Author: kmf17

  • Case Western Reserve University Technology Transfer Outlook Bright for Research-to-Market Licensing

    Performance Shines in Ohio and Nationally in AUTM Survey

    Survey data compiled by a national technology transfer organization shows Case Western Reserve University continuing a leadership role among Ohio universities, hospitals and research institutes by collecting $35.3 million in licensing revenues over a recent three-year period, and the outlook for ongoing strong performance is bright.

    The Association of University Technology Managers (AUTM) recently released its U.S. Licensing Activity Survey, including fiscal year 2008 (the latest comparative statistics available).

    “Although the national 2009 data for U.S. research institutions has yet to be released, we are confident that we will again exhibit best-of-class performance, as 2009 was a record-setting year at CWRU in terms of both income and company formation,” said Mark E. Coticchia, the university’s vice president for research and technology management.

    Specific to Ohio colleges and universities participating in the AUTM survey, in fiscal 2008 CWRU ranks number one in licensing income ($13.3 million), executed licenses and options (34) and cumulative active licenses (217). CWRU Technology Transfer had $16.2 million in revenue in fiscal 2009.

    Nationally, CWRU’s licensing revenues in fiscal 2008 ranked in the top 25 among all schools and outpaced other notable institutions, including peer-group members Johns Hopkins, Vanderbilt, Carnegie-Mellon and Dartmouth.

    Also at the national level, CWRU consistently ranked in the top 15 in various categories with respect to the 135 institutions with a research base of $350 million or less. Among a peer group of 43 schools, CWRU ranked sixth in licensing income, ninth in invention disclosures and tenth in license/options executed and cumulative active licenses.

    “I believe that our last several years of success are largely predicated upon commitments and principles that we initiated in 2002, when our trustees and operational leadership realized the needs and opportunities tied to sound commercialization of cutting edge research” Coticchia said. “We firmly believe that the approach and operational approaches to which we subscribe at CWRU will continue to be successful from both a commercialization and translational perspective.”

    The nation’s recession has not interfered with opportunities for partnering and licensing, said Joseph Jankowski, associate vice president technology management.

    “Likewise, our startup portfolio companies continue to exhibit the ability to raise investment capital despite the challenges facing the private equity markets,” Jankowski said. “It’s hard to provide a definitive reason for insulation from the macro-economic factors, but it may be that product-stage commercial firms are turning to research institutions as a way to grow their future product portfolios rather than investing in internal R&D.”

    Technology transfer is a term used to describe a formal transfer of rights to use and commercialize new discoveries and innovations resulting from scientific research to another party. Universities typically transfer technology by protecting it through patents and copyrights, then licensing its use.

    The mission of the Technology Transfer Office (TTO) at Case Western Reserve University is to assist and lead the successful commercialization of ideas created by the university’s valuable research.

    The Association of University Technology Managers, with headquarters in Deerfield, Ill., is a nonprofit organization with an international membership of more than 3,000 technology managers and business executives. AUTM members — managers of intellectual property, one of the most active growth sectors of the global economy — come from more than 300 universities, research institutions and teaching hospitals as well as numerous businesses and government organizations.

    For more information contact Marv Kropko, 216.368.6890.

  • Department of Civil Engineering Unveils New Lab

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    Dario Gasparini holds up original plans
    for the state-of-the-art structures lab

    The Department of Civil Engineering‘s new state-of-the-art structures lab, on the east side of the Bingham Building, can mimic the worst mother nature can throw at the built environment while enabling researchers to learn why everything from deep sea structures to soaring towers fail, and how to make them safer and sounder.

    The Richard ’39 and Opal Vanderhoof Infrastructure Research and Education Facility was recently unveiled: 2,400-square-feet of hardy concrete, steel and hydraulics married to high-tech computer controls and sensor systems.

    The Vanderhoofs provided a gift of $2 million to build the new facility, with the Case Alumni Association leading this major fundraising initiative.

    “It’s a gift from the past – civil engineering alumni – to future and present civil engineering students,” said Dario Gasparini, professor of civil engineering. He has shepherded the project, and talked about the effort to a crowd of more than 50 alumni, university administrators, students and other guests.

    In attendance were two representatives of the Vanderhoofs; Frank E. Gerace Case Institute of Technology ’48, whose name adorns the L-shaped strong wall; and others who donated time and money to create a facility that now puts the university in competition for large-scale academic, industrial and governmental research and testing.

    Arthur A. Huckelbridge Jr., professor of civil engineering, showed the audience his current project: stressing and straining components of a base similar to that used on some wind turbines in Europe. The bases have proven a weakness in the design.

    “I barely remember this space before: it was dark, dirty, unused and crowded with junk stored here,” said Chad Fusco, a master’s student and one of the first students to use the new lab.

    “Now it’s beautiful and usable,” said Janette Siu, a master’s student who, with Fusco, demonstrated a system that stabilizes buildings in high winds and earthquakes. “The new lab is a boon to faculty and students.”

    For more information contact Kevin Mayhood, 216.368.4442.

  • 2010 ADVANCE Opportunity Awards Announced

    The Academic Careers in Engineering & Science program (ACES+) recently announced recipients of the 2010 ADVANCE Opportunity Awards. Fourteen proposals representing academic disciplines ranging from engineering to religious studies to sociology received $41,667.

    “We’re thrilled to have the support of President Barbara R. Snyder and Provost Bud Baeslack to continue these awards,” said Lynn Singer, deputy provost and vice president for academic programs. ADVANCE Opportunity Awards also receive funding through the National Science Foundation ADVANCE program.

    Advance Opportunity Grants provide small amounts of supplemental support of current or proposed projects and activities where funding is difficult to obtain through other sources. All Case Western Reserve University faculty members are eligible to apply.

    According to the Office of the Provost, the following is a list of 2010 ADVANCE Opportunity Award winners and information about their projects:

    Alexis Abramson, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $1,771 to support travel to attend and present work at two national conferences.

