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Richard J. Cote, M.D., a nationally recognized expert on the cellular and molecular markers of tumor progression in cancer patients has been named chair of the Department of Pathology at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and the University of Miami Health System, and chief of pathology for Jackson Memorial Hospital. He will also start and direct the University of Miami Biomedical Nanoscience Institute. Cote had been at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California for the past 18 years, where he was professor of pathology and urology and director of the Genitourinary Cancer Program at USC/Norris Cancer Center. He also directed the Laboratory of Immuno and Molecular Pathology. In 2005 he started and was the director of the Biomedical Nanoscience Program at USC.
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On Thursday, June 25, the incandescent future of medicine was on proud display on the eighth floor of the Biomedical Research Building, during an open house for the Interdisciplinary Stem Cell Institute (ISCI).
Putting an excited buzz in the air at the event were forward-looking ISCI donors, patients who have benefitted from the institute’s futuristic treatments, and staffers extended the privilege of rewriting medical history on a daily basis.
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As he sat in the auditorium listening to administrators and veteran physicians welcome him and 199 other new residents to the practice of medicine at University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital, Stephen George felt he was ready to serve and ready to save lives. The countless hours beating books, taking exams and working with physicians had led to this moment, to this place, this venerable medical campus where he would first don a white coat with his name neatly embroidered—with the letters M.D. after it.
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“It’s a very refreshing experience and I’ve worked a long time toward this,” Dr. George said. “In choosing a residency program I looked very carefully for a place where I would get good trauma experience. I am going into orthopaedic surgery with a special interest in spine and I wanted to be at a place where I would be able to see a lot of degenerative diseases and orthopaedic trauma, and a place with a strong neurosurgery department. I thought I could really thrive here where there is a real emphasis on education and teaching.
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“It’s also a bit daunting having the M.D. after your name and have the layman think you are the same as your attending,” added George, who graduated this year from the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. “Most people don’t know the hierarchy of medicine. It will take me a while to get used to the fact that these are my new responsibilities and switching roles from medical student to medical doctor, but I’m confident that I’m ready.”
George and his new resident colleagues at UM/Jackson, and 24 new residents at JFK Medical Center and the West Palm Beach VA (both in Palm Beach County), attended a day of orientation sessions on Monday, June 22, designed to officially welcome them to the hospitals where they will survive their first work days and work nights as medical doctors under the guide of experienced attending physicians.
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Lina Shehadeh, Ph.D., research assistant professor of medicine at the Miller School, has won the prestigious Young Investigator Award from the International Society of Heart Research. She received the honor during the organization’s North American Section Meeting in Baltimore on May 28.
Dr. Shehadeh was among a large pool of scientists who submitted their unpublished manuscripts for consideration. The field was winnowed down to four finalists who made presentations at the meeting, with the winner announced two days later.
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Over the course of a lengthy Miller School career that began when President Johnson was in the White House, Hooshang Bolooki, M.D., invariably gave 110 percent to students and patients, till the day of his death in 2008.
On Monday, June 22, the cardiac surgeon who performed South Florida’s first heart transplant got something back. From now on, whenever new Miller School juniors receive their surgical scrubs, they’ll do so at the annual Bolooki Junior Scrubs Ceremony.
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The Miller School mourns the passing of a giant, in light of news that Lynn Carmichael, M.D. -- who created the medical school’s Department of Family Medicine and Community Health and is widely renowned as a founding father of family medicine – has died at the age of 80.
Carmichael passed away June 19 in Tucson, where he had been suffering from chronic illness. He became the Miller School’s founding chair of family medicine, and its associated family medicine residency program at Jackson Memorial Hospital, in 1965. Carmichael led family medicine for 31 years, and was a pioneer in establishing community health centers throughout South Florida.
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For some time, researchers have known that protein p27 is an important inhibitor of the cell division that spreads cancer. Understanding the full mechanism and extent of that role has taken much longer. Now, scientists at the Braman Family Breast Cancer Institute at the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center have solved part of the puzzle, discovering that p27 can severely misbehave when in bad company. In fact, it can lose its restraining action on cell growth and bind to other molecules to promote cell motility, one of the first steps in the spread of cancer. In other words, Dr. Jeckyl becomes Mr. Hyde.
