24 Feb 2014

Professor Ruth Salom to lead pathology teaching at CCS

Professor Ruth Salom
Professor Ruth Salom has recently joined CCS on a part time basis to oversight the MBBS pathology teaching. Ruth is a Monash MBBS graduate and knows Monash and the Alfred well. She has over 20 years’ experience in working in health as a pathologist, a researcher and a health and life science manager. From 2008-2012 she was the Inaugural Executive Director of SA Pathology, an organization of 2000 staff and a budget of $300M. Ruth was also responsible for major research initiatives including the formation of the Centre of Cancer Biology and the establishment of the South Australian Genomics Facility. We look forward to Ruth's vast industry and commercial experience being applied in the Monash environment. For more detail see Ruth's LinkedIn profile.

Welcome to CCS's 2014 Honours & new PhD students

Undergraduate students
intently browsing at the
2013 CCS student infor-
mation evening
Central Clinical School has its highest ever enrolment of Honours students beginning this year, 34 in total (20 BBiomedSc and 14 BSc). We also have 2 Masters in Biomedical Science (Part 1), 19 Bachelor of Medical Science Honours (BMedSc(Hons)) students, and 9 midyear intake Honours students, bringing our total of currently enrolled one year program students to 64. We also have 15 new PhD students starting. We have orientations for general Honours and PhD students scheduled for Friday, 28 Feb and on Tuesday 4 March for the BMedSc(Hons) students.

23 Feb 2014

Improving quality information flow to medical practitioners: Living Systematic Review

Current and emerging health
knowledge ecosystems
Medical research output is doubling every five to seven years. The great boon of this body of work is its potential for dramatically improving  understanding of disease processes and treatment protocols. The curse is that busy practitioners who need comprehensive overviews of their field, don't have time to read everything. Systematic reviews analyse all the data for a given subject area, but are slow to complete because of the volume of material and rigour required. For the first time, a new process, called a living systematic review (LSR), has been proposed by a group of Monash University clinician-researchers based at the Alfred Hospital.

19 Feb 2014

Yoga @ AMREP, coordinated by BakerIDI

Baker IDI has facilitated yoga classes for staff and students at AMREP at an incredibly good price with some wonderful instructors, and is now in a position to open this up to other AMREP staff and students.  Classes are held in the meeting room on the 7th floor, Baker IDI Tower on:

17 Feb 2014

Perioperative medicine Masters program and short courses in high demand

Source: Cabrini Health
2014 is the second year of running the Master of Medicine (Perioperative Medicine) program through the Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine at the Alfred and Monash University, and Units are in high demand with 3 out of 4 of the core units already full for 2014. It has been very successful with positive feedback received from the first year intake of students. Admissions are currently open. The Perioperative Medicine short course is now in its fifth year, with intake numbers increasing. It has a substantial waitlist. