Tag Archive | "miller school of medicine"

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Survive Cancer? Join the Sylvester Singers Survivor Choir


The music therapy program at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center invites cancer survivors of all ages, abilities, and experience levels to join the Sylvester Singers Survivor Choir. Enjoy free lessons with no commitment and the physical and mental benefits of social singing. All styles of vocal music are welcome.

Rehearsals begin in January and will be held on Mondays from 2:30 to 4 p.m. in the Support Services Building, 1430 NW 11th Avenue, Miami. Parking fees will be covered. For more information, email SCCC music therapist Marlen Rodriguez-Wolfe, a graduate of the Frost School of Music, at [email protected].

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Felicia Knaul Participates at 2016 APEC CEO Summit


apec-peru

From left are UM’s Felicia Knaul, Peru Vice President Mercedes Aráoz, and   Merck CEO of Healthcare Belén Garijo.

UM News

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (November 25, 2016)The University of Miami had a key presence in the recently held 2016 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) CEO Summit in Lima, Peru. Dr. Felicia Marie Knaul, director of the University of Miami Institute for the Americas and professor at the Miller School of Medicine, participated in multiple sessions. Peruvian Vice President Mercedes Aráoz, a UM alumna, and Minister of Health Patricia Garcia hosted and led many aspects of this global landmark two-day event.

A forum of 21 economies in the Asia-Pacific region, APEC seeks to achieve prosperity among member economies. This year’s CEO Summit highlighted the importance of “Quality Growth and Human Development” as well as the key role of women in healthy economies.

During a discussion on “Driving Sustainable Health Systems to Achieve Quality Growth and Human Development,” Knaul focused on the often-ignored roles women play in both the economy and health care.

“Women are the motors of economic growth who also produce the majority of both paid and unpaid health care. Yet, health systems are disabling instead of enabling women,” Knaul said at the Executive Health Dinner held in conjunction with the CEO Summit.

Knaul’s participation was part of ongoing collaboration with Belén Garijo, member of the executive board and the CEO of Healthcare at Merck, who has been spearheading work at APEC on examining the relationship between healthy women and healthy economies. This work builds on her research published in The Lancet on women and health.

While at the summit, Knaul also met with Peruvian Vice President Aráoz, a leading voice and defender of women’s empowerment who graduated from UM’s School of Business Administration. She has accepted an invitation to speak at UM and share her thoughts on women as leaders. In meetings with Garcia, the Peruvian minister of health who graduated from the Miller School of Medicine’s William J. Harrington Fellowship Program, Knaul advanced collaborative work aimed at closing the global divide in access to care for women, particularly cervical cancer screening and treatment, with the Peruvian Ministry of Health, the U.S. National Cancer Institute, and the University of Miami.

In addition, Knaul participated in the Women in Parliaments’ APEC Women Leaders Breakfast, which featured Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, who encouraged ongoing work in which UM is deeply committed on women, health, and the economy. An ongoing series, the breakfast strengthens connections between women in leadership roles in politics, business, and social development initiatives across the Asia Pacific and serves as a network for building dialogue around issues impacting the region.

 

 

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Family Matriarch Sue Miller Passes Away

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Family Matriarch Sue Miller Passes Away


sue-miller-may-2010-001Susan “Sue” Miller, the matriarch of a family whose business and philanthropic enterprise has left an indelible mark on South Florida and, in particular, improved medical care, student life, and the study of Judaism at the University of Miami, died Thursday after a battle with cancer. She was 81.

“Sue Miller was an inspirational force in our community,” said UM President Julio Frenk. “Her tireless and passionate advocacy for educational opportunities helped lift and shape young minds. Her legacy, in particular through the Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, will endure in the many lives touched by her generosity. The University of Miami family mourns her loss, and our hearts go out to her children Stuart, Leslie, Jeffrey, and the entire Miller family.”

Flags on the University of Miami campuses were lowered to half-staff Thursday to honor the legacy of Sue Miller.

The widow of the late Leonard M. Miller, former chair of UM’s Board of Trustees who built a prominent homebuilding company with an investment of his own capital, Sue Miller had become the torch bearer of her family’s boundless generosity after her husband passed away in 2002.

At the 2004 ceremony where the Millers announced their landmark $100 million gift to UM’s medical school, it was Sue Miller, in a moving speech, who paid tribute to her husband, recognized the many physicians, caretakers, and researchers for their commitment to humanity and the value they place on life, and urged the youngest members of her family to continue its tradition of philanthropy.

