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News & Announcements

 

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Video Produced by Biomedical Writing Faculty & Students, Malaria: A Preventable Disease

This MJoTA (Medical Journal of Therapeutics Africa) Film was produced by the faculty and students of the Biomedical Writing program at the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia (USP). Hosted by Susanna J Dodgson, PhD. Filmed on location in Lagos, Nigeria.

 

To learn more about MJoTA and read the Journal go the the MJoTA Website.

 

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Manuscript/Article and Grant Writing Institute

May 13 - June 12, 2008
2-3 hours sessions, one per week

Do you want to Increase your chances of writing and submitting successful peer reviewed journal publications or grants?

Need Help developing skills that lead to submitting and receiving on-going funding?

      Want to Improve your skills in writing manuscripts, research thesis, book chapters, etc.?

Who should attend:

Faculty members and graduate students who are in the beginning stages of their research careers and wish to receive training on preparing and writing effective journal publications and grant proposals.

Faculty members who have established research programs and who wish to refresh or strengthen their writing skills.

InstituteFormat:

The format for the sessions will include lectures, handouts, interactive exercises, writing, and discussions so that attendees will develop a better understanding of how to research, write and develop their specific grant proposals. Each 2-3 hour session will occur once a week and will cover the overall plan of grant-writing, including, but not limited to, the specific aims, background, rationale, research methods, personnel and budgets. All sessions will engage the participants in interactive exercises, writing, lectures and discussions so that all participants will leave the class understanding how to research, write and develop their specific project. There will be approximately 10 sessions.

Click Here for schedule & course descriptions



Deadline for Registration: May 1st, 2008.

Click Here to register

Questions may be directed to Dr. Tejani-Butt or Karen Mitchell

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Health Policy Symposium: The Future of Vaccines, May 8, 2008

The Future of Vaccines
Changes, Successes, Opportunities

DATE: Thursday, May 8, 2008
TIME: 5:00-7:00 p.m.

Reception to follow

The symposium will be held on the campus of University of the Sciences in Philadelphia in the AstraZeneca Auditorium of the McNeil Science and Technology Center located at 43rd Street and Woodland Avenue.

About the Symposium: What does the future hold for vaccines, a technology that has saved countless lives and prevented untold human suffering?  This symposium will assemble four of the world’s foremost experts in the field.  They will bring experience in public health, government, biomedical research, patient care, and industry to bear on challenges and opportunities.  Their discussion will be moderated by internationally renowned bioethicist Dr. Arthur Caplan.  In a two-hour dialogue, the panelists will seek to frame an agenda to realize the full promise of this essential tool of public health. For more information Click Here.

Join us at 3:30 p.m. for a ribbon cutting and dedication celebration for USP’s Mayes College of Healthcare Business and Policy

Registration: To register online, please go to www.usp.edu/symposium/register.aspx. You can also call 1.866.431.0845. Please respond by Thursday, May 1, 2008.


Presented by the Department of Health Policy and Public Health at USP’s Mayes College of Healthcare Business and Policy

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2008 Brings the MBA to Japan

As many of you know the MBA program is going global. Their 2nd annual trip to Japan will take place this summer from June 29th to July 9th.

While in Japan students will have the opportunity to meet with high level executives of the Japanese pharmaceutical and health care industry.

Companies to be visited include Eizai Headquaters, Wyeth Japan, AZ Japan, and Dai-Ichi R&D Center.

Last year students had the opportunity to meet with students from several universities including the renowned Tokyo University.

All MBA students are encouraged to join them for this trip. It offers each student a chance to understand another culture and how it affects the pharmaceutical/health care field.

We hope that all MBA students can make this trip. If you know any graduate of the program that may be interested in the opportunity please let them know.

This is truly an experience to remember.

To view photographs from last years trip Click Here.

For additional information contact the MBA Program Specialist: Cassandra Henderson

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Graduate Student Professional Development Workshops

The College of Graduate Studies is pleased to offer a variety of professional development workshops throughout the academic year. The workshop topics are designed for new, current, and senior graduate students.

The Next Workshops in the Schedule are as follows:

Thurs | Apr 10
Introduction to Writing and Research*, STC Room 147, 1-3 PM
Contact: Dr. Justin Everett & Dr. Deirdre Pettipiece, Writing Center & Writing Program

Tues | Apr 15
Find Funding, Rosenberger Hall Room 101, 11:30-1:00 PM (Lunch)
Contact: Karen Mitchell, Office of Sponsored Projects & Research

 

Click here for the full Spring 2008 Workshop Calendar the and Graduate Student Workshop Guide

 

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Alumni Give USP Students Career Advice


Thinking about your post-college plans can be overwhelming; even within one program of study, there can be dozens of possible career paths. To help students navigate this sea of choices, three successful USP alumni shared their experiences and offered advice during a career panel on December 6.





Alumni Panel

Alumni Panel, from left to right: Jean Surian, P’84, PhD’90; Joseph
M. Betz, PhD, P’88;
Susan Pytel, MPT’99

 

Joseph M. Betz, PhD, P’88, recalled the long and unpredictable journey that led him to his current position at the National Institutes of Health as director of the analytical methods and reference materials program in the office of dietary supplements. “Things never go exactly the way you expect them to,” Dr. Betz professed. “I thought that I’d be out on a ship at sea directing a research program at this point in my career, but it’s completely different.”

After earning his bachelor’s degree in biology from USP in 1976, Dr. Betz went to Long Island University for his Master’s degree in marine and environmental science. While his original interest was in field biology and zoology, he began studying venomous and poisonous sea life throughout his Master’s coursework. When he was ready to pursue his PhD, a mentor at Long Island University suggested he contact USP’s Ara DerMarderosian, PhD.

