Redding City Councilwoman McArthur will get alumni award from Chico State

McArthur has served on the boards of directors of north state organizations.

Faculty members at Chico State University have selected Redding native and City Councilwoman Missy McArthur to receive the school's Distinguished Alumni Award for her long record of accomplishments and community service.

The award is one of the school's highest honors, Chico State Paul Zingg said in a letter to McArthur.

"I was just floored," said McArthur, 62, who graduated from Chico State in 1972 with a bachelor's degree in English and completed a teaching credential a year later. A pair of faculty members told her she'd been chosen for the award at a recent lunch in Redding.

Chico State gives out eight distinguished alumni awards annually — one for each of the school's seven colleges and the eighth is a service award.

"We try to bring back the best and the brightest and it wasn't that hard to pick her," said Joel Zimbelman, dean of the College of Humanities and Fine Arts, which oversees the English department at Chico State.

"She's a great local success story for Redding, obviously, and Chico as well," Zimbelman said.

McArthur went on from to Chico State to earn a master's degree from the University of San Francisco and a Physicians Assistant Credential from Stanford University.

McArthur was a physician's assistant for 25 years, including 12 years at Mercy Medical Center, before retiring. She's also taught for the Shasta Union High School District, was a family planning counselor and owned several businesses.

McArthur was elected to the council in 2008 and served as mayor in 2011. Her involvement in Redding goes back decades.

She's served on the boards of directors for organizations including the Shasta County Women's Refuge Auxiliary, the Shasta College Foundation, the Shasta Family YMCA and the Methamphetamine Task Force.

She also was a chair of New Library Now! The group was instrumental in securing funding for Redding Library, which opened in 2007.

McArthur also has been involved with the Shasta Library Foundation, Library Citizen's Advisory Committee, Library Review Committee, Chair of the Library Governance and Financing Task Force, Kids' Kingdom — Project Playground, Turtle Bay Board of Regents, American Heart Association, American Cancer Society, Help Line Inc., Plus One Mentors, Shasta-Tehama-Trinity Joint Community College District Board of Trustees, CSU Chico President's Advisory Board and Redding Rotary.

"Her community involvement record I think is pretty illustrious," said Zimbelman, who was on the team that selected McArthur for the award. "I think Redding should be very proud of her and I'm really pleased that we've got such outstanding people who graduate from this university who take up residence in the north state."

McArthur will receive the award during a campus visit in April. That visit will include a breakfast with Zingg, classroom visits, a panel discussion with other award recipients and an awards dinner, Zimbelman said.

McArthur said she's looking forward to the campus visit. Her son, 21-year-old Rob Milton, is a Chico State engineering student and a member of an honors society and on the dean's list.

"I'm real proud of him," she said.

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Redding City Councilwoman McArthur will get alumni award from Chico State

Study finds Caribbean-American women at higher risk for elevated mercury levels

Public release date: 17-Feb-2012
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Contact: Ron Najman
ron.najman@downstate.edu
718-270-2696
SUNY Downstate Medical Center

A new study published by researchers at SUNY Downstate Medical Center's School of Public Health assesses mercury levels in pregnant women and examines dietary and environmental sources of exposure to mercury. The research, which focuses on an urban immigrant community, examined risk factors that may be associated with elevated mercury levels, measured through urine and cord blood samples. The study, published this month in the Journal of Environmental Monitoring, found that foreign-born immigrant women from the Caribbean are at higher risk for elevated levels of mercury in the blood, predominantly from dietary sources such as large fish. The full article is available at http://xlink.rsc.org/?doi=C2EM10835F

Laura Geer, PhD, MHS, assistant professor in the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences at SUNY Downstate's School of Public Health, and Patrick J. Parsons, PhD, chief of the Laboratory of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry, Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, were the main collaborators on the study, "Assessment of Prenatal Mercury Exposure in a Predominately Caribbean Immigrant Community in Brooklyn, NY." The study can be read in the journal's online edition at (To Come). The School of Public Health at SUNY's University at Albany, where Dr. Parsons is professor and chair of the Department of Environmental Health Sciences, also contributed to the study, which was also conducted in collaboration with SUNY Downstate's Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. The research was sponsored by The New York Community Trust.