Joyce M. Slingerland, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Braman Family Breast Cancer Institute at Sylvester at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, led a team of researchers in collaboration with David Helfman, Ph.D., professor of cell biology and anatomy at Sylvester. Their findings were published in the May 19 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) journal.
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The Pew Charitable Trusts has named Grace Zhai, Ph.D., assistant professor of molecular and cellular pharmacology, a 2009 Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences. The prestigious honor, which recognizes early-career scientists who display “outstanding promise in research relevant to the advancement of human health,” comes with a $240,000 award over four years to support her research.
Dr. Zhai is among 17 scientists nationally who were chosen for the award that encourages collaboration and the exchange of ideas. The Miller School’s first “fly person,” Dr. Zhai studies Drosophila, or fruit flies, which, because most of their genes are homologous to human genes, can provide scientists a glimpse of some of the most complex diseases.
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Miller School associate professor Robert Gailey, P.T., Ph.D., a leader in the field of physical therapy, and a group of UM students who won first place for raising the most money nationally to aid physical therapy research, were recognized with national honors by the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) at the group’s annual meeting in Baltimore on June 11.
Dr. Gailey, a faculty member since 1986, was honored with the American Physical Therapy Association’s Henry O. and Florence P. Kendall Award for Excellence in Practice. The award, named for two stalwarts of the physical therapy profession, is given annually to “a physical therapist who has made outstanding enduring contributions to the practice of physical therapy as exemplified in the professional careers of Henry O. and Florence P. Kendall.”
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The Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at the Miller School has joined forces with Microsoft and Resolute Solutions Corporation to conduct a unique pilot study to determine if technology can play a role in providing primary care. Twenty-five patients from the Jefferson Reaves Sr. Health Center in Overtown will participate in the first phase of the project, which will focus on diabetes management.
“It is our hope that this pilot will be able to fundamentally change the way that family practice is implemented — moving from a low-tech, high-touch model to a high-tech, high-touch model,” said Robert Schwartz, M.D., professor and chairman of family medicine and community health.
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A team of researchers from the Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Surgery at the Miller School of Medicine have found an association between the skin disease psoriasis and atherosclerosis, which is a buildup of plaque in the arteries. In particular, the researchers found the association applies to coronary artery, cerebrovascular and peripheral vascular diseases and results in an increased risk of death. The new findings are published in the June issue of Archives of Dermatology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Psoriasis affects two to three percent of the world’s population, including seven million Americans. In addition to its effects on the skin, psoriasis is associated with arthritis, depression and a lower quality of life. “More recently, psoriasis has also been shown to be a systemic inflammatory condition, with similarities to other inflammatory immune disorders,” the authors write. “Since the risk of myocardial infarction is increased in rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus, which are both inflammatory conditions, attention has been focused on the association between psoriasis, cardiovascular risk factors and myocardial infarction.”
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The Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami has a powerful new ally in the fight against cancer. The work of State Senator Ted Deutch (D-Boca Raton) will help Sylvester pull in millions of dollars more through state-funded competitive cancer research grants for years to come.
Senator Deutch visited the Miller School campus to attend the Sylvester Board of Governors meeting on Wednesday, June 10, during which he was recognized for his commitment to fighting cancer. Calling him a “hero in the community,” W. Jarrard Goodwin, M.D., director of Sylvester, presented Senator Deutch with a glass inscription honoring him for his leadership and advocacy as a “true legislative champion.”
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Breast cancer researchers at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine have been awarded a prestigious Department of Defense Synergistic Idea Award, one of just 12 such grants in the United States. The $725,000 research grant over two years will allow Lisa Baumbach, Ph.D., associate professor of pediatrics at the Miller School, and Mark Pegram, M.D., professor of medicine and associate director for clinical and translational research at the Braman Family Breast Cancer Institute at Sylvester, to expand their work examining the genetic differences found in African-American breast cancer patients.
This work is critical to understanding why African-American women suffer more devastating forms of breast cancer and have a higher death rate from the disease, and will lead to more effective prevention and treatment.
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For the second year in a row, a University of Miami Miller School of Medicine cardiologist is the recipient of the American Heart Association’s Cor Vitae award. Eduardo de Marchena, M.D., professor of medicine and surgery in the Cardiovascular Division, was presented with the award at the American Heart Association’s 41st annual Miami-Dade Heart Ball, on Saturday, May 30.
