stars.

Founded in Memphis in 1871 making it the oldest university founded in the city CBU has an enrollment of 1,600 students, and its 2014-15 freshmen class of 371 is the largest in its history.

A chief part of Lensings task is connect with lost alumni who might live blocks from the 75-acre wooded Midtown campus or on the other side of the world. Or in Miami, where Lensing recently had a business meeting with a man who turned out to be a CBU grad and one of those lost alumni.

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Alumni United

Marysville students return amid grief, outpouring of support

Originally published November 3, 2014 at 5:24 PM | Page modified November 3, 2014 at 5:42 PM

MARYSVILLE After 10 emotional days weighed down by tragedy, grief and loss, Mondays reopening of Marysville-Pilchuck High School amid support from hundreds of community members was called an important step in the right direction.

It feels really good to be back at school, said a sophomore, Jordan Reynolds, shortly after re-entering the school. People are upbeat. Not in a happy way, but just in an appreciation of each others company.

Today was a good day in Marysville, said Becky Berg, superintendent of the Marysville School District. She said the students had lots of time to be together, and to hug, and to cry, and to begin the processing of this event together.

Hot chocolate, doughnuts and roses greeted students on their return to the school in which freshman Jaylen Fryberg opened fire with a handgun on Oct. 24, fatally wounding three 14-year-old girls and seriously injuring two male students before killing himself.

About 85 to 90 percent of students attended the abbreviated day Monday, Berg said, with regular classes to resume Tuesday.

Its really weird ... coming back to school and not being able to see those people, said student Michael Stope, 17.

But beginning the healing process is necessary, said Strope. Gesturing toward a fence lined with bouquets, balloons, stuffed animals and messages of support, he said, I dont think we could have done it any better than this.

A third student, Karina Gavrilchik, 15, said the school didnt feel the same, due especially to an unsettling feeling near the cafeteria, where the shootings occurred.

Doors to the cafeteria were closed and its windows were papered over, she said. Students ate in the gym, where a lunch of sub sandwiches, salad, breadsticks and pizza was provided.

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Marysville students return amid grief, outpouring of support

Alumni & Friends- University of South Carolina School of …

Dear Alumni and Friends,

Ive had the great privilege of being associated with the University of South Carolina School of Medicine Alumni Association for some years now. It never ceases to amaze me what our graduates are accomplishing, especially given the fact that we are such a young medical school. Our first graduating class was small, and is now barely 30 years old, and especially in the first few years, our classes consisted only of a handful of people.

With that in mind, it is tremendous to consider what we have done for the medical care of the people in South Carolina and beyond. We are small in number, but grand in accomplishments.

With that in mind, I also need to point out that given our relatively small number of graduates, every person and every deed makes a difference. For other institutions, if you contribute your money or your time, you are one of the many. For us, by the very nature of our institution, you are one of the few. If you agree to mentor a medical or graduate student, you are providing a tremendous resource. If you support the alumni association fundraising activities, your contribution may actually make a difference as to whether we can fully fund a scholarship or not. If you serve on a committee, it wont be an honorary position; youll be a contributing member of an important group.

You may ask why you would want to do any of these things. Why would you want to come to the Black Tie/White Coat Gala, attend your class reunion, or come to a football game? Why would you want to serve on a committee or the alumni association board? In answer, I will tell you medicine is changing. Whether you disagree or agree with the way things are heading, I think we can all agree that things will very be very different this time next year. In uncertain times, it helps to have a home. It helps to have a group of people one can rely on. What better group of folks to navigate these times with than the classmates with whom you went through gross anatomy, biochemistry, and pathology. Come home to the University of South Carolina School of Medicine.

Thank you B. James McCallum, M.D. Class of 2001 President, School of Medicine Alumni Association

Join My Carolina Alumni Association today!

Member Benefits include:

Nominations for MyCarolina Board of Governors

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Alumni & Friends- University of South Carolina School of ...

AC to honor alumni at homecoming

Austin College will honor five graduates and two faculty members for distinguished professional accomplishment and service to the college on Friday during Homecoming events on the campus. Awards will be presented during a dinner in Mabee Hall of Robert J. and Mary Wright Campus Center. For information, contact the Office of Alumni Engagement at 903-813-2335.

Distinguished Alumni Awards recognize those who have distinguished themselves in their profession and in their communities, exemplifying leadership and ethical standards in their interactions. First Decade Award recipients are selected on the same basis, but for accomplishments within 10 years of graduation. Austin College Alumni Board president Kirsten Brandt James of Dallas, Class of 1985, and Dr. Marjorie Hass, president of Austin College, will present the awards to alumni.

2014 Distinguished Alumni Awards

Craig Florence, Class of 1984, of Dallas is a partner and trial attorney with Gardere Wynne Sewell in Dallas. He has been recognized for his work by Chambers USA: Americas Leading Lawyers for Business, Best Lawyers in America, Texas Super Lawyers, and holds an AV Preeminent Peer Review Rating. He earned a law degree, cum laude, from Baylor University School of Law.

Tara Jo Gibson Myers, Class of 1978, of Jersey Village headed to University of Texas Medical School at Houston upon completing her Austin College education and earned her M.D. in 1983. She completed her residency at UTMS Houston in internal medicine before beginning private practice in 1986. She continued in private practice in internal medicine until 1995 when she began the hospital-based practice in emergency medicine she continues today. She has held many leadership roles within her professional career, including serving as medical director for several services and serving as state commander for the Disaster Medical Assistance Team.