The study elaborates on previously identified risk factors of in utero mercury exposure. Mercury exposure is a continuing concern in immigrant communities due to risk factors such as maternal country of origin, fish consumption, and ritualistic use of elemental mercury in religious ceremonies. For infants and children, the primary health concern is possible damage to cognitive and central nervous system development related to maternal exposure.

Dr. Geer and her team used a combination of assessment methods to determine exposure levels. A questionnaire designed in collaboration with health professionals from the Caribbean community assessed the frequency of fish consumption, ritualistic practices, occupational exposures, number of dental amalgams, and use of mercury-containing skin and household products. [SUNY Downstate is located in an area of Brooklyn that includes one of the largest Caribbean-American communities in the United States.]

Analysis of cord blood for mercury revealed that 16 percent of samples exceeded the estimated equivalent of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Reference Dose. Cord blood samples generally reflect organic mercury that has been acquired through maternal food consumption. Predictors of cord blood levels included maternal fish consumption and foreign birth of the mother.

Urine mercury levels, which are more likely to reflect environmental exposure to inorganic mercury, were significantly lower than cord blood levels. Predictors of urine mercury also included foreign birth of the mother, as well as the number of dental amalgams and special product use. There were no reports of mercury use in ritualistic practices or in cosmetics; however, some women reported use of religious medals and charms. Women participating in the study were informed of any elevated test results.

Although the study population was selected as a convenience sample, the mercury levels were lower -- in this higher-risk population -- than those estimated based on maternal blood levels from the NYC Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (HANES) of 2004, indicating the possibility of lower exposure since the NYC HANES study was conducted.

Putting this into context, Dr. Geer explains that the elevated cord blood mercury samples seen in some study subjects were still not at levels that are known to be associated with adverse health or developmental effects. However, she notes that the study indicates a need for further study and mercury-exposure prevention efforts tailored to this group, and that subjects were contacted and offered further testing. Furthermore, efforts should target health care providers, health agencies, and community advocates who provide avenues of education for women of childbearing age concerning appropriate dietary fish selection, and potential sources of mercury in the home. Dr. Geer points out that the new widespread use of fluorescent light bulbs, which contain a small amount of inorganic mercury and may expose people when they break, as well as the possibility of exposure from discarded computer equipment, are two current but little recognized sources.

Dr. Geer said, "Our study shows that women of Caribbean origin are at high risk for mercury exposure, owing to the consumption of specific types of fish and other factors. Since mercury can harm a child's development both in and beyond the womb, mercury should be kept at the lowest possible levels. Community education efforts should target Caribbean-American women to accomplish this."

Dr. Geer, assisted by Fay Callejo, MPH, from the School of Public Health, is in the process of completing a follow-up study to identify educational strategies to facilitate community awareness of mercury exposure sources, particularly for women of childbearing age.

Dr. Geer recommends that people familiarize themselves with how to protect their children and their homes from mercury exposure. As suggested by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), five things they can do include:

Learn how to enjoy a diet that includes fish while minimizing exposure to fish species that have high mercury levels.

Learn which products are likely to contain mercury. Avoid use of mercury-containing skin-lightening creams.

Properly recycle or dispose of any mercury-containing products in the home.

Handle mercury-containing products such as thermometers and compact fluorescent bulbs carefully to avoid breakage.

And learn how properly to clean up a mercury spill. Never use a vacuum cleaner.

###

More information on how to avoid mercury exposure is available from the EPA at: http://www.epa.gov/mercury/spills/index.htm and from the New York City

Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (NYC DOHMH) at http://www.nyc.gov/html/doh/html/epi/mercury.shtml.

Advice from the EPA on consuming fish and shellfish can be found at: http://water.epa.gov/scitech/swguidance/fishshellfish/outreach/advice_index.cfm; advice from the NYC DOMHM on fish and shellfish is available at http://www.nyc.gov/html/doh/downloads/pdf/edp/mercury_brochure.pdf.

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 patient's 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 ninth 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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Study finds Caribbean-American women at higher risk for elevated mercury levels

UM kicks off $1.6 billion campaign

The University of Miami’s last Momentum fundraising campaign was a record-smashing success — amassing $1.4 billion in donations at a time when no Florida school had ever before topped the billion-dollar mark.