“We in this family know that the measure of one’s success is not the wealth accumulated,” she said. “It has nothing to do with shrines erected, nor records broken; it is the inner strength we build each day through hard work, through integrity, and the respect for our fellow man.”

The landmark gift, which renamed the school in Leonard Miller’s honor and was the largest ever to the University at the time, transformed Florida’s oldest medical school, helping it to achieve unprecedented levels of excellence in clinical care, biomedical research, and medical education.

“It would be hard to overstate the impact Sue Miller had on this campus and in this community,” said Laurence B. Gardner, M.D., MACP, interim dean of the Miller School of Medicine. “She was a wonderful friend of the Miller School, as was Leonard, and we are forever grateful for their support. Their efforts will resound for generations to come through our students, as well as the thousands of patients who come to the University of Miami for care.”

Steven M. Altschuler, M.D., senior vice president for health affairs at the University of Miami and chief executive officer of UHealth – the University of Miami Health System, described her as “a matriarch of her family.”

“Sue Miller provided a shining example of service and commitment to our community, and she instilled that into everyone around her,” Altschuler said. “She will be deeply missed.”

In 1998, Sue Miller and her husband donated $5 million to establish the Sue and Leonard Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies. Located on the Coral Gables campus, it is the first academic and research center in the United States that focuses on the issues that have affected the Jewish people in the 20th century and the challenges they face in the future.

At the 2003 dedication ceremony for the center’s new home in UM’s Merrick Building, Sue Miller called the center a vital component of UM’s campus tapestry. “Students must be armed intellectually against the backdrop of Holocaust denial, racists, bigots, and neo-Nazis,” she said. “We must keep our young students informed so they can help build an uplifting society.”

Longtime South Florida residents, the Millers came to Miami in 1954 as newlyweds following Leonard Miller’s graduation from Harvard. Both had grown up in Massachusetts. Soon after the young couple arrived in Miami, Leonard invested $10,000 into a small construction company that ultimately became Lennar Corporation, one of the nation’s leading homebuilders and providers of residential financial services.

Over more than four decades, Sue and Leonard Miller built a distinctive style of philanthropy, inspiring many others to join them in making powerful commitments to improve the community. One of their most passionate causes was the South Florida Annenberg Challenge, now known as the Council for Educational Change, which works to raise the level of student achievement in public schools. Sue Miller served as a trustee of the council and chaired its Educational Advancement Committee.

A dedicated community advocate, she had always believed in fostering the spirit of giving, chairing the Miami Beach Community Campaign to benefit the United Way in her early days as a volunteer for the nonprofit charitable organization. Over time, she played an instrumental role in shaping the United Way of Miami-Dade’s leadership giving program. She was a founding member of the Tocqueville Society, established in 1991 to honor individuals who give $10,000 or more annually.

Sue Miller also founded United Way of Miami-Dade’s Women’s Leadership program, which has raised millions of dollars since its inception while mentoring young women as community leaders. Her work in the women’s leadership arena carried over to the national and international levels, as she once spearheaded and sponsored a leadership exchange between United Way of Miami-Dade and United Way of Jamaica. Her work on the education front, and specifically early education with United Way of Miami-Dade, took her to Washington, D.C. to advocate for increased funding for quality early education.

But it is Sue Miller and her family’s generosity toward UM that is arguably the hallmark of their philanthropic efforts. Among her family’s other notable gifts to the institution: In 2014, The Lennar Foundation, the Lennar Corporation’s charitable arm established by Sue Miller and her husband, gave a lead gift of $50 million to name The Lennar Foundation Medical Center, a state-of-the-art facility that brings the University of Miami Health System to UM’s Coral Gables campus. It will open in December.

The donation was one of the signature gifts of UM’s Momentum2 campaign. Last year, the Miller family propelled UM past the campaign’s $1.6 billion fundraising goal with a $55 million gift, the bulk of which—$50 million—is being used to build the new Miller School of Medicine Center for Medical Education. A ceremonial groundbreaking for the state-of-the-art facility was held earlier this year during a pre-inaugural ceremony for Frenk. During that event, her son, Stuart Miller, lauded his mother as a “primary driver of philanthropy” in his family.

“Both my mother and my father were extraordinary examples of how important it is to give, so a community can build,” he said.

The remaining $5 million of that $55 million gift was donated to the University’s Phillip and Patricia Frost School of Music.

The Miller family’s generosity during the Momentum2 campaign also included a naming gift for the Braman Miller Center for Jewish Student Life for UM Hillel.

