Thursday, February 26, 2009

HIV Rotation Meeting

To all those interested in the HIV Rotation,
 
We are looking for coordinators for the Columbia Post-bac HIV Rotation Program at St. Luke's to help expand the program.  There will be an informational meeting on Monday, March 2nd at 1 PM located at Room 302 in the Teachers College Library to discuss specifics of the program and next steps for participation and expansion.  We apologize for the short notice.
 
To remind you: the purpose of this internship rotation is to examine HIV care in low income communities from a comprehensive public health perspective with an eye towards being future physicians.  We are looking for two first-year postbaccs to help with a pilot program and become future coordinators of this program.

The clinic is an amazing place with a client population of 3,300 HIV positive New Yorkers.  They provide a wealth of health care, mental health, case management services as well as conduct research.  The staff at the Saint Luke's clinic have been receptive to postbacc student participation and have helped design a rotation that will be piloted on a relatively small scale for the remainder of this semester.  The purpose of the pilot is to fine tune the structure for the program and create some tools for reflection on the experience.  If all goes well the program will be continued and expanded for future semesters.

Some logistics of the program:
•       The four components include 1) shadowing doctors and assisting in a clinical setting 2) assisting public health research 3) providing assistance in constructing patient education workshops 4)
administering satisfaction surveys.
•       The weekly commitment is substantial and requires 6 hours per week. While the hours are flexible to fit your schedule, once they are set it requires a consistent commitment, regardless of your exam schedule.  We are extremely excited about the educational opportunities the CCC offers.  This program is gonna be amazing!

Again, the informational meeting will be on Monday, March 2nd at 1 PM located at Room 302 in the Teachers College Library to discuss specifics of the program and next steps for participation.
 
The advantage of getting involved now is that you can have ownership of helping to create this program and take leadership in the future.

If you are interested in participating in the program this semester, please RSVP to this email AND please make every effort to attend this meeting.  Even if you've sent us your resume, please still try to attend this meeting.

--
Social Justice Medicine
School of General Studies
Columbia University
http://www.columbiasjm.blogspot.com/
 

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Fwd: "Owning knowledge" Public Health event from the Committee on Global Thought

The Committee on Global Thought presents,

Owning Knowledge: Science, Health and Law in an Integrated World

February 25, 2009
Wednesday, 6:30 pm
Discussion
Schapiro Center, Davis Auditorium

The panel will feature Sherry Glied, Joseph Stiglitz, John Sulston,
Harold Varmus, and Arti Rai.

This symposium will consider the implications of the private ownership
of scientific knowledge, particularly for such critical issues as
global public health. Scientific, economic and legal perspectives will
be employed to address the ways in which global knowledge commons can
be managed to make scientific advances once again benefit those who
most need them. Panelists will discuss how intellectual property
affects public health, and whether there are alternative ways that
public health research might be structured to make it more useful to
vulenrable populations and the developing world.

Sherry Glied is Chair and Professor of the Health Policy and
Management Department at Columbia University's Mailman School of
Public Health. Her principle areas of research are in health policy
reform and mental healthcare policy.

Joseph E. Stiglitz is University Professor of Economics at Columbia
University. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2001 for
his analysis of markets with asymmetric information.

Sir John Sulston is Chair of the Institute for Science, Ethics and
Innovation at the University of Manchester. He was awarded the Nobel
Prize in Medicine 2002 for his work in sequencing the human genome.
Sulston is leading campaigner against the patenting of human genetic
information.

Harold Varmus is President and Chief Executive Officer of Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. He was awarded the 1989 Nobel Prize in
Physiology or Medicine. As Director of the National Institutes of
Health, he advocated for an open access system for scientific
research, arguing the scientific knowledge should be available to all.

Arti Rai is Elvin R. Latty Professor of Law at Duke University. Her
current research, funded by the NIH, focuses on intellectual property
issues raised by collaborative R&D in areas ranging from synthetic
biology to drug development.