So what will the U do for an encore? We’re about to find out.

Thursday evening, at a black-tie event attended by hundreds of donors, trustees, top UM administrators and their guests, which included actress Goldie Hawn, walking the orange carpet, UM President Donna Shalala officially announced Momentum2, a follow-up fundraising drive that aims to secure $1.6 billion in donations by 2016.

“This vision is grant, it’s fearless, and it’s comprehensive,’’ Shalala told the gathering.

As is typical with such fundraising campaigns, UM has been quietly soliciting donors for several years to get the ball rolling.

“Even I don’t know how much we’ve raised,’’ Shalala said, as Sebastian the Ibis brought out a sealed envelope.

An ovation erupted as she announced: $905 million.

“ S pectacular,’’ Shalala beamed and guest performance artist Kenny Loggins broke out into a rendition of “Heart to Heart.’’

“The real importance of it is it will firmly establish us in the top ranks of American universities,” said Shalala, 71, who has pledged to stay as head of UM through the campaign.

All major universities do fundraising, but the University of Miami’s original Momentum campaign became something more significant during the past decade: a highly successful metaphor for a school that was striving for, and achieving, new heights.

Begun in 2003 and concluded several years later, Momentum’s $1.4 billion haul was made even more remarkable when considering South Florida’s reputation for lacking a strong philanthropic community. UM’s success was also unusual for such a young university, as it became the first private university established in the 20th Century to reach a 10-digit fundraising goal.

UM’s new $1.6 billion goal is nowhere near the highest in the nation — Stanford University’s latest five-year fundraising drive just topped a record $6.2 billion — but UM’s sights are set very much in line with its chief Florida rival when it comes to prestige, the University of Florida. UF’s Florida Tomorrow campaign was launched several years ago with a $1.5 billion goal, which has almost been reached.

Does money guarantee a university increased quality and significance? Certainly not, but it sure doesn’t hurt. And UM administrators and supporters say the improvements associated with the first Momentum campaign are Exhibit A in demonstrating the importance of attracting dollars.

UM Senior Vice President for University Advancement Sergio Gonzalez credits the Momentum campaign with pushing UM higher in national rankings — U.S. News & World Report now ranks UM No. 38 on its “Best Colleges” list, a ranking that is 29 slots higher than where UM stood a decade ago.

The quality of faculty also improved because of successful fundraising, Gonzalez said. And Gonzalez says the surrounding South Florida community also benefits, as UM’s beefed-up resources fuel local hiring, and help pay for outreach such as community health clinics and partnerships with public K-12 schools.

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UM kicks off $1.6 billion campaign

UE ready to celebrate school’s 158th birthday

EVANSVILLE — The University of Evansville is celebrating its 158th birthday this week with a series of events, including the dedication of a gallery showcasing the school's Methodist heritage.

The John Wesley Gallery and Methodist Commemorative Collection will be on the lower level of Neu Chapel. Its dedication will be at 9:30 a.m. Sunday.

UE officials say the collection is a gift from R. Wayne Perkins, a professor emeritus of philosophy and religion, and his wife Sally Perkins, a UE master's degree recipient.

It includes paintings, ceramics, plates, silverware, busts and more.

Founders Day is observed annually at UE to mark the incorporation of Moores Hill College, the move to Evansville, the charter as Evansville College, and the official opening of the University of Evansville.

All four of these dates fall between Feb. 10 and 19.

Following the gallery dedication, UE will hold a Founders Day service at 10:30 a.m. in Neu Chapel. It will feature the Edgar M. McKown Lecture, given by storyteller and author Tex Sample.

Sample is a professor emeritus in church and society at St. Paul School of Theology, a United Methodist seminary in Kansas City, where he taught from 1967-1999.

The Founders Day celebration will conclude with the annual Alumni Awards Luncheon at noon in Eykamp Hall. The UE Alumni Association will present three awards:

* Samuel Orr Honorary Alumni Award: Richard and Patrice Schroeder. Both are members of the UE Sponsor-a-Student program and are longtime members of the President's Club. Richard Schroeder is a charter member of the Schroeder Family School of Business Administration Advisory Board and currently serves as chair.

