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On Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022, the Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences hosted its 19th annual College Research Day. Andrew King, MD, presented the keynote, "Pain and Opioid Use Disorder: Evidence Based Approaches," and awards were presented for top student research.

Photo credit to Hilda Gomez, Plant Pathologist, Citrus Health Response Program, USDA APHIS PPQ

Mathias Tembo, pathologist at the Zambia Agriculture Research Institute (ZARI), checks the cassava field genebank at ZARI’s Mt Makulu Central Research Station, Lusaka. Pic by Neil Palmer for the Crop Trust.

Taken in the necropsy room at the Tropical & Aquatic Animal Health Laboratory run by Biosecurity Queensland at Oonoonba.

 

Camera - Leica IIIf

Lens - Canon 50mm f/2.8

Film - Neopan 400

Process - Rodinal 1+25.

   

See where this picture was taken. [?]

A screen capture of the SIVQ graphical user interface is depicted above. The pre-processing viewport in the upper-left demonstrates the source predicate image with this window also being utilized for image navigation. The ring vector preview window, depicted slightly to the right of this viewport allows for visual examination of the selected search predicate. Further to the right are a number of SIVQ algorithm parameter settings (e.g. vector size, quantity of sub-rings, heatmap paint size feature, etc.) that allow for optimization of the algorithm’s overall selectivity and sensitivity. Finally, a post-rendering window is depicted below, with it demonstrating resultant heatmaps, where quality of SIVQ-based pattern matching can be assessed.

 

Read more at:

 

www.uofmhealth.org/News/sivq_pathology_0200

Maricelis Acevedo, an early career pathologist specializing in the use of host resistance for control of cereal rusts. Maricelis has screened wheat landraces from the USDA collection for stem rust resistance at the International screening nursery at Njoro Kenya for the past two years in order to identify new sources of resistance to the “Ug99” race and its variants

On Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022, the Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences hosted its 19th annual College Research Day. Andrew King, MD, presented the keynote, "Pain and Opioid Use Disorder: Evidence Based Approaches," and awards were presented for top student research.

@Pathology2018 #CME #pathology #cancer #epidemiology #pathologists #pathresidenst #nurses #doctor #neuroscicnce #pathologist #medicine #health #hospital #Dermpath #BSTpath #GIpath #autopsy #digipath #cytopath #plantpath #breastpath #surgery #histopath #pathdoctors #molecularpath #medical #healthcare #liverpath #cancercytopath #internalmedicine #pulmonarypath #forensicpathology #nephropathology #neuropathology

PS: pathology.euroscicon.com/

Untiring efforts of Dr Sohail Aziz pathologist was with me.

On Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022, the Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences hosted its 19th annual College Research Day. Andrew King, MD, presented the keynote, "Pain and Opioid Use Disorder: Evidence Based Approaches," and awards were presented for top student research.

Photo credit to Hilda Gomez, Plant Pathologist, Citrus Health Response Program, USDA APHIS PPQ

On Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022, the Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences hosted its 19th annual College Research Day. Andrew King, MD, presented the keynote, "Pain and Opioid Use Disorder: Evidence Based Approaches," and awards were presented for top student research.

Dr. Ranajit Bandyopadhyay, IITA pathologist explains points to tour participants in the newly constructed aflasafe laboratory at IITA-BIP.

Peter Spencer Philips, a plant pathologists at UWE came along to our public day and helped add even more scientific facts to Steve's talk! He was excellent at capturing the children's imaginations and asked questions such as, 'why is this bit of rotting wood white and this other once dark brown?'. This really engaged the public and we feel they all learnt something!

Photo credit to Hilda Gomez, Plant Pathologist, Citrus Health Response Program, USDA APHIS PPQ

Près de Darwin, cimetière militaire argentin. Au laboratoire forensique, tous les corps sont passés aux rayons X. Ensemble, le radiologue forensique, les pathologistes, l’anthropologue et l’odontologiste cherchent des indices comme d’anciennes fractures osseuses ou des antécédents odontologiques particuliers, qui pourraient permettre d’établir une correspondance entre un corps et l’un des dossiers médicaux transmis à l’équipe du CICR par les autorités ou les familles des défunts.

