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Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
The image was taken on Kodachrome slide film and digitised using a Kaiser Baas Photomaker.
LINK
Monochrome version: www.flickr.com/photos/jbrimacombe/51782836455/
Title: Monash University, medical school, Medicine A building
Author / Creator: Sievers, Wolfgang, 1913-2007, photographer.
Date: 1963.
Note the cigarette packs and ashtray (complete with cigarette) on the table.
Contents / Summary: Interior; students and teacher in classroom.
Subjects:
Monash University (Vic.)
Universities and colleges Victoria Clayton.
Medical students Victoria Clayton.
Gelatin silver prints.
Index terms: Australia; Victoria; Wolfgang Sievers; Monash University; Clayton; medical students
Notes: Vintage print with the photographer's studio stamp on reverse.
Title and date taken from inscriptions in pencil in the photographer's hand on reverse.
Job number inscribed on verso: 3484-BX
Copyright status: This work is in copyright
Conditions of use: Copyright restrictions apply.
For Copyright queries, please contact the National Library of Australia.
Source: SLV
Identifier(s): Accession no: H2004.49/238
Source / Donor: Gift of Wolfgang Sievers, 2002.
Series / Collection: Wolfgang Sievers collection.
Link to online item:
handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/284377
Link to this record:
search.slv.vic.gov.au/permalink/f/1cl35st/SLV_ROSETTAIE84...
search.slv.vic.gov.au/permalink/f/1cl35st/SLV_VOYAGER1793214
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
The med school hasn't had a float in the homecoming parade since sometime in the 70's. This year a few people organized a float around our mission of providing rural primary care across the state. They were looking for someone with a tractor and trailer to pull it. Of course, I knew just the guy for this job, my husband. The weather was beautiful. Students walked and handed out candy. Everyone seemed to enjoy it. I didn't get any great photos but memories were made!
Evelina, medical student from Romania, worked her last shift with us today, and I shot some farewell portraits.
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Number 113619
date created: 1950
Extent: 1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.
Rights: Photograph is presumably in the public domain.
First-year medical students and University of Nevada School of Medicine faculty members are implementing the new curriculum at the medical school. To learn more about the curriculum, check out the fall 2012 issue of Synapse. Photo by David Calvert.
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
U.S. Army Africa Commander, Maj. Gen. David R. Hogg (left), presents a commander's coin to 2nd Lt. Megan Donahue, Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences medical student, before the start of the MRMC-USARAF Command Surgeon Conference Aug. 2 in Vicenza, Italy, while the present and incoming commanders of U.S. Army Medical Research Unit-Kenya, Col. Scott W. Gordon and Col. Thomas Logan, look on.
More than a dozen medical researchers from U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command shared their experience and expertise on establishing programs, conducting research and delivering medical support in Africa at the second annual U.S. Army Africa Command Surgeon’s Forum Aug. 2 at Caserma Ederle in Vicenza, Italy.
U.S. Army Africa Commander, Maj. Gen. David R. Hogg, met with the principal participants to reiterate the command’s support for their wide range of activities and the positive impact they are having in promoting peace, prosperity and stability on the continent.
“The Army Africa Command Surgeon’s Office is acting as an intermediary, encouraging networking among U.S. Army medical researchers in Africa, AFRICOM’s service components and big Army, and developing lasting partnerships as we pursue our common interests in Africa,” said Col. Alfonso Alarcon, Army Africa Command Surgeon, and host of the conference.
MRMC researchers in Africa are establishing research centers, training personnel and conducting research relating to malaria, HIV, leishmaniasis, and a range of vector borne and bacterial diseases, while executing programs such as the President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (PEPFAR) and the U.S. Military HIV Research Program, said Col. Kent Kester, commander, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research.
Presenters highlighted both the enormity of the problems facing societies and governments on the continent, and the impressive steps forward in both research and treatment that have become possible through building partnerships and establishing training programs.
“It’s a multi-pronged problem that requires multi-pronged approaches, and that’s just to get things started,” said Lt. Col. Shon Remich, director, U.S. Army Medical Research Unit-Kenya’s joint U.S. Army-Kenya Ministry of Defense PEPFAR program.