* Distinguished Young Alumnus Award: Craig Bryan, a 2011 graduate. Bryan has established programs to reduce suicidal behaviors among pre-deployment and active duty soldiers. He recently assumed the new role of associate director of the National Center for Veterans Studies at the University of Utah, and he has also worked as a consultant for the Air Force, Marine Corps, and Army.

* Distinguished Alumnus Award: Dr. R. Edward Coleman, a 1965 graduate. Coleman is a professor of radiology and vice-chair of the Department of Radiology at Duke University Medical Center. He has worked with PET (positron emission tomography) imaging and its use and evaluation of patients with cancer and dementia.

Coleman is credited as the first physician to demonstrate the potential clinical utility of PET imaging. He served on the UE Alumni Association board of directors from 1988-1994 and received an honorary degree from UE in 2000. Coleman has also been a President's Club member since 2009, sponsors an endowed scholarship, and was the 2009 homecoming speaker.

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UE ready to celebrate school's 158th birthday

Career Day

Photos by Sue Watson

Career Day
Former graduates of St. Mary's, Cadet, and now known as Holy Family School, recently gathered for Career Day. Students led the morning devotional and entertained prior to being introduced to several dozen alumni from the school. Their careers included writers, poets, attorneys, scientists, teachers, pastors, broadcasters, school principals, a county prosecutor, realtors, music producers, concert promotors, a medical transcriptionist and coder, and a physician. Parents and grandparents were also present to cheer on the elementary school which educates children in grades K-8. (Top) Holy Family students enjoy singing together and clapping. (Below) Third grader India Lucas leads a song. (Above) From left are Agatha Asemota, healthcare consultant; Maliah Wilkinson, student; Helen Howell, computer tech teacher; Lakisha Mitchell Buffington, published writer and poet; Amnesti Johnson; Galena principal Andre Sims; and student Chris Falkner. Holy Family School is under the auspices of Sacred Heart Southern Missions, a Catholic ministry headquartered in Walls.

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Career Day

School Secrets: 5 things to know about Boston College

Lions and tigers and eagles, oh my! The Powers Atrium in BC?s Fulton Hall isn?t your average atrium: It has a Wizard of Oz theme. ?[The atrium] was renovated not too long ago, and the architects wanted to incorporate a cool theme into it,? said Savarino. And so, the benches are engraved with the Latin equivalent of, ?Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore,? while the lights are shaped like the Tin Man?s hat.

?It?s kind of weird,? said sophomore nursing major Grace Collins. ?I think you just have to come in and see it to believe it.?

The Eagles like to get down and dirty. Right before finals, BC observes their spring semester tradition of Mudstock: Students build a mud pit in the parking lot and have an all-day volleyball tournament, culminating with an outdoor concert near the senior housing complex known as the Mods. Savarino, who worked as an EMT on medical standby for both events last year, said everyone always has a good time -- but getting a spot on one of the volleyball teams can be pretty competitive, said sophomore marketing major Kasey Jong.

BC went to the Super Bowl.?Or at least, some of its alumni did: Six players who played in this year?s Super Bowl used to walk the halls of Boston College, and New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin used to be BC?s head coach. ?You wouldn?t think that BC would be the most-represented college in the Super Bowl,? said senior communications major Dave Grotz, but he added that football is ?probably the best part about BC.?

?There?s a definitely a lot of BC pride about people that have gone to the NFL and done well,? said Jong.

Want a prime Boston Marathon-watching spot? Head to BC.?BC is located right after ?Heartbreak Hill,? a make-or-break stretch of the Boston Marathon, so their campus is said to be one of the best places to watch. ?From experience here as a student and as a runner, it?s absolutely amazing running through BC,? said Grotz, who ran the marathon his sophomore year.

And as most Boston students will agree, Marathon Monday is one of the best days to be a student in the city. ?Everyone just gets hammered on Monday and goes out and supports the runners,? said Jong -- although that tradition is pretty much the same no matter where you go to school.

BC is a powerhouse of incredible architecture. The third floor of Gasson Hall, which opened in 1913, has a spiral staircase that leads up to a gorgeous bell tower. Word on the street is that any student found up there will be ?punished accordingly,? said Savarino (which most students believe means expulsion), but that hasn?t stopped some Eagles from making the trek.