    Karen Beckwith, Department of Political Science, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $3,258 to develop a database and to purchase statistical software for data collection, coding and analysis for a new project.

    Diane M. Bergeron, Department of Organizational Behavior, Weatherhead School of Management

    Award: $6,500 to provide summer support for two doctoral research assistants working on a project.

    Joy R. Bostic, Department of Religious Studies, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $3,630 to support research on activism in African American mystical traditions, including travel to investigate original manuscripts, data collection and materials documentation.

    Clemens Burda, Department of Chemistry, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $1,500 to support child care during a three-month research visit during a sabbatical leave.

    T. Kenny Fountain, Department of English, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $1,300 to support a student assistant to aid in transcription and data analysis of audio data for preparation of a book manuscript.

    Victor Groza, Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences

    Award: $2,800 to support international travel to train interviewers in an ethnosurvey approach to expand an ongoing study.

    Gladys Haddad, Western Reserve Studies Symposium, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $2,000 to seed funding for program design and implementation for the East Cleveland Neighborhood Project.

    Charles J. Love, Department of Comprehensive Care, School of Dental Medicine

    Award: $1,996 to support travel to an international conference to disseminate research findings.

    Heidi B. Martin, Department of Chemical Engineering, Case School of Engineering

    Award: $6,000 for short-term funding to support a graduate student stipend for a four-month period.

    Heather Morrison, Department of Astronomy, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $2,000 in travel support to seed a collaboration with researchers from China for a survey project on the Milky Way.

    Ronald G. Oldfield, Department of Biology, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $5,000 to support a research visit to research a publication.

    Robert Spadoni, Department of English, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $505 to support travel to a national society meeting for participation in a panel discussion related to a new book project.

    David F. Warner, Department of Sociology, College of Arts and Sciences

    Award: $3,407 to support a specialized training course to enable an expanded research project.

    For more information contact Kimyette Finley, 216.368.0521.

  • Case Western Reserve Named to Princeton Review’s 286 Green Colleges Guide

    Case Western Reserve University’s ongoing commitment to sustainability is being recognized with a spot in The Princeton Review’s Guide to 286 Green Colleges.

    The announcement, made this week, coincides with the 40th anniversary of Earth Day.

    “We recognize that there is a rising interest among students in attending colleges that practice, teach, and support environmentally responsible choices,” wrote the Princeton Review editors. They point out that in Princeton Review‘s 2009 College Hopes & Worries Survey, 64 percent of college applicants and parents indicated a desire to know more about colleges’ environmental commitments.

    The guide cites Case Western Reserve’s signing on to the American College & University Presidents’ Climate Commitment; the creation of the Great Lakes Energy Institute; the school’s sustainability committee; LEED-certified construction projects; and more.

    The Princeton Review partnered with the United States Green Building Council to produce the guide, which is available online.

  • Hudson Relays Celebrates 100th Anniversary

    One of the university’s longest-standing traditions, Hudson Relays, is always a special event for the campus community. This year’s event, taking place Saturday, April 24, will be even more significant because students, faculty, staff and alumni will witness the event’s centennial milestone.

    “Hudson Relays is one of the oldest traditions on campus. The centennial is a great opportunity to celebrate something we’ll never see again,” said Colleen Barker-Williamson, director of student activities and leadership. “It’s a vibrant day of athleticism and social gathering, and it celebrates a facet of the university’s history.”

    The 26-mile relay footrace commemorates Western Reserve College’s 1882 move from Hudson, Ohio, to University Circle. Teams representing first-year through fourth-year students, as well as an alumni team, will participate, and the campus community is invited to come out and cheer on the runners.

    In honor of this year’s centennial celebration, the planning committee worked with University Archives to gather historical data and photos of the relays. Ground signs currently line the binary walkway and the Kelvin Smith Library (KSL) Oval with quirky, historical facts related to Hudson Relays. In addition, the Friday, April 23, University Community Hour event is scheduled to be a Hudson Relays Pep Rally on the KSL Oval. Campus members will have an opportunity to enjoy cake and check out photos from past relays. And on Saturday – relay race day – there will be a special 100th anniversary special program featuring President Barbara R. Snyder and other special guests.

    Angel Flowers, outgoing vice president of the University Program Board, has served on the Hudson Relays committee for the past three years. “I didn’t have any idea what it was,” she said of her first year. “I took it by horns and it became exciting for me to come back to it year after year.”

    Flowers, a senior, hopes younger students embrace the Hudson Relays tradition. “It’s fun to get to know people and to support your class. Take pride in participating —all components make the event a success.”

    One of those younger students supporting the event is Christian Wargo, current vice president of the freshman class. “It sounded really exciting to me. I wanted to take more of a leadership role in the Class Officer Collective. I can’t wait to experience it for myself,” he said of soon to be first experience with Hudson Relays. He is serving as a co-chair of the event.

    Wargo said students, faculty, staff and alumni should come to this year’s event “for the history of things. This event holds a special place in a lot of people’s hearts. None of us will be around when the 200th anniversary rolls around, so come out and celebrate this meaningful tradition.”

    The complete schedule for the 2010 Hudson Relays is available online.

  • Make a Difference: The University Launches Faculty and Staff Campaign

    This week, Case Western Reserve University will officially launch its FY 2009-10 faculty and staff campaign. The effort is facilitated through the university’s Annual Fund with the leadership of Provost W.A. “Bud” Baeslack and Senior Vice President for Administration John D. Wheeler.

    “Our faculty and staff show their dedication to this institution every day, and we are tremendously grateful,” says Wheeler. “We also hope they will see a gift to the Annual Fund as an extension of this commitment to help Case Western Reserve remain a vibrant and strong institution.”

    Gifts support the university’s general operations, enhancing the lives of students and supporting faculty research and facilities maintenance and improvement.