Dozens of colleagues, supporters and philanthropists were on hand at the Eden Roc Resort and Spa on Miami Beach for the presentation. This is just the second year for the Cor Vitae award, which is given to recognize an outstanding physician in Miami-Dade County whose focus is in cardiovascular medicine or stroke. De Marchena said it was “humbling and a great honor to be recognized by the American Heart Association and to be nominated by such excellent cardiologists, cardiac surgeons and neurologists.”
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After about two years, hundreds of construction workers, teams of technicians, and the laying of nearly 6,000 feet of pipe, the “Big Dig” on the Miller School campus is — not yet over. While there appears to be a lull in activity, work is still going on at night and more daytime construction is on the horizon.
Meanwhile, the Department of Facilities and Support Services wants to make sure faculty, staff and students know the digging and temporarily inaccessible areas – including a section of the southwest side of the Rosenstiel Medical Science Building and the rear entrance to Jackson’s Park Plaza West garage – are all part of a plan to provide better air conditioning and other utilities to all Miller School buildings via the campus’ new state-of-the-art chiller plant. The Big Dig is necessary to lay the thousands of feet of underground pipes that connect the campus buildings to the chiller plant. The underground water pipes are needed because the cooling system operates by chilling water to produce cool air.
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After a successful debut on the Coral Gables campus last year, Zipcar will hit the medical campus starting Monday, June 1. The innovative car-sharing program is designed to help relieve congestion and provide economical transportation for faculty, staff and students by allowing them to reserve cars online or by phone for an hourly rate of $8.
Zipcar is already popular on college campuses across the nation and was practically an overnight sensation on the Coral Gables campus, according to Richard Sobaram, director of parking and transportation services, who led the 2008 initiative. “It’s the convenience of having a car without the responsibility of car ownership,” said Sobaram. “It’s a great option if you only need a car occasionally, but it’s wise to book your reservation at least a week in advance, because they are so popular.”
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At the Miller School of Medicine’s 54th commencement ceremony on Saturday, 171 graduating seniors marked the beginning of their careers as medical doctors. Thirty students from the regional campus at Florida Atlantic University were in the class receiving their doctor of medicine degrees at the BankUnited Center on the Coral Gables campus.
“From this day forward, life will no longer be just about you and your loved ones, but it will be about the patients you will encounter, those people who will put their trust and well being in your hands,” Miller School Dean Pascal J. Goldschmidt, M.D., told the new doctors. “And wherever you are, whenever you need him, the Dean of our great Miller School of Medicine family will always be there for you.”
Miller School of Medicine Commencement Ceremony
(Use RealPlayer)
With his guide dog Bruno lying at his feet, University of Miami law professor Bruce Winick sat in the lobby of the Ritz-Carlton Coconut Grove hotel last Friday and removed his cell phone from his coat pocket.
The rigors of battling cancer, heart disease and other chronic illnesses often put children at an educational disadvantage compared with their healthy peers.
Robert J. Myerburg, M.D., professor of medicine and physiology in the Cardiovascular Division at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, received the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Medicine from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Oulu in Oulu, Finland during commencement on May 16. Each year the university selects one honorary degree recipient, doctoris honoris causa, who has contributed significantly to their field of expertise.
More than 100 local small business owners gathered for a free Business Opportunity Fair, hosted by the University of Miami and the University of Miami Health System (UHealth) on Friday, May 22. The event, a collaboration between UM and Miami City Commissioner Michelle Spence-Jones, gathered business owners in the Liberty City, Allapattah, Wynwood, Overtown and Little Haiti neighborhoods that make up Spence-Jones’s District 5. “It’s extremely important for these businesses to have an opportunity to compete,” said Spence-Jones.
Researchers at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine have found that dramatic disparities in breast cancer outcomes continue to exist for African-American women, regardless of the age at which they are diagnosed, extent of the cancer, type of treatment or socioeconomic status.
A nationally recognized expert on health disparities, Olveen Carrasquillo, M.D., (pictured at left) has been named associate professor of medicine and chief of the Division of General Internal Medicine in the Department of Medicine at the Miller School.
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