?I?ve had friends do a lot of weird stuff up there,? said Grotz.

Bapst Library isn?t too shabby either; in fact, it was named one of the most beautiful college libraries in the world. ?It?s just what you would imagine a Hogwarts library to look like,? said Collins.

?Basically if you drop a pen or are really loud, everyone will look at you and glare at you,? she said, ?so Bapst is the place to go if you want to get some serious studying done.?

BC students, what's your favorite thing about your school?

Interested in more 'School Secrets'? Find out what's weird and wacky about life at Northeastern and BU, and check back for fun facts about the rest of Boston's institutions of higher education.

Photos by Burns Library, Boston College (top) and TheDailySportsHerald (bottom) (Flickr)

About Melissa -- I'm a journalism student at Northeastern University, originally from New Jersey. I love hiking, kayaking, and cereal, and I am a vegetarian. I'm afraid of nothing, except butterflies. I love Disney movies, and I hope to one day meet Betty White.

Want more TNGG? Send us an email. Go to our main site. Follow us on Twitter @nextgreatgen. Like us on Facebook. And subscribe to our newsletter!

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School Secrets: 5 things to know about Boston College

Rutgers students plan rally over proposed Rowan University takeover of Camden campus

Hundreds of Rutgers University students plan to rally today outside a meeting of the university's board of governors to protest a proposed takeover of the Camden campus by Rowan University.

Gov. Chris Christie last month announced the plan and other recommendations that a state advisory committee made to reorganize medical education in New Jersey. The merger was proposed to create a public research university that would strengthen Rowan's new Cooper Medical School.

But many Rutgers students, faculty, staff and alumni have strongly opposed the plan, organizing protests, signing petitions and calling their legislators. More than 40 people have signed up to speak at the board’s public meeting at 1:30 p.m. today at the Walter K. Gordon Theater in Camden, a Rutgers spokesman said.

A Rutgers-Eagleton poll released today showed less than a quarter of New Jersey voters support the merger proposal.

Last week, Rutgers University President Richard McCormick said he does not want to give up the Camden campus, but that the university may not be able to pick and choose from the recommendations if they are bundled together as a package deal.

The same committee has also recommended Rutgers add three successful pieces of UMDNJ to its New Brunswick-Piscataway campus, which would give Rutgers a medical school.

McCormick said the Rutgers Act of 1956 requires the university’s board of governors and board of trustees to vote on the proposed changes that affect Rutgers.

To set the plan in motion, Christie has spoken publicly about submitting a reorganization plan to the Legislature, which would have 60 days to vote on it. His spokesman said that is one option, but discussions on the best way to institute the changes are ongoing with legislators and representatives of the colleges.

Related coverage:

• Editorial: Gov. Chris Christie's plan for N.J. higher ed is promising

• Q&A: Chris Christie's higher ed reform plan good for N.J.

• N.J. higher education reorganization: An opinion round-up

• Poll: Voters not warm to Christie plan to upend N.J. university system

• Rowan merger plan complicates proposal to merge 2 Rutgers law schools

• Rutgers president McCormick says university would not give up Camden campus if given a choice

• Gov. Chris Christie outlines plan to overhaul UMDNJ

• Gov. Christie calls for major changes in higher education

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Rutgers students plan rally over proposed Rowan University takeover of Camden campus

Error in Adrenaline Sensitivity Research Leads to Wharton Digital Press “Brilliant Mistakes” Contest First Place Win

Second place goes to ill-prepared children’s performer who found profits in improv

Philadelphia, PA (PRWEB) February 15, 2012

The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania announces Dr. Stephen Salzman of UCLA Medical Center is the grand prize winner of Wharton Digital Press’ “Brilliant Mistakes” contest. In partnership with media sponsor Inc.com, winners were announced today, marking the conclusion of a three-month challenge.

Three finalists’ submissions were reviewed by judges, including faculty from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, John Seely Brown, Co-Chair, Deloitte Center for the Edge, Inc.com Editor Eric Schurenberg, and the inspiration for the contest, Paul Schoemaker, PhD and author of “Brilliant Mistakes: Finding Success on the Far Side of Failure” (Wharton Digital Press). Entrants were challenged to submit an error that they committed and recognized as a potential source of learning or innovation, and then leveraged as a new concept or idea that helped transform a project or organization.