“My PhD project at USP was to isolate and characterize the compounds in a jellyfish that are responsible for antibiotic activity,” explained Dr. Betz. “I was making preparations to be an academic scientist in a marine drug discovery program.” However, due to an unexpected weather pattern in the Gulf of Mexico, the jellyfish he needed to perform his research were not available for an entire year. As an alternative, he helped Dr. DerMarderosian evaluate ginseng products. When nearing the end of his PhD program, Dr. Betz applied to several marine research centers but ultimately ended up at the FDA.

“It is important to be active in professional societies, even as a student, because the people that you meet often turn out to be career opportunities,” said Dr. Betz. “If I emphasize anything to you, it’s to make and keep your connections.” While at a chemistry conference in Atlantic City, he met some representatives from the FDA and was offered a two-year post-doctoral job shortly thereafter. He remained at the FDA for 10 years until moving on to his next role as a vice president at an herbal products trade association. “The importance of networking, meeting other people, and being active in your professional societies is vitally important. This is where you meet the people who are either looking to hire somebody, or know somebody else looking to hire.”

Susan Pytel, MPT’99, is a senior physical therapist for MARC Children’s Services and a consultant with the Spring Valley YMCA working on their developing special needs program. She specializes in physical therapy for babies ages birth through three. One of her current projects involves designing a playground for the YMCA specifically made for children with physical disabilities and challenges.

“Right when I had decided I wanted to do physical therapy, a notorious TIME magazine article came out hailing physical therapy as the ‘job of the future,’” Pytel recalled. “There were only five schools in the nation with a MPT program like USP’s, but by the time I graduated five years later, the market was flooded with physical therapists.” With an influx of recent PT graduates in the job market, Pytel and her classmates could not be as choosey about their first job. This lack of options led her to take a position that she probably would have never taken if she had her choice. Although it was disappointing at first, she admits that things actually worked out better because she was forced to try something different.

For the past seven years, Pytel has been working in early intervention visiting disabled children at their homes. “I get to be a part of the children’s lives more than I would be able to in a hospital setting,” she said. “I’m a part of their family and I like that close relationship I develop with the parents and child.”

The event’s third guest, Jean Surian, P’84, PhD’90, is the associate principal scientist and global drug delivery manager at AstraZeneca. She is responsible for accessing external drug delivery technologies for AstraZeneca research as well as the development and commercial applications for all types of pharmaceutical dosage forms. Her background in pharmacy helps her develop products from the perspective of the patient. “I’ve always had the patient focus,” said Dr. Surian. “One of the things I always ask when developing a new product is, ‘What’s that going to taste like?”

At the close of the seminar, the panelists offered advice on internships and stressed the importance of gaining work experience while in school. “Choose your internship very wisely,” advised Pytel. “It’s going to be your best opportunity to be a sponge and just soak everything up.”

“All the majors here at USP give you such a fundamental background and solid foundations that once you graduate you can go into practically any science-based field,” Dr. Betz told the students. “Let your horizons be as wide as you can imagine because you’ve got the background and the know-how.”

Dr. Surian said she enjoys coming back to USP to see the changing campus and speak with the students. “USP has such a family-oriented philosophy, and it still is that way even as it grows. It still comes down to the people at the school and it feels like a family. It feels like you’re coming home when you’re an alumnus coming back to the school.”

Contact: Tom Kupfer   (267-295-3167)

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Health Care Regulation in America: Complexity, Confrontation, and Compromise

Breakthrough publication by The College of Graduate Studies Health Policy Director
Robert I. Field, JD, MPH, PhD, Oxford University Press, 2007

Health Care Regulation  in America Regulation shapes all aspects of America's fragmented health care industry, from the flow of dollars to the communication between physicians and patients. It is the engine that translates public policy into action. While the health and lives of patients, as well as almost one-sixth of the national economy depend on its effectiveness, health care regulation in America is bewilderingly complex. Government agencies at the federal, state, and local levels direct portions of the industry, but hundreds of private organizations do so as well. Some of these overseers compete with one another, some conflict, and others collaborate. Their interaction is as important to the provision of health care as are the laws and rules they implement.

Health Care Regulation in America is a guide to this regulatory maze. It succinctly recaps the past and present conflicts that have guided the oversight of each industry segment over the past hundred years and explains the structure of regulation today. To make the system comprehensible, this book also presents the sweep of regulatory policy in the context of the interests, values, goals, and issues that guide it. Chapters cover the process of regulation and each key area of regulatory focus - professionals, institutions, financing arrangements, drugs and devices, public health, business relationships, and research.

Learn more about Health Care Regulation in America on the publisher's website.

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Using Computers to Unlock the Secrets of Molecules

The West Center for Computational Chemistry and Drug Design
Article by Shawn J. Farrell

The West Center for Computational Chemistry and Drug Design Chemistry Lab. For many, the words conjure up a bevy of images and memories: the hiss of a Bunsen burner, scratched safety goggles, and a lab filled with white coats and unique aromas-where knowing how to properly dispose of toxic waste is as important as knowing the Periodic Table.

It is this atmosphere that drove a young chemistry undergraduate into the University's hub of theory, the West Center for Computational Chemistry and Drug Design. "It was the thought of having to wear safety glasses that drove me to Preston Moore's office," says Raeanne Napolen (C'05). "And," she adds upon consideration, "a love for theoretical research and tackling big problems."

Read the full story from the USP Bulleting by Downloading the PDF >

 

Note: The link listed on this page is in PDF PDF format and can only be opened through Adobe Acrobat Reader. If you do not have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed, please click here and download it for free.

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