Col. Scott W. Gordon, USAMRU-K commander, described the infectious disease research and surveillance programs under way in Kenya and neighboring countries. USAMRU-K operates field research stations at Kisumu and Kericho, where staff partner with Kenyan government ministries, U.S. government agencies, nearly a dozen African and American universities, and a handful of nongovernmental agencies.
The U.S. military’s interest in African infectious diseases and their consequences began in the wake of worldwide awareness of the AIDS epidemic, a perceived interest in protecting blood banks and in not deploying HIV-infected personnel, said Merlin L. Robb, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel and presently deputy director of clinical research for WRAIR’s U.S. Military HIV Research Program. Drawing on a range of funding sources, MHRP has helped establish significant elements of a base infrastructure to address HIV in several locations on the continent.
The program has helped establish an HIV maternal-child health center in Kericho, Kenya; a Centre for Infectious Diseases clinic and lab at the Mbeya Referral Hospital in Kihumbe, Tanzania; a research lab and clinical treatment support lab facilities in Mulago and Kayunga Provinces in Uganda; and a lab and surgical suite at the Kayunga District Hospital, also in Uganda, among other projects.
In Tanzania alone, MHRP has succeeded, with PEPFAR funding, to provide anti-retroviral treatment to more than 57,000 people, basic care services to more than 116,000 people, and counseling and testing to more than 228,000 pregnant women, he said.
“We establish a lab. We establish standards, and they have to meet those standards, and that’s very helpful,” Robb said.
MHRP is also active in Nigeria, where partnerships with the national government and the Nigerian Ministry of Defense are addressing the enormous toll that HIV and AIDS have taken on both the military and the society at large.
“I was there in the 1990s. Soldiers were dying by the boatload,” said Capt. Darrell Singer of the U.S. Public Health Service, who directs the operation in country for WRAIR. “We’d come in to train soldiers, then we’d come back six months later and they’d all be dead.”
At present MHRP-Nigeria and PEPFAR activities are supporting 20 military treatment facilities providing comprehensive services to tens of thousands, he said. More than 116,000 individuals have been tested for HIV and more than 9,500 patients have begun anti-retroviral drug treatment, he said.
“We rolled out treatment, now we’re getting the structure in place. We have a lot of structure, but it took us a long time to get that structure there. You have operational issues, issues of tracking, getting all your metrics in place,” said Singer.
“Getting necessary hires has been critical to getting care out there. It’s a lot of work. They have great bureaucracy and I think it will help improve their health care,” he said.
The Nigerian military has dedicated $9.6 million in funding to the program, Singer told the conference. “The plan is, they take over parts to keep the program going. Now they’re taking that part and we’re doing the ‘extra,’” he said.
Part of that “extra” at present is to teach forecasting, budgeting and related skills necessary for ensuring the long-term viability of programs that have been put in place, said Singer. The challenges are similar to those encountered by any developed country’s land forces: “They have to attract good people, they have to retain them,” he said.
The advent of AFRICOM has brought with it the benefit of sustained interest and support to programs on the continent, Singer said, who was in Africa in the 1990s when EUCOM had responsibility for large swathes of the continent.
“Back then they were dealing with the aftermath of the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin Wall . . . their engagement was elsewhere,” he said.
AFRICOM and Army Africa’s ability to focus on sustaining activities over an extended period of time is having a positive impact on MHRP-Nigeria’s operations, Singer said.
“The Nigerians depend on long-term history. Frequent and consistent engagement is key. One-offs actually become problems,” he said.
“This dialogue also helped our headquarters better assess how to support Medical Research and Materiel Command on the continent going forward,” Alarcon said.
“This second annual conference was by far more successful than last year’s, with an expanded agenda and twice the participation. I see this evolving into an annual event which will grow as our headquarters matures in its support role,” he said.
To learn more about U.S. Army Africa visit our official website at www.usaraf.army.mil
Official Twitter Feed: www.twitter.com/usarmyafrica
Official YouTube video channel: www.youtube.com/usarmyafrica
Dr. Balser's Loveless Picnic-
MD Welcome Picnic for the School of Medicine
Dr. Balser's orientation dinner for our incoming 1st year medical students.
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Photo: Anne Rayner; VU
Below is a list of notable people buried in Glasnevin Cemetery.
Thomas Ashe - died on hunger strike in 1917
Kevin Barry - a medical student executed by the British for his role in the Irish War of Independence. (His body was moved from Mountjoy Prison to Glasnevin in October 2001, having been accorded a state funeral.)
Piaras Beaslai - Easter Rising survivor turned writer
Sir Alfred Chester Beatty - art collector
Brendan Behan - author and playwright
Harry Boland - friend of Michael Collins and anti-Treaty politician. Image of Harry Boland's grave
Christy Brown - writer of My Left Foot and subject of the film of the same name
Father Francis Browne - Jesuit priest and photographer who took the last known photographs of RMS Titanic
Cathal Brugha - first President of Dáil Éireann (January - April 1919) Image of Cathal Brugha's grave
Sir Roger Casement - Human rights campaigner turned Irish revolutionary, executed by the British in 1916.2Image of Casement grave
Robert Erskine Childers - Irish republican and Treaty signatory executed by the Irish Free State government during the Irish Civil War. Erskine Childers' grave, located in the Republican Plot.
J. J. Clancy - Irish Nationalist MP (1847-1928)
Michael Collins - assassinated republican leader, Anglo-Irish Treaty signatory & first internationally recognised Irish head of government.
Dáithí Ó Conaill - a founder member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army
Roddy Connolly - socialist politician and son of James Connolly.
Andy Cooney - Irish republican
John Philpot Curran - patriotic barrister, renowned wit, lawyer on behalf of Wolfe Tone and other United Irishmen, Sarah Curran's father.
William Dargan - Ireland's rail pioneer
Charlotte Despard
Éamon de Valera - 3rd President of Ireland (1959-1973) and dominant leader of 20th century.
Sinéad de Valera - wife of Éamon de Valera, buried in the same plot.
Anne Devlin - famed housekeeper of Robert Emmet
John Devoy - Fenian leader. Image of John Devoy's grave.
John Blake Dillon - Irish writer and politician
Martin Doherty IRA member
Frank Duff - founder of the Legion of Mary
James Fitzmaurice - aviation pioneer
Edmund Dwyer Gray - Irish 19th century MP, son of Sir John Gray.
Sir John Gray - Irish 19th century MP. Image of Sir John Gray's gravestone
Maud Gonne - nationalist campaigner, love of W.B. Yeats's life, famed beauty and mother of Nobel & Lenin Peace Prize winner Seán MacBride, who is buried in the grave also. Image of Maud Gonne & Seán MacBride's grave
Arthur Griffith - President of Dáil Éireann (January - August 1922).
Joseph Patrick Haverty - Irish painter
Tim Healy - 1st Governor-General of the Irish Free State. image of Tim Healy's grave.
Denis Caulfield Heron - lawyer and politician
Gerard Manley Hopkins - poet
Peadar Kearney - composer of the Irish National Anthem, Amhrán na bhFiann
Kitty Kiernan - fiancée of Michael Collins
James Larkin - Irish trade union leader and founder of the Irish Transport & General Workers Union (ITGWU).
Seán MacBride - founder of Clann na Poblachta and a founder-member of Amnesty International.
Edward Cardinal MacCabe - late 19th century Archbishop of Dublin & Primate of Ireland. Image of the elaborate monument to Cardinal MacCabe.
Dick McKee - prominent member of the Irish Republican Army during the War of Independence.
Terence MacManus - Irish rebel and shipping agent.
James Patrick Mahon - Irish nationalist politician and mercenary.
Countess Constance Markiewicz - first woman elected to the British House of Commons and a minister in the first Irish government.
Manchester Martyrs - gravestone honouring three members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood known in history as the Manchester Martyrs who were in fact buried in the grounds of a British prison following their execution by the British.
Dermot Morgan - Irish satirist and star of Father Ted. He was cremated in Glasnevin but is buried in Deansgrange Cemetery.
Kate Cruise O'Brien - writer & publisher. This is not Kate O'Brien who is buried in Faversham Cemetery.