Dr. Salzman explained in his submission that throughout his medical career he believed that athletes, with lower heart rates, must be less sensitive to the effects of adrenaline. To prove his hypothesis correct, he conducted blinded research. Much to his surprise, the exact opposite proved to be true, forever changing his perspective, not only in the area of adrenaline, but throughout cardiology.

The second place winner, Annie Banannie, was awarded an Invitation to an SEI Center for Advanced Studies in Management conference. A performer for children, her entry detailed how insufficient preparation led to her best performance ever. She didn’t have her props, so she had to make up a story on the spot in front of an audience of 200. Because of the “mistake,” Annie is incorporating more improvisation into her act, one that is more successful than it ever.

According to Paul Schoemaker, some errors – referred to as “portals of discovery” – can lead to game-changing innovation. “We were pleasantly surprised by the wide range of examples submitted,” said Schoemaker. “It is difficult to mine mistakes for learnable moments or innovative ideas; these winners exemplify what can happen when an organization encourages extracting the most from mistakes.”

Matthew Lynch, the third place winner, explained that while working to identify Medicare fraud, he realized that only focusing on higher-than-average claims (conventional wisdom) was insufficient. With a team of others, he uncovered fraud activity by individuals and corporations who were uniquely adept at defrauding the system. The successes found in Matthew’s operation became an industry best-practice. He will share a lunch with Paul Schoemaker at the Wharton School.

Dr. Salzman’s prize includes two round-trip tickets on Southwest Airlines to anywhere in the continental United States and a Wharton Executive Education course. In addition, he will receive a complimentary registration for Inc's Growco conference and an Invitation to Wharton Mack Center for Technological Innovation Conference.

The top ten entrants received a signed paperback copy of Brilliant Mistakes. To learn more about the book visit the Wharton Digital Press Web site: Brilliant Mistakes: Finding Success on the Far Side of Failure.

About the Wharton School and Wharton Digital Press

The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania— founded in 1881 as the first collegiate business school — is recognized globally for intellectual leadership and ongoing innovation across every major discipline of business education. The most comprehensive source of business knowledge in the world, Wharton bridges research and practice through its broad engagement with the global business community. The School has more than 5,000 undergraduate, MBA, executive MBA, and doctoral students; more than 9,000 annual participants in executive education programs; and an alumni network of 88,000 graduates.

Wharton Digital Press was launched in collaboration with Knowledge@Wharton, by the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, as an innovative all-digital publishing initiative that publishes relevant, accessible and empirically based business knowledge to readers wherever and whenever they need it.

Wharton Digital Press brings together communities of readers and authors committed to identifying and solving the critical problems business managers face today. Leveraging a wide range of cutting-edge digital technologies, Wharton Digital Press helps inspire authors to develop bold, insightful messages, and communicate in creative ways with their audiences. Managers and policy makers need new sources of innovative and practical knowledge that will enable them to deal with the problems of the present and the challenges of the future. Wharton Digital Press takes advantage of the Wharton School’s global presence to disseminate relevant business knowledge from the world’s leading experts to readers wherever and whenever they need it. Wharton Digital Press’s eBooks and print-on-demand books are distributed by Constellation, a service of the Perseus Books Group.

###

Peter Winicov
The Wharton School
215-746-6471
Email Information

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Error in Adrenaline Sensitivity Research Leads to Wharton Digital Press “Brilliant Mistakes” Contest First Place Win

Health Dialog Executive to Speak at Harvard Business School’s “Dynamic Women in Business” Conference

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Health Dialog today announced that Mary Jane Favazza, Executive Vice President of Client Operations, has been invited to speak at the prestigious Dynamic Women in Business conference hosted by the Harvard Business School Women’s Student Association on Saturday, February 25, 2012.

Favazza, an HBS alumna, will be featured on the panel, “Leaders in Change: Women Leading Changes in Healthcare”. The panel will take place from 2:50 - 4:00pm. Also on the panel will be Jean Yang, Chief Financial Officer of the Massachusetts Health Connector and Suzanne Cross, Vice President of Business Development at Johnson & Johnson. The panel will be moderated by Bunny Ellerin, Chief Executive Officer at Ellerin Health Media.