In all, Sue Miller and her family have given more than $200 million to the University, primarily to the Miller School of Medicine, the Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies, the School of Law, the Frost School of Music, and the Intercollegiate Athletics Program.

Sue Miller is survived by her three children—Stuart Miller (J.D. ’82), who followed in his father’s footsteps as chair of the UM Board of Trustees; Jeffrey Miller; and Leslie Miller Saiontz—11 grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren.

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UM and Community Partners Join MetroLab Network

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UM and Community Partners Join MetroLab Network


The partnership between local governments and universities allows members to research, develop and deploy solutions to address challenges faced by urban areas.

UM News

UM, FIU< and Miami Dade College are joining Miami-Dade County and the Beaches in the new MetroLab Network consortium.

UM, FIU, and Miami Dade College are joining Miami-Dade County and the Beaches in the new MetroLab Network.

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (September 30, 2016) – As Zika and other climate change-related diseases continue to be the focus of local departments of health, researchers and academics at the University of Miami maintain their focus on efforts to work collaboratively with local institutions as one of the newest members of the MetroLab Network.

As part of the Greater Miami and the Beaches Consortium, UM will partner with Miami-Dade County and the cities of Miami and Miami Beach, along with university partners Florida International University and Miami Dade College.

“The MetroLab Network partnership will provide the University with a stronger relationship to face the challenges affecting our cities,” said Jean-Pierre Bardet, dean of the UM College of Engineering. “This is the value of the interaction between cities and universities, to solve the challenging new issues of the 21st century.”

The consortium’s projects will focus on adaption to sea-level rise and coastal flooding, response to climate-related diseases, including Zika, and access to transportation and affordable housing.

“The MetroLab Network partnership is a great opportunity for us to establish robust collaborations that will ensure that the best available science is informing important community decisions in how we adapt to environmental challenges associated with climate change,” said Ben Kirtman, professor of atmospheric sciences at the Rosenstiel School for Marine and Atmospheric Science and director of the Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies.

In a statement to the community, Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos A. Giménez stressed that the county will focus on three priorities, one of which is to develop specific programs and protocols to eliminate and address the impact of climate change-related diseases such as Zika.

“Miami-Dade County, Miami, and Miami Beach already have existing relationships and ongoing projects with our local universities, but through our participation in MetroLab Network, we will benefit from increased coordination between the three members of Greater Miami and the Beaches, the three local universities, and the members of MetroLab Network,” said Giménez.

Mario Stevenson, professor of medicine, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases, and director of the Institute of AIDS and Emerging Infectious Diseases at the Miller School of Medicine, will meet with the consortium’s city partners in early October to discuss the Zika project.

“Research universities have the physical and human resources to undertake the research and development of innovative projects at a lower cost. A partnership through the MetroLab Network allows us, as the University, to outline the purpose and process of collaborative research and provide solutions to the problems faced by our community,” he said.

The consortium also will work to identify technology-enabled solutions to another challenge of urbanization: affordable housing and transportation.

“Affordable housing is one of the most significant challenges facing Miami today, with over half of our households paying more than 30 percent of their income on housing,” said Robin Bachin, UM assistant provost for Civic and Community Engagement. “Already, UM’s Office of Civic and Community Engagement has partnered with FIU’s Metropolitan Center to create the South Florida Housing Studies Consortium, whose goal is to raise awareness about the challenges facing our housing market and craft solutions through policy and practice to overcome them.”

Bachin will continue to work closely with FIU and the Miami-Dade County Department of Public Housing and Community Development to enhance the relationships between the universities and local governments in order to ensure the best solutions for housing affordability in South Florida.

The MetroLab network now includes 40 partnerships between local governments and their university partners, focused on incorporating data, analytics, and innovation into local government programs. Members of the network research, develop, and deploy technologies and policy approaches to address challenges facing the nation’s urban areas. MetroLab Network was launched by 21 founding city-university pairings in September 2015 at the White House as part of the Obama Administration’s Smart Cities Initiative.

In addition to Greater Miami and the Beaches, UM, FIU, and Miami Dade College, new MetroLab Network members announced September 26 are:

City of Los Angeles – California State University, Los Angeles

City of San Francisco – University of California, Berkeley

University of Pittsburgh (joining existing City of Pittsburgh – Carnegie Mellon Partnership)

For more information on MetroLab Network visit www.metrolabnetwork.org.

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Zika Won’t Be Last Threat to Emerge

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Zika Won’t Be Last Threat to Emerge


Globalization, increased travel, and climate change are all contributing to the spread of vector-borne diseases.