Kim Powers, Class of 1979, of New York City, New York is the senior writer for ABCs news magazine 20/20, for which he received the Edward R. Murrow Award for continuing excellence this year. During his nearly 20-year career at ABC News, he also won Emmy and Peabody Awards for his 9/11 reporting for Good Morning America. He also wrote the popular What Would You Do? Series, hosted by John Quinones, and has written numerous primetime TV specials for the leading ladies of ABC News: Diane Sawyer, Barbara Walters, Robin Roberts, and Katie Couric.

First Decade Award

Abbas Ravjani, Class of 2004, of Washington, D.C. completed his Austin College degree in political science and Middle East studies, having enjoyed a semester abroad at Oxford University and served as student body president back on campus. In the intervening 10 years, he has had an impressive array of experiences, including selection as a Truman Scholar, a Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans, and a Center for a New American Security Next Generation National Security Leader. He spent two years working for the U.S. House of Representatives Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, then served as law clerk for the Honorable Barbara Lynn in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas. In 2012, he returned to Washington, D.C., where he is an attorney in the U.S. State Department.

Heywood C. Clemons Volunteer Service Award

The Clemons Award is given to alumni or friends of Austin College in honor of continued service and commitment to the College. The award is named to honor longtime Austin College Board of Trustees chair Heywood Clemons of Fort Worth, Texas. The 2014 recipient is Billy Core.

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AC to honor alumni at homecoming

Program offers medical students real patient contact

Third-year medical students usually don't have much time for a visit home.

But a home visit is just what is prescribed for students at Southern Illinois University.

After two years of book work, medical students go through a rotation of medical specialties, most of which are on campus in Springfield, but this month, several Decatur area students had a chance to work with patients under the direction of local family practice doctors.

Dr. Brooke Ballard at the Mount Zion Family Care Center oversaw the work of Decatur native Paige Tsuda.

Its just exciting to be involved in the direct education of future physicians, Ballard said.

For her, being part of the program is invigorating. The medical students' joy and excitement about learning takes Ballard back to when she was a student. When the SIU alum participated in the program, she worked under Dr. Daniel Smith, the same doctor she now shares an office with.

Thats how I found out I loved family medicine, Ballard said.

SIU's Tracey Smith sets up students with about 172 preceptors, or physician mentors, around the state, many of whom are alumni.

It's a wonderful opportunity for them to give back to try and share what pulled them into family medicine, said Smith, director of medical student education for the Department of Family and Community Medicine.

Five of the rotations, or clerkships (pediatrics, internal, surgery, psychiatry and obstetrics) are available on campus through physicians with the SIU school of medicine. However, we know that 99 percent of healthcare occurs outside an academic institution, Smith said.

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For aspiring doctors, it’s application season

The fall season means many hours devoted to reviewing applications for the Office of Admissions at the Perelman School of Medicine. Last year, the school received over 5,700 applications and interviewed 898 candidates, but accepted just 239 a 4.1 percent acceptance rate.

Admissions staff have been organizing interviews since August, and the interviews will continue into January. Unlike some schools that do not require an interview, Penn Med only considers applicants that it interviews. Applicants spend a day on campus composed of two interviews one with faculty, one with students as well as the opportunity to attend lunch, sit in a class and participate in clinical simulations, Director of Admissions and Financial Aid Gaye Sheffler said.

Brian Chang , a 2014 College and Wharton graduate, is now a first-year student at the Medical School, after applying to 15 schools. He said the interview process was long and required him to leave class during the day, but he would absolutely go through the application process again.

I love medical school now. I think that the privilege of being a doctor is very unique, because you hold a very valuable and unique position in patient care. Its worth the time and energy, Chang said.

Changs positive outlook could be attributed to his passion for medicine. His father, who is a doctor, provided Chang his first exposure to a career in medicine. He also worked as a patient care technician and an EMT before coming to Penn. While an undergraduate, Chang said that he was able to develop a more scientific understanding of medicine to support his clinical exposure. He became involved in genetic research on aging, as well as research on the Affordable Care Act.

Since Chang knew that he wanted to attend medical school from the time he got to Penn, competition did not distract him from his goal. For the most part, though, he said he tried to get involved in activities that were not medically related so that it didnt always seem like [he] was in the thick of the competition.

Rosaline Zhang , a 2014 College graduate who majored in biology and urban studies, is one of Changs classmates. She also avoided the competition of applying to medical school by being involved with urban studies.

I was much more involved with the urban studies major, which is [in] a very small department, Zhang said. I didnt really feel that bogged down by the pre-med, competitive atmosphere, and so I just decided to do things I was just interested in.

Zhang applied to about 20 medical schools and ended up accepting 10 interview offers. Her first interview was very nerve-wracking, but Zhang said that advice given by upperclassmen helped her to prepare.

You kind of hit this groove, because [the medical schools] ask the same questions, and the medical schools are also trying to sell themselves to you, Zhang said. The interview process reaffirmed Zhangs desire to attend medical school, because the interview questions required her to reflect on why she was going into medicine.

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For aspiring doctors, it's application season