    “These contributions will have an immediate impact on schools, scholarships, the library, athletics, or any other area donors choose to support,” says Baeslack. “Contributions from our faculty and staff also send a message to our alumni, friends, students and community partners that we are a community united in our commitment to Case Western Reserve.”

    Gifts of any size are encouraged and appreciated. Faculty and staff can choose to designate their gift to the school of their choice or to any number of university funds that support diverse areas of interest, including the Staff Educational Enhancement Fund.

    Gifts can be made through automatic payroll deductions, online, by cash or check, or by contacting the Office of Annual Giving at 368-5288 or by e-mail at [email protected]. In addition, there are other ways to make contributions. Learn more.

    Additional information about the Annual Fund is forthcoming through interoffice mail and e-mails.

  • Sen. Sherrod Brown Talks Economy with Undergraduates

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    Sen. Sherrod Brown and Prof. Susan Helper

    Students in Professor Susan Helper’s seminar already get to learn from one of the nation’s foremost experts on manufacturing. But on Monday they received an added bonus: a chance to meet with one of the U.S. senators most directly involved in setting federal policy in this area: Ohio’s Sherrod Brown.

    Helper is one of the country’s leading scholars on the automobile industry, the person national reporters invariably call for insight regarding GM’s future, Toyota’s troubles and the policies most likely to help revive this beleaguered sector. Brown, meanwhile, has focused much of his political career on issues of labor and the economy. Over the years Brown has tapped Helper often as an adviser to his office and to other federal leaders. For this spring’s economics seminar, Helper turned to Brown’s staff to help enrich her students’ academic experience.

    Over the course of the semester, Helper’s students not only studied the academic aspects of economic policy, but also developed the kinds of documents political leaders would use in a Congressional hearing. The students’ work so impressed Brown that he elected to sit down with the students this week.

    The class discussion touched on questions such as whether policy should shift toward protectionism or free-trade and whether some other nations have an edge in developing alternative energy or training the unemployed for jobs in demand.

    The senator also spoke about the gradual shift of the U.S. economy away from manufacturing.

    “One of the reasons we see flat wages in this county is because we don’t make things anymore,” Brown said.

    Helper said students in the seminar have considered whether government policies can improve the design of manufacturing markets, leading to higher efficiency and a better standard of living for workers.

    For more information contact Marv Kropko, 216.368.6890.

  • Case Western Reserve Professor to Lead Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology

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    Joseph C. LaManna

    Joseph C. LaManna, professor of physiology and biophysics, neurology and neuroscience at the School of Medicine, has been voted president-elect of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, a major advocacy organization for biological and biomedical research.

    The Federation is the nation’s largest coalition of biomedical researchers, representing 23 scientific societies and over 90,000 researchers from around the world.

    “We try to be as objective as we can, lobbying for people doing science, people who are improving public health,” LaManna said.

    He doesn’t have to look far for constituents: “Most of the faculty at the School of Medicine belong to at least one of the member societies,” he said.

    As president-elect, LaManna will run policy group meetings and build consensus for positions on new laws and regulations; programs, laws, annual budgets and funding at the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, NASA, and Department of Agriculture and more.

    As president next year, he will be the public face of the Federation, meeting with members of Congress and their staff, testifying before Congressional committees and sending out position papers and analyses of issues as prepared by the organization.

    When asked to run in February, LaManna thought for a while, then agreed. In a message to the Executive Officers Advisory Committee, which includes members of each society, he said, “We need to continue to strengthen FASEB’s role as a respected advocate for biological and biomedical research. We are entering an era of increased appreciation for value of accurate and unbiased scientific advice in understanding significant challenges facing the nation and the world, and in providing potential scientific and technological approaches to their solution.”

    More important than communicating with political leaders, LaManna said the Federation must better inform and educate the public, and educating and training the next generation of scientists and engineers must be a significant priority.

    For more information contact Kevin Mayhood, 216.368.4442.

  • Researchers Encouraged to Submit Proposals for Johnson & Johnson – CWRU Challenge Grant

    Case Western Reserve University Provost W.A. “Bud” Baeslack announces a request for proposals for the Johnson & Johnson – CWRU Innovation Challenge Grant. This is the inaugural year of funding from The Johnson & Johnson-CWRU Innovation Challenge Grant, which was announced to the campus community in February.

    The funding is designed to support research that will lead to improvements in health care. Faculty and clinicians participating in this program will develop technologies in a broad range of areas. Researchers in the fields of science, medicine and engineering conducting projects to improve human health are encouraged to apply.

    “In keeping with Forward Thinking, it is critical to develop team solutions to healthcare problems. We hope to see strong interdisciplinary project ideas submitted through this important J&J program,” Baeslack said.

    One page quad charts are due April 21. The quad charts should include the names of the principal investigators, their institutional affiliations and contact information. Sample quad charts are available through the Provost’s office.

    The Johnson & Johnson – CWRU Innovation Challenge Grant will provide a total of $250,000 in seed funding for selected projects and must include a one to one match. Initial awards are for one year, with status updates and a final report required at the end of the project. This request for proposals specifically seeks novel applications that will improve diagnosis and treatment of diseases.

    Successful proposals will be oriented toward translational and potentially transformative research that will significantly impact one of the following areas:

    • Therapeutic electrical stimulation
    • Oncology therapeutics
    • Biomaterials
    • Wireless medical technologies
    • Bio-sensor platforms
    • Therapies for CNS disorders
    • Surgical devices

    Preference will be given to interdisciplinary project teams. Evaluation of each proposal will include scientific merit, potential impact, experience of the investigators and the potential for future commercialization. Selected proposals will be reviewed through the CTSA electronic review system.

    Complete details are available through the Office of the Provost.