Daniel O'Connell - dominant Irish political leader from 1820s to 1840s. O'Connell's tomb under the specially built round tower O'Connell's tomb interior
Patrick Denis O'Donnell - well-known Irish military historian, writer, and former UN peace-keeper.
Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa - Fenian leader. Patrick Pearse's oration at his funeral in 1915 has gone down in history.
Eoin O'Duffy - Chief of Staff of the Irish Republican Army and leader of The Blueshirts.
Thomas O'Hagan, 1st Baron O'Hagan - Lord Chancellor of Ireland.
Kevin O'Higgins - assassinated Vice-President of the Executive Council.
Seán T. O'Kelly - 2nd President of Ireland (1945-1959).
John O'Mahony - a founder of the Irish Republican Brotherhood.
John O' Leary (Fenian poet) [1]
James O'Mara - nationalist leader and member of the First Dáil
Henry O'Neill - painter and archaeologist.
Charles Stewart Parnell - dominant Irish political leader from 1875 to 1891.
Patrick (P.J.) Ruttledge - Minister in Éamon de Valera's early governments.
Daniel D. Sheehan - first independent Irish labour MP.
Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington - founder of Irish Women's Franchise League
Patrick James Smyth Journalist and politician
David P. Tyndall - prominent Irish businessman who transformed the grocery business
Medical students Michelle Carley, Tony Leung, and Eunice Chung pose with some of the Prolene sutures we used to repair hernias.
Salaam Namaste
2005 film
A chef (Saif Ali Khan) and a medical student (Preity Zinta) test their compatibility by living together for a year.
Initial release: September 9, 2005 (USA)
Director: Siddharth Anand
Music composed by: Shekhar Ravjiani, Vishal Dadlani, Sulaiman Merchant, Salim...
www.downloadmovies.website/salaam-namaste-2005-hd-torrent...
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Medical Students Circa 1892-93 Dr. E.J. McKinney is 2nd from the left. An interesting photo as compared to one taken now days! This one was another on that was barely there in the original with both dark and light spots everywhere and as you can see it was deteriorating rapidly! It looks like there "might" be another cadaver on the left bottom corner of the picture. That might be its hand showing just below the apron hanging?
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Spending a couple of weeks in Italy was not exactly a summer vacation for medical student Megan Donahue, but then again most med students don’t wear Army uniforms to class.
U.S. Army Africa photo by David Ruderman
To learn more about U.S. Army Africa visit our official website at www.usaraf.army.mil
Official Twitter Feed: www.twitter.com/usarmyafrica
Official Vimeo video channel: www.vimeo.com/usarmyafrica
Join the U.S. Army Africa conversation on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ArmyAfrica
In between her first two years of study at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md., 2nd Lt. Megan Donahue was in Vicenza, Italy, in early August to complete an operational clerkship with U.S. Army Africa, part of her military medical field studies program.
And it all could have been different if it hadn’t been for an accidental meeting with a West Point cadet.
Donahue studied biology and anthropology for her undergraduate degree at the University of Florida. She considered entering medical school there until she spent a summer doing volunteer work in Gambia with Operation Crossroads Africa, the precursor of the Peace Corps. It was there she met the West Point cadet who told her about USUHS.
“I’ve had a growing interest in Africa,” Donahue said. “I was interested in tropical medicine, so I wanted to do something like Operation Crossroads. I knew the military was increasing its interest in Africa, taking on a new mission. That expanded interest in Africa was one of the reasons I joined the military.”
Her two weeks with Army Africa were an eye-opener, exposing her to the scope of medical research and military-to-military programs under way in Africa, Donahue said.
“It’s supposed to be kind of seeing the operations side of the Army, how much oversight is involved in organizing operations on the continent. I’ve learned a lot,” she said.
While in Vicenza, Donahue participated in Army Africa’s second conference with the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command, an annual meeting that allows medical researchers on the continent to share information, network and develop future military partnerships in the medical sphere.
“The coolest thing was the conference,” Donahue said. “I was alert and fascinated all the time. My particular interest is in malaria, so it was very interesting to hear about some of the hardships and obstacles people in the field have to overcome to do their work.”