Near Darwin, Argentine military cemetery. In the forensic laboratory, all the bodies are X-rayed. The forensic radiologist, together with the pathologists, anthropologist and odontologist, searched for clues, such as old fractured bones or specific dental work, that could help match the bodies to one of the medical files handed over to the ICRC team by the authorities or families of the deceased.

The 1982 war between Argentina and the United Kingdom was brief but a source of intense pain for many families.

 

Over 900 soldiers died on both sides, with three civilians killed. Some disappeared in the fury of the battle or were laid to rest without being identified. More than 200 Argentine soldiers – 122 of them without any names – were buried in Darwin cemetery, at the heart of the Falkland/Malvinas Islands.

 

In 2017, an ICRC forensic team was able to identify 90 of them, to the relief of their surviving family members.

 

In March 2018, more than 200 of them visited Darwin cemetery to pay their respects.

 

The ICRC accepted this task based on its humanitarian mandate, the needs and interests of the families, and its extensive conflict-related forensics experience. The ICRC forensic team will treated the mortal remains with the utmost respect throughout this forensic operation. Any exhumed remains were placed in new coffins and immediately reburied in the same location. At the end of the project, the cemetery has been restored to its original condition.

 

A temporary mortuary had been set up at the cemetery, where the remains were analysed and samples collected for DNA testing in genetic laboratories in Argentina, Spain and the United Kingdom.

 

CICR site web, 07.05.2018, Galerie Photo: Îles Falkland/Malouines : redonner un nom aux morts.

 

The 1982 war between Argentina and the United Kingdom was brief but a source of intense pain for many families.

 

Over 900 soldiers died on both sides, with three civilians killed. Some disappeared in the fury of the battle or were laid to rest without being identified. More than 200 Argentine soldiers – 122 of them without any names – were buried in Darwin cemetery, at the heart of the Falkland/Malvinas Islands.

 

In 2017, an ICRC forensic team was able to identify 90 of them, to the relief of their surviving family members.

 

In March 2018, more than 200 of them visited Darwin cemetery to pay their respects.

 

The ICRC accepted this task based on its humanitarian mandate, the needs and interests of the families, and its extensive conflict-related forensics experience. The ICRC forensic team will treated the mortal remains with the utmost respect throughout this forensic operation. Any exhumed remains were placed in new coffins and immediately reburied in the same location. At the end of the project, the cemetery has been restored to its original condition.

 

A temporary mortuary had been set up at the cemetery, where the remains were analysed and samples collected for DNA testing in genetic laboratories in Argentina, Spain and the United Kingdom.

 

ICRC website, 18.04.2018, Photo gallery : Falkland/Malvinas Islands : Giving back the dead their names.

 

On Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022, the Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences hosted its 19th annual College Research Day. Andrew King, MD, presented the keynote, "Pain and Opioid Use Disorder: Evidence Based Approaches," and awards were presented for top student research.

Pathologist Stefan Pambuccian, MD, FCAP during Loyola Medicine's 5th annual See, Test and Treat® event on September 7, 2019. The event offers same-day test results and access to health education resources. (Photo: Natalie Battaglia)

On Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022, the Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences hosted its 19th annual College Research Day. Andrew King, MD, presented the keynote, "Pain and Opioid Use Disorder: Evidence Based Approaches," and awards were presented for top student research.

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Photo credit to Hilda Gomez, Plant Pathologist, Citrus Health Response Program, USDA APHIS PPQ

Helen Maffei. Dave Bridgwater retirement party. Portland, Oregon.

 

Photo by: Julie Johnson

Date: February 2, 2008

 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.

Source: Aerial Survey Program collection.

 

Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth

Extension Plant Pathologist Yeshi Wamishe checks a plot as segments are filmed on Aug, 6, 2021, for the online Arkansas Rice Field Day. (U of A System Division of Agriculture image by Mary Hightower.)

S7. TOPIC: Cross-cutting

SPECIAL SYMPOSIA: 7th Annual Women in Rehabilitation Science Symposium

 

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Lorelei Johnson, PhD, CCC-SLP, Research Speech Pathologist, Atrium Health

Abiodun Akinwuntan, PhD, MPH, MBA, Dean and Professor, University of Kansas Medical Center

 

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ACRM 100th Annual Conference #ACRM2023

Progress in Rehabilitation Research | Translation to Clinical Practice

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