  • “Healthy Minds Across America” Forum to Take Place April 24

    Public forum will feature presentations from university-affiliated researchers

    The campus community is invited to attend the free “Healthy Minds Across America” forum April 24. University Hospitals Case Medical Center is joining more than 40 other institutions across the country to partner with NARSAD, a national charity primarily focused on advancing research related to the causes, treatment and prevention of psychiatric disorders.

    The “Healthy Minds” event is designed to bring science to families seeking hope for better treatments of a broad range of mental illnesses. The forum will feature several presentations and speakers affiliated with Case Western Reserve University, including David Kemp, assistant professor of psychiatry; Keming Gao, assistant professor of psychiatry; and Elizabeth Pehek, associate professor of psychiatry and neurosciences.

    To date, NARSAD has awarded more than $2.1 million via 36 research grants to support the work of 33 researchers affiliated with Case Western Reserve. Their research projects are focused on breakthroughs related to serious mental disorders that affect nearly 60 million Americans each year, including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders, depression and childhood mental disorders.

    The event is from from 1 to 6 p.m. at the W.O. Walker Building Auditorium, 10524 Euclid Ave. Additional information about the panels, speakers and registration for the “Healthy Minds Across America” forum are available online.

  • Case Western Reserve University Ranked One of the Nation’s Top 20 Medical Schools by U.S.News & World Report

    School improves 5 places in latest magazine rankings; University’s Health Law program ranked No. 3 in the nation

    Case Western Reserve University once again ranked as one of the best medical schools in the nation in the annual U.S. News & World Report “America’s Best Graduate Schools” rankings. Of the 146 national programs surveyed by the magazine, Case Western Reserve’s School of Medicine ranked 20th in research—and overall, an improvement of five places over last year’s ranking. This ranking once again placed it highest among Ohio medical schools.

    “This ranking reflects the extraordinary efforts of our faculty to continue to pursue medical breakthroughs, as well as the excellence of our student body,” said Pamela B. Davis, dean of the School of Medicine. “I congratulate everyone in our academic community on this well-deserved recognition.”

    Other highlights from this year’s rankings include: The School of Law’s health law program ranked third in the nation, up from No. 5 last year; and the university’s programs in biological sciences improved to 34th in the nation, up from No. 42 in 2007, the last time this specialty was surveyed by U.S. News; biomedical engineering ranked 11th, up from No. 12 last year; and the university’s master’s in nonprofit management program ranked 11th.

    “We are pleased to see this progress in the standing of some of the university’s most impressive programs,” President Barbara R. Snyder said. “Our task now is to build upon those strengths and also achieve gains in other disciplines.”

    Two of Case Western Reserve’s part-time graduate degree programs also received national rankings by the magazine. The Weatherhead School of Management’s part-time MBA program ranked 31st in the nation out of 314 programs surveyed. The School of Law’s part-time program jumped 17 places to No. 43 in the nation.

    U.S. News & World Report ranks graduate programs yearly in five major disciplines—engineering, law, medicine, business and education. The rankings are based on two kinds of data: expert opinions about program quality and statistical indicators that measure the quality of a school’s faculty, research and students. These data come from surveys of more than 1,200 programs and some 11,000 academics and professionals conducted in fall 2009.

    For more information contact Marv Kropko, 216.368.6890.

  • Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine Receives Nearly $8M in Federal Funding to Help Providers Enable Adoption of Electronic Health Records in Ohio

    CWRU wins OHIP bid to become a Regional Extension Center (REC) entity for the state of Ohio
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    Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland and
    School of Medicine Dean Pamela B. Davis

    Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine has received $7,942,500 in federal stimulus funds from the Ohio Health Information Partnership (OHIP), the state designated entity for health information exchange development.

    The funding positions the School of Medicine as a regional extension center (REC). The designation will allow the school to help 1,765 health care providers in Lorain, Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga and Ashtabula counties advance the use of health information technology (HIT) in their practices. The School of Medicine will provide administration and management to multiple contractors whose overall goal is to provide select products and training on how to use the technology to aid in the improvement of patient care.

    The formal announcement was made Tuesday afternoon at the Cleveland Clinic by Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland.

    “This is great news for Case Western Reserve School of Medicine’s facilities and patients in northeast Ohio,” said U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown. “Health information technology helps reduce medical errors and improves patient care. By helping doctors and nurses consult with one another through technology, we will improve the quality of medical care offered across our state – particularly in rural areas. And by helping medical facilities adopt new information technologies, we will reduce medical errors and lower health costs.”

    Pamela B. Davis, M.D., Ph.D., dean of the School of Medicine and vice president for medical affairs at Case Western Reserve, explained how the new initiative could ultimately lead to healthcare advancements in the region. “The School of Medicine is committed to improving the health of our community. We believe that HIT is a key tool in healthcare reform and we look forward to partnering with independent healthcare providers to encourage quick adoption of HIT. Once enabled, HIT provides a two-fold benefit: 1) improving patient care, for example, through electronic alerts that notify healthcare providers of a patient’s need for annual testing e.g., mammograms, and 2) by lowering healthcare costs by reducing redundant testing.”

    The REC endeavor, as directed by the federal government, is specifically targeted toward primary care providers.

    “Electronic health records tend to be financially out of reach for private practitioners and small practices,” said Julie Rehm, senior associate dean of the School of Medicine and associate vice president of strategic initiatives for Case Western Reserve.

    The federal and state initiative is providing smaller primary care practices with an incentive to early adoption of health information technology.

    “If healthcare providers adopt early they are eligible for additional reimbursement from the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services until 2011,” Rehm stated.

    The CWRU School of Medicine is one of seven RECs in Ohio established by OHIP and made possible by funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). An eighth REC was awarded directly by the federal government to HealthBridge, a not-for-profit health information exchange serving Greater Cincinnati and surrounding areas. The medical school’s REC designation has dozens of partnering stakeholders, including the region’s major hospitals, health care agencies and programs, health care insurers, and colleges and universities. Several national partners are also part of the REC.