By Robert C. Jones Jr.
UM News

zika2A plane flies over Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood, spraying pesticides. A pregnant woman decides to work full-time from home, secluding herself to her Miami apartment—whenever she does venture outside, she dons long pants and a hooded sweatshirt, even with daily temperatures in the 90s. And Miami Police officers give away cans of mosquito repellent to the homeless.

Such are the measures being taken to contain the spread of the Zika virus in Miami. Eventually such tactics, combined with education, counseling, and vaccine development, could very well prove successful in wiping out the disease.

But as sure as death and taxes, another virus, spread by a mosquito or other vector, will emerge and begin to spread, prompting health professionals to take action to contain and eradicate it. A group of experts at the University of Miami, which will host a special panel discussion on the Zika virus this Thursday on its Miller School of Medicine campus, are in agreement on that.

“Throughout human history pathogens have always co-evolved with us, and despite our best efforts to suppress either the pathogens themselves or the vectors that transmit them, most bugs have been very successful at evading control,” explains Justin Stoler, an assistant professor of geography and regional studies in UM’s College of Arts and Sciences, whose research explores the geographic patterns of urban health disparities, particularly in the developing world.

Could climate change, or more specifically warming temperatures, fuel the spread of disease-carrying vectors? The conditions must be right.

“Mosquitoes don’t like extreme weather either. If it just gets warmer and precipitation declines, things will dry out, and that’s not good for mosquitoes,” said Larry Kalkstein, a bioclimatololgist in the Miller School of Medicine’s Department of Public Health Sciences, who studies the impact of weather on all things living. “Basically what we’re talking about is a potential shifting of the range [of vectors], rather than just an expansion.”

Globalization of travel and trade coupled with unplanned urbanization quite probably plays a much larger role in the proliferation of vector-borne diseases.

“Anything that’s anywhere can easily get everywhere,” said Chris Cosner, a professor of mathematics who has investigated outbreaks of Rift Valley fever in Egypt. “When there was much less global travel, Zika was an isolated, obscure disease in an African forest. But once everybody can get anywhere, it [the disease] is out there trying to be pandemic. And it’s not the only disease out there waiting to do that.”

Cosner states a sobering fact, one with which other experts agree.

“There are many arboviruses (any of a group of viruses that are transmitted by mosquitoes, ticks, or other arthropods) and other pathogens that are obscure in the tropics, but with increased global connectivity and travel, it is likely that these neglected pathogens will potentially move from isolated areas to more populated places outside their restricted ranges,” said Doug Fuller, a professor of geography and regional studies who examines the distribution patterns of mosquitoes around the world.

“Zika is not currently in Wynwood and Miami Beach because of climate change. Zika is here because of globalization and increased air travel and because lower-resource countries are now rapidly developing,” said Stoler. “There are all these other pathogens lurking in tropical forests waiting to emerge, and there are additional superbugs emerging out of livestock populations. But climate change will, to varying degrees, shape how long some of these pathogens disperse and persist.”

It is likely that in the not-too-distant future, physicians and health officials, much like they are doing now with Zika, will be forced to react to a new outbreak of an unheard of virus, searching to find ways to wipe it out. Their efforts could be hampered by a system that merely reacts to crises rather than investigate their root causes and form action plans that can be implemented whenever there’s an outbreak.

“Zika, Ebola, Chikungunya—these are not new pathogens. The clinical community has known about these viruses for decades, but our knowledge of each is still limited. This is because there has not been a great effort to really understand what is making people sick in the Global South (those regions of the world made up of Africa, Latin America, and developing Asia including the Middle East) beyond the major diseases of malaria, HIV/AIDS, and tuberculosis—all of which have been on the decline,” explains Stoler.

“High-income countries, for all their best intentions in fighting emerging pathogens, haven’t really done their due diligence to find out what exactly is circulating, and where,” said Stoler, who is collaborating with the University of Ghana’s West African Centre for Cell Biology of Infectious Pathogens on a project to improve diagnosis, prevention, and control of febrile illnesses in sub-Saharan Africa.

“I like the metaphor of the United States healthcare system where we don’t emphasize preventive care and take a more reactive approach to medicine in our fee-for-service system,” Stoler said. “Our Zika control efforts are a similar band-aid, as they do not address the root causes of infectious outbreaks. We need to diagnose and study emerging diseases in their place of origin, and learn about how they transmit so that when something like Zika inevitably jumps across the continent, we can say, ‘Hey, we’ve seen that before. We know what it does. Here’s what we need to do.’ ”


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