Mary Jane Favazza has nearly 25 years of experience in operations, business development, and client management in the healthcare and financial services industries. With close to ten years at Health Dialog, a healthcare analytics and decision support company, she has held numerous roles within the organization, currently overseeing and managing day-to-day client operations, client satisfaction, and program management. Previous roles at Health Dialog have included positions in business development, service delivery, implementation, and several cross-functional initiatives.

Dynamic Women in Business is a leading networking and learning event, focusing on the opportunities and challenges facing women in today’s business world. The conference will be attended by more than 1,000 women, including Harvard students and alumni, faculty, distinguished business leaders, and community members. For more information or to register, please visit http://www.dynamicwibconference.com.

About Health Dialog:

Health Dialog Services Corporation is a leading provider of healthcare analytics and decision support. The firm is a private, wholly-owned subsidiary of Bupa, a global provider of healthcare services. Health Dialog helps healthcare payors improve healthcare quality while reducing overall costs. Company offerings include health coaching for medical decisions, chronic conditions, and wellness; population analytic solutions; and consulting services. Health Dialog helps individuals participate in their own healthcare decisions, develop more effective relationships with their physicians, and live healthier, happier lives. For more information, visit http://www.healthdialog.com.

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Health Dialog Executive to Speak at Harvard Business School’s “Dynamic Women in Business” Conference

Haiti service trip ‘strikes a cord’ in hearts of pre-med students at University of Scranton

University medical alumni and current pre-med undergraduates have traveled to Haiti during intersession since 2002 in a trip sponsored by the Medical Alumni Council to provide medical attention and aid to the people in the impoverished nation. For the students participating, the service provides the invaluable experience of working alongside doctors, gaining insight in the lives of Haitians, and seeing first hand the school’s Jesuit identity in action.
Michael Le, a senior from South Abington Township, who is a member of the University’s Special Jesuit Liberal Arts Honors Program with a double major in biology and philosophy, said this service allowed him to see the value of communication when working with patients where there is a language barrier.
“In many instances, the doctors knew the correct diagnosis and prescribed the appropriate treatment, but without a means of communication, both the Haitians and the doctors were lost,” said Le, who plans to attend medical school next year. Le saw first hand the important role of the group’s translator, Junior, who helped both the doctors and students communicate with Haitian physicians and patients.
Le added that he and the other Scranton students were given the opportunity to practice procedures and treatments that they otherwise wouldn’t be able to perform in the United States until medical school. According to Le, students pulled teeth and performed physical examinations.
“In terms of medical education, this hands-on approach reinforced the theories and concepts we studied in our physiology and biology class,” said Le.
For Le, the trip also reinforced the University’s Jesuit ideals, reminding him of the value of service.
“The experience has struck a certain cord in my heart. I have a deeper understanding and appreciation for what I have learned in school, especially about service to others,” explained Le.
Lucie Henry, a junior from Beach Lake, majoring in biology major with a biochemistry minor and a concentration in nutrition, said the experience showed her how poor living conditions contribute to the spread of disease.
“There is no sanitation system, so when it floods all the waste gets into the tents or shacks where most of the people in Cite Soleil live. That is one of the main ways cholera spreads,” said Henry, who also plans to become a doctor.
Henry also said on a visit to see the abandoned children of St. Damien’s in Tabarre, she was shocked by the lack of medical procedures for these children.
“They were sick and most likely going to pass away because they needed a simple medical procedure, but didn’t have access to it,” said Henry.
The third student participating in the January service trip was Kathleen Lavelle, a senior biochemistry, cell and molecular biology and Hispanic studies double major from Avoca, who also participates in the Special Jesuit Liberal Arts Honors Program and plans to attend medical school.
University medical alumni participating were Richard Bevilacqua, D.M.D., M.D. ’83, Pamela Taffera, D.O. ’02 and Christopher Andres, M.D. ’89
The University’s Health Professions Organization and the Medical Alumni Council collected medical supplies donated by local alumni doctors and others.

Elizabeth Klassner is a communication major at The University of Scranton with a minor in English literature.

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Haiti service trip ‘strikes a cord’ in hearts of pre-med students at University of Scranton