    “Success for the CWRU REC will be measured in three ways,” said Rehm. “First, we must meet the milestones and metrics that are being asked of us by the federal government. Second, we must enable the earliest adoption possible which will allow primary care providers to pull in the maximum amount of federal dollars from reimbursements. And third, we must improve the quality of care through the utilization of this technology which will ultimately improve the health of Clevelanders.”

    The REC award builds on the recent Center of Excellence designation by the State of Ohio to CWRU School of Medicine for “Translating Technology and Research into Better Health” which included HIT as a major component.

    The Case Western Reserve REC is expected to begin work later this month.

    For more information contact Christina DeAngelis, 216.368.3635.

    For more information contact Jessica E. Studeny, 216.368.4692.

  • Founder of Free, Remote Medical Service to Receive 2010 Inamori Ethics Prize at Case Western Reserve University

    Stan Brock of Remote Area Medical (RAM) to be honored September 1 by the
    Inamori International Center for Ethics and Excellence

    Stan Brock

    Stan Brock, the humanitarian who has been delivering free health care worldwide through his nonprofit organization Remote Area Medical (RAM) for 25 years, will be recognized as the recipient of the 2010 Inamori Ethics Prize, awarded by the Inamori International Center for Ethics and Excellence at Case Western Reserve University.

    Brock, who assembles teams of volunteer doctors, nurses, dentists and other health care professionals to provide free medical services anywhere they are needed, will receive the honor on September 1 at the Inamori International Center at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Brock will give a keynote address and take part in a panel discussion as part of the celebration.

    He joins Dr. Francis S. Collins, previous leader of the Human Genome Project, and The Honorable Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland and former U.N. High Commissioner on Human Rights, as winners of the prize.

    “It’s very easy to become overwhelmed by all the suffering in the world and feel like there’s nothing you can do to help,” said Shannon French, director of the Inamori Center. “Stan Brock’s story teaches us that if we are willing to tackle just one problem with passion and persistence, we can make a real difference. The work of RAM has improved and even saved thousands of lives and touched countless hearts.”

    A native of Great Britain and former host of the popular NBC television series “Wild Kingdom,” Brock’s experiences living and working as a cowboy and a bush pilot in the central Amazon basin of Guyana inspired him to create RAM. There and during his travels with the nature show, Brock saw firsthand how people suffer and how their lives are endangered without accessible medical services.

    Over the years, Brock realized just as people in developing countries often have to travel hours or days to see a doctor, similar circumstances exist for people in remote areas of the United States. And even in urban centers, Americans without insurance might as well be miles from medical services.

    In 1992, Brock began to focus RAM efforts in the United States, where the organization now provides 64 percent of its services. But U.S. laws that prohibit health care professionals from practicing across state lines hampered Brock’s early outreach.

    RAM is headquartered near Brock’s home in Tennessee, where, with his influence, the aptly titled Volunteer State has changed its laws to make it possible for many medical volunteers to legally serve beyond state boundaries. Brock continues efforts to affect laws across the country.

    RAM healthcare providers have served hundreds of thousands of people and tens of thousands of animals. RAM projects include the Guyana Air Ambulance service, the Guyana Cervical Cancer Project, and the Rural America Program. RAM conducts its medical missions wherever they are needed, regardless of danger or difficult conditions, from conflict-torn East Africa to post-earthquake Haiti. Nicknamed “Saint Stan,” Brock himself takes no salary and lives in an abandoned schoolhouse in Tennessee with no luxuries of any kind. He has no family and no other pursuits, working tirelessly day after day to bring healthcare and hope to desperate people from the hills of Appalachia to the mountains of Nepal.

    “When we asked Dr. Inamori to give us an example of the type of person we should honor with this prize, he said, ‘Mother Theresa.’ Stan Brock certainly fits that model. He is hard-working, humble and utterly selfless, and he has dedicated his life to the service of those in need,” French said.

    It is impossible to know how many people owe their lives to this modest and humble man.

    About the Inamori Ethics Prize

    Presented annually to an individual who has demonstrated exemplary ethical leadership, the Inamori Ethics Prize honors those whose actions and influence have greatly improved the condition of humankind. First awarded in 2008, the Inamori Ethics Prize carries with it a monetary award, which is intended to support the recipient’s ongoing work. Each year’s recipient is conferred the prize at Case Western Reserve University, where he or she also delivers a public lecture about his or her work and the challenges that lie ahead.

    In its short lifespan, the Inamori Ethics Prize has become an indicator of additional honors. Not long after receiving the honor, Francis S. Collins was named director of the National Institutes of Health, while Mary Robinson was honored with a Presidential Medal of Freedom following the announcement of her Inamori Ethics Prize award and received the prestigious “Entrepreneur for the World” Award from the World Entrepreneurship Forum shortly thereafter.

    About the Inamori International Center for Ethics and Excellence

    The Inamori International Center for Ethics and Excellence began in July 2006 as the result of a generous gift from Kazuo Inamori and the Inamori Foundation of Kyoto, Japan. Dr. Inamori, founder of the Kyocera Corporation, believes that “people have no higher calling than to serve the greater good of humankind and society” and “the future of humanity can be assured only through the balance of scientific progress and spiritual maturity.”

    For more information contact Susan Griffith, 216.368.1004.

  • Study Examines Effectiveness of Telemonitoring Vital Signs

    Like the bleeps of an alarm clock, TeleCare, a home monitoring device, gives the chronically ill a wake-up call: “It’s time to take your vitals.”

    Researchers from Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland State University will study how effective TeleCare, a device the size of an alarm clock, is in keeping individuals with complex health issues healthy and out of the hospital.

    CWRU’s University Center on Aging and Health awarded a one-year pilot grant to investigators Elizabeth Madigan from the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, Rebecca Boxer from the School of Medicine at CWRU, and Amir Poreh from Cleveland State, for the study, “Supporting Self-Management with Telehealth for Patients with Multiple Morbidity.”