CLICK HERE FOR CONFERENCE COVERAGE
But there were other, less conceptual components to her field studies that exposed her to other facets of the Army.
“I got to go out last week to the rigger’s shed and pack parachutes. That was a new experience. It was a lot of fun.”
Donahue also worked out on the obstacle course at La Comina, the Italian military training facility near Aviano.
“I have some awesome bruises to show for it,” she said.
The eldest of three siblings, the West Melbourne, Fla., native is from a family with military connections in the past, the present and the future. Both of her grandfathers served in the Navy, and her brother just recently announced he had joined the Navy’s JROTC program.
“I am now definitely the cool sister because I’m an officer, and because I joined the Army,” she said.
After finishing her clerkship, Donahue will join her mother and her aunt for a week of sightseeing in Italy before they all return to the United States, and she resumes her studies at USUHS.
“I think they’re very proud,” Donahue said.
And her family can continue to be proud of their ACU-wearing daughter for the foreseeable future. Donahue can look forward to three more years of study at USUHS and then a series of residencies, probably at Walter Reed or Brooke Army Medical Center.
“At least another six years of school and training, if not another nine,” she said.
To learn more about U.S. Army Africa visit our official website at www.usaraf.army.mil
Official Twitter Feed: www.twitter.com/usarmyafrica
Official YouTube video channel: www.youtube.com/usarmyafrica
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Medical students attend Dr. Aaron Shaver's Immunology Class in School of Medicine at Langford Auditorium.
White Coat Ceremony
1st yr. Medical Students receive their white coats in Langford Auditorium. Special precautions are taken during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
**Number plates may need pixelating/Moving Footage with relevant desk** (Pictured: Students dressed as petrol pumps queue behind eachother at The Hop, an Epic annual fancy dress night on Broad Street in Birmingham which is held a week after Freshers Week for 1,500 medical students from the University of Birmingham Medical Society (Medsoc). The event has been held for the past 22 years although was cancelled due to the pandemic in 2020. Pic taken 29/09/2021) - The annual University of Birmingham Medical Society student event called 'The Hop' took place on Wednesday night.
The night is infamous for its amazing fancy dress with no theme, giving partygoers the freedom of choice.
One thousand five hundred students bought tickets to the sold out event.
In previous years, fancy dress included a North Korean ballistic missile, a woman dressed as a packet of extra safe Durex condoms and a Hungry Caterpillar.
The students started out at PRYZM nightclub before making their way down to Players Bar on Birmingham’s Broad Street.
This years amazing outfits included; a queue of petrol pumps, a Zoom chat, Colin the Caterpillar cake, A whoopee cushion, collection of hoovers, a group of censored ladies, a bunch of Babybels and many many more.
The students enjoyed their night with a smile, knowing their limits and not putting ambulances and hospitals under further pressure unlike other recent fresher events.
The fancy dress extravaganza has been running for 22 years and is held for the country’s future doctors, nurses and other medical professional students the week after Freshers Week although last years event was cancelled due to the pandemic.
The night also sells a legendary drink called ‘Heidi’, which was originally made by a Birmingham medical student who is now a successful GP in Stourbridge.
The drink consists of two shots of Archers, two of Smirnoff and one of Malibu, all in a pint glass and topped with orange or cranberry juice and lemonade.
The drink has been described as ‘Delicious and fairly lethal’ and was on sale at around a fiver.
ENDS
Medical Students from the Carver College of Medicine lead five different STEM activities for the kids and their families to engage in.
Medical students attend Dr. Aaron Shaver's Immunology Class in School of Medicine at Langford Auditorium.
Monash University medical students Prasanthan Thaveenthiran and Azaliya Abdullah help Churchill North Primary School, Janae, learn the importance of hand hygiene during the university's annual Teddy Bear Hospital.
Run by first-year students from the Gippsland Medical School, and designed to show the different aspects of medical care, Teddy Bear Hospital sees teddy bears and their young owners pass through 10 health stations, including travelling in an ambulance, scrubbing up for surgery and learning about the importance of good nutrition.
For more information, visit monash.edu/gippsland/news-and-events/news/2012/confidence...