    The researchers will work with the 40 patients under the care of the Cleveland Visiting Nurses Association (VNA) of Ohio, headquartered in Cleveland. The patients suffer from one or more of the following illnesses: heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and diabetes. They also experience symptoms of depression, anxiety or difficulties making decisions.

    The Cleveland VNA has about 100 TeleCare monitors in use to track heart rates, blood pressures, oxygen saturation, temperature, weight and blood sugar of patients on days when the visiting nurses do not make house calls.

    When the device announces the time to take vital signs, the patient plugs the device into the telephone jack, attaches various pieces of medical equipment (like a blood pressure cuff or scales) to the device and then records the data. The information is sent directly to a specially-trained VNA nurse at a computer station, who tracks the data for health changes that signify a potential medical issue.

    According to Madigan, the technology allows health care organizations like the VNA to monitor and extend care beyond the regular home visit and find changes in the health condition before it might reach a critical stage.

    An example says Madigan, who is a professor of nursing, is an elevated weight gain in a person with heart failure — a sign of potential fluid overload.

    “Generally patients like this monitoring,” said. While it is distant monitoring, “it’s another set of eyes on their health conditions.”

    The VNA has used the monitors for about seven years, but past studies on home telehealth monitoring have been done on the ideal or controlled patients.

    Because the targeted illnesses in this study also are associated with cognitive or mental health changes, the researchers want to see if the technology is effective in helping “the real patient with real issues” manage their illnesses.

    “We hope to find out which patients benefit the most from telehealth monitoring,” Madigan said.

  • Mortality Weaves its Way Through CWRU Poet’s Green Is The Orator

    Gridley and other poets to share their poems during Poetry Reading, April 19

    greenorator.jpg

    With the University of California’s publication of Sarah Gridley’s Green is the Orator, her recent nomination for a Carl F. Wittke Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, and a recipient of a $20,000 Creative Workforce Fellowship from Cuyahoga County’s Community Partnership for Arts and Culture, the Case Western Reserve University poet and assistant professor of English says 2010 is off to a good start.

    Green is the Orator follows five years after her first publication, Weather Eye Open (2005). The public will have the opportunity to hear Gridley read selections from her two volumes of poems during Writer’s Week on Monday, April 19, from 8-9:30 p.m. in Guilford House Parlor.

    Titled Writing Home: Eco-poets of Maine, Montana, and Ohio, and funded by the Helen Buchman Sharnoff Endowed Fund for Poetry, the reading features work by Gridley and two visiting poets: Melissa Kwasny, the author of The Nine Senses (forthcoming), Reading Novalis in Montana, Thistle, and The Archival Birds; and Richard Miles, the author of Boat of Two Shores.

    In Reading Novalis in Montana, Kwasny, who lives outside Jefferson City, Montana, carefully sorts out the overlaps and disconnects between book knowledge and direct perceptions of the natural world. In Boat of Two Shores, Miles, a professional stonemason, explores the borders of selfhood in rural, coastal Washington County, Maine.

    Gridley returned to her hometown of Cleveland four years ago to become a visiting lecturer in poetry at CWRU. After living near woods and ocean in Maine for six years, under the “big sky” of Montana for two years earning her MFA, and in Iowa farmland for six months while a visiting professor at the Writers’ Workshop at the University of Iowa, she says a top priority was locating the city’s green spaces.

    She found a nearby “gem” — Lake View Cemetery. Situated on an escarpment overlooking Lake Erie, rich in geological and horticultural wonders, the cemetery contains an old Ohio bluestone quarry site, and trees dating back to the founding of the city over 200 years ago.

    Gridley says the green space offered her a place of solitude and reflection, and that one poem in the book was directly inspired by a geological walking tour she took there with Joe Hannibal, a curator at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.

    In writing Green is the Orator, Gridley says she became fascinated with Normandi Ellis’s translation of the Egyptian Book of the Dead, Awakening Osiris — especially the line, “I am blessed by mortality.”

    During the writing of the new book, Gridley experienced a series of deaths and found her poems becoming “intersecting sites of eulogy and elegy — of praise and grief for a finite life.”

    Attracted to the word “green” for its double sense of vitality and naïveté, she derived her title from a line in Wallace Stevens’ poem, “Repetitions of a Young Captain”: “The choice is made. Green is the orator/Of our passionate height. He wears a tufted green,/And tosses green for those for whom green speaks.//Secrete us in reality. It is there/My orator. Let this giantness fall down/And come to nothing. Let the rainy arcs//And pathetic magnificences dry in the sky.”

    In the world of academia where the general objective is to produce one book after another, Gridley says she tries to remember what drew her to poetry in the first place (its resistance to hurry), and to pace her writing according to slower rhythms and deeper instincts.

    She hopes to impart this sense of concentration and attention to her students, she says, adding they generate a lot of energy and inspiration for her own work.

    Teaching and writing complement each other well, Gridley says, but in her practice of poetry, retreat plays an important role.

    “Kwasny and Miles provide great models for conserving and articulating ‘green solitude’ — for making time and space for the more-than-human world — and that is why I so wanted to bring them into contact with my students.”

    Gridley hopes to use her Creative Workforce Fellowship toward a leave in the fall — to open up some space for her next writing project and to think creatively about future course offerings and teaching practices.

    Go online for more information about the Poetry Reading on April 19.

    For more information contact Susan Griffith, 216.368.1004.

  • Flora Stone Mather Alumnae Association, University Community Celebrates Grand Opening of Mather Park

    matherpark.jpg

    The day after the anniversary of Flora Stone Mather’s 158th birthday, members of her namesake alumnae association of the former Flora Stone Mather College for Women gathered for a celebration.

    The alumnae, dedicated to the empowerment of women, witnessed the grand opening of a special gift they provided to current and future students: Mather Park, Case Western Reserve University’s softball field.

    “This is a great day for all of us,” said Sandra Malek Vodanoff (FSM ’59), final president of the Flora Stone Mather Alumnae Association. “We’re sure she’s (Flora Stone Mather) with us in spirit…cheering on the team.”

    More than a dozen members of the alumnae association joined Case Western Reserve University President Barbara R. Snyder, the softball team and university friends and supporters at the official ribbon cutting ceremony on April 7.

    The Flora Stone Mather Alumnae Association announced in 2008 it would transfer the balance of its endowment to Case Western Reserve to support enhancing the student experience.

    The naming of Mather Park, located on the north side of campus, was one of those gifts.

    “The Mather women are some of the best women in the world,” President Snyder said during the grand opening.

    She noted the association’s long-standing commitment to and support of the university, including scholarships, the Flora Stone Mather Center for Women and now Mather Park. “I’m deeply grateful for all you’ve done and continue to do.”

    Softball, added to the university’s sports catalog in 1996, is the only varsity sport on campus solely for female athletes. “This is such a wonderful opportunity for women,” Charlotte Guggenheim (FSM ’62), said about Mather Park.

    The alumnae association’s support of the softball field has allowed for superior facilities, said Dave Diles, director of athletics.

    Mather Park features an amenity named in honor of another impressive woman: The Peggy Nicholls Press Box. The state-of-the-art facility was a generous donation from the family of Glenn Nicholls, vice president for student affairs. The press box honors the memory of his late wife.

    “I’ve been privileged to be surrounded by remarkable women,” Nicholls said. He told guests gathered for the grand opening ceremony that Peggy believed in opportunities for women, and that women “shouldn’t have any sort of barriers or obstacles” in their path.

    Shortly before the Spartans took on John Carroll University in a double header, the softball team changed into yellow T-shirts with the name “Mather” emblazoned across the front. They presented each alumnae association member with a signed and framed architectural rendering of Mather Park.

    “We feel grateful to honor these women,” said Lauren Wolz, a sophomore biology major who plays first base and right field.

    As the game got underway, Patricia Kilpatrick (FSM’49, GRS’51), took her seat in the stands. “Our university has worked so hard to support athletics for women and men. I’m proud of our administration.”

    She added that it was “rewarding to see this great facility for women. We Mather alums like to do this kind of stuff,” she said with a smile.

    Learn more about Mather Park.

  • Conference Examines Canada-U.S. Regulatory Review, Reform, Recovery

    Canada-United States Law Institute names annual conference in honor of Henry T. King Jr.

    As the world emerges from economic crisis, significant trading partners Canada and the United States are striving for sustained recovery. The 2010 Henry T. King Jr. Annual Conference – The Canada-US Regulatory Regime: Review, Reform, Recovery – examines challenges and obstacles along the path to recovery.

    The Canada-United States Law Institute hosts its 27th annual conference this Thursday-Saturday (April 8-10) at Case Western Reserve University School of Law. The conference agenda and description can be found at http://cusli.org/conferences/annual/index.html.

    The conference this year is being re-dedicated in the name of Case Western Reserve’s Professor Henry T. King Jr., who died May 9, 2009. Professor King was a legendary figure at the CWRU Law School and the broader international community.

    The conference also is significant because CUSLI will announce the two new co-chairs who will be replacing King – James Blanchard, the former U.S. Ambassador to Canada and former governor of Michigan, and James Peterson, former Minister of International Trade Canada and former member of the House of Commons.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper and President Barack Obama recently observed that recovery requires a thorough examination of the Canada-U.S .regulatory environment. Canada-U.S. regulatory policies often are described as “ships passing in the night” or “a game of leap frog.”

    Differing approaches to regulation, such as in the nations’ financial sectors, can provide lessons for avoiding future crises and promoting stability. On the other hand, regulatory differences can lead to competing, conflicting, and unnecessary processes that add costs to businesses, diminish economic competitiveness and prevent job creation.

    CUSLI will present the Henry T. King Jr. Award to U.S. Sen. George Voinovich. A member of the senator’s staff will be present for the award, and CUSLI is planning a ceremony in Washington, D.C., later this spring with the senator.

    The 2010 conference will also examine a number of key sectors – manufacturing and autos, energy, agriculture and food, intellectual property, and taxation. Analysis will involve CUSLI’s ongoing work regarding climate change, border security and international trade policy.

    Ultimately, CUSLI will issue a report to the respective governments that will respond to leaders’ call to identify areas that reduce unnecessary regulatory differences by building on previous efforts, developing focused priorities and a specific timeline. That goal was within the Joint Statement by North American Leaders, Guadalajara, in August 2009.

    For more information contact Marv Kropko, 216.368.6890.

  • R. Mohan Sankaran Earns Glennan Fellowship

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    The academic fields and disciplines of the 2009-2010 Glennan Fellows vary as widely as the projects in which they are engaged.

    Glennan Fellowships are administered by the University Center for Innovation in Teaching and Education (UCITE). The awards are designed to reward excellence in faculty and to nurture their growth as teachers and scholars. Each Glennan Fellow has been awarded $6,500 to be used toward their projects.

    The Daily will continue to feature each of the award recipients. Today, learn about R. Mohan Sankaran‘s project.

    R. Mohan Sankaran, assistant professor of chemical engineering

    Project: “Chem-E-Car Experience as an Educational Tool for Undergraduate Chemical Engineers”

    As a Glennan Fellow, Sankaran plans to implement a new Chem-E-Car experience for undergraduates in the Department of Chemical Engineering.

    “A Chem-E-Car competition occurs annually through the leading organization for chemical engineers, AIChE (American Institute of Chemical Engineers),” Sankaran wrote in his proposal. “My objective is to use the competition, which involves building a fuel cell vehicle, as an educational tool to expose students to important concepts in chemical engineering and to make them aware of relevant societal issues such as sustainability.”

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    Fourth-year students Andrew Krajewski and Curtis Grant have been working together as a team to design, build and test the car. Meanwhile, faculty members have provided guidance on building the car, and some have even incorporated their own research into the design of the car. Sankaran said additional students are welcome to join the team.

    The car will eventually be powered by an H2 fuel cell. Once the vehicle is completed, it will be unveiled at next year’s AIChE conference. Sankaran plans to incorporate the project into several of his classes.

  • Searching for Brain’s Defenses to Ward off Infections, Prevent Memory Loss

    University Center on Aging and Health Funds New Project

    Researchers at the Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine and School of Medicine will look for evidence within the brain for human beta defensin peptide function —proteins important to the peripheral body’s natural defense system against infection from the outside environment.

    They will examine brain tissues to explore the possibility that the beta defensins contribute to degenerative brain diseases and in particular Alzheimer’s disease (AD).

    “Chronic inflammation within the aging human brain and in the brains of individuals suffering from a variety of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease, is now recognized as a major contributor to neuronal cell death and subsequent decline in cognitive function,” said Wesley M. Williams, a neurobiologist and researcher in the Department of Biological Science at the dental school.

    Williams and Mark A. Smith, a professor from the Department of Pathology at the medical school, are co-investigators for the University Center on Aging and Health-funded pilot study, “Beta defensin antimicrobial peptides — compromised immunomodulators of inflammation within the aging and Alzheimer’s brain.” Sandy Richardson and Sandi Siedlak, both research assistants, are also engaged on the project.

    Williams became interested in beta defensins through studies with gingival epithelial cells in the mouth and his work on diabetes, a risk factor for AD.

    Preliminary findings by the researchers suggest that beta defensins may be adversely affected by AD, thus contributing to chronic inflammation that can lead to neuronal cell death.

    While the blood-brain barrier generally blocks harmful pathogens from reaching brain tissue, Williams said not all parts of the brain have this protection.

    Those pathogens reaching the brain can produce an inflammatory response, which is known to have a role in brain cell death.

    Beyond AD, neuronal cell death is a part of the degenerative process in Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, and in normal aging and contributes to cognitive memory loss among combat veterans and accident victims who have suffered traumatic brain injuries.

    The big question is what role, if any, do beta defensins play in the development of chronic inflammatory response in the brain, Williams said.

    “We don’t know what we will find. This study is thinking outside the box for something that has not been studied previously,” said Williams.

    The researchers received a $20,000 launch grant to pilot a study to gather evidence that they hope leads to further research projects. They will investigate if beta defensins influence the immune response by the brains resident immune cells, the astrocytes and microglia. This project focuses on the most commonly found defensins, HBD1 and HBD2, both prevalent in the mouth and skin, and whether they are found in two types of brain cells.

    Beta defensins are found in the skin and in lung, kidney, intestines, mouth, stomach, and vagina. Whenever a wound occurs in these areas, the beta defensins kick in to fight off infection.

    Some 20-beta defensins are known to exist in humans, other mammals and plants.

    The researchers will work with brain tissue generously donated by individuals with and without AD.

    This study is among a number of funded projects by the University Center on Aging and Health supported by the President’s Strategic Initiatives Fund and McGregor Foundation, located in the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing and under the direction of Diana Morris, that encourage interdisciplinary research projects among campus researchers.

    For more information contact Susan Griffith, 216.368.1004.

  • New Lab Will Encourage Students to “Tinker”

    Barry A. Romich (CIT ’67); Barbara R. Snyder,
    CWRU president; Norman Tien, Case School of Engineering dean and Nord Professor of Engineering; and
    Larry M. Sears (CIT ’69), university trustee.
    Click on photo to view full-size image.

    Case Western Reserve University has received a $1 million gift from Barry A. Romich (CIT ’67) to name the Prentke/Romich Laboratory at the Case School of Engineering.

    “I want today’s undergraduates to have a place to go to build things,” says Romich, who got his own start in hands-on engineering by “tinkering” in the student shop of Bingham Hall in the ’60s. The result was the start of what is now a leading international manufacturer of assistive technology to address the communication needs of people with severe speech disabilities.

    In 1966, while a student at Case, Romich co-founded the Prentke Romich Company with Edwin Prentke (CIT ’26), whom he memorializes through this gift. The two had become acquainted when they collaborated with James Reswick, Ph.D., and Charles Long, M.D., at the Engineering Design Center at Case Institute of Technology on federally-funded research to investigate the control of upper-extremity-powered orthoses. Among the new firm’s early projects were a device to limit the acceleration of powered wheelchairs and the first communication device for stroke victims.

    “It was a blessing to know Ed. He had the business experience, and I had the recent formal, technical training,” Romich recalls. “We both had the ability to put ourselves into the place of the individuals we were serving. These were high-level spinal cord injury patients—many of whom were close to my own age at the time. We worked to give them the tools they needed to move beyond their physical limitations and reconnect with society.”

    Headquartered in Wooster, Ohio, the company completed the process of ownership transition to an employee stock ownership plan in 2008. Romich has since used the Romich Foundation as a vehicle to support responsible charitable distribution of his previously owned stock.

    In addition to his desire to memorialize Prentke, Romich was inspired by the leadership gift of Larry M. Sears (CIT ’69) and Sally Zlotnick Sears (FSM ’72, SLC ’74), whose nearly $6 million gift to the Case School of Engineering in 2006 enabled the creation of the Sears Undergraduate Design Laboratory.

    Romich also wanted to give something back to the university and to show his support for the leadership of President Barbara R. Snyder. “I’m so pleased that such a place as Case Western Reserve exists with a focus on helping undergraduate engineering students achieve success,” says Romich. “I hope this space inspires and supports talented young students to go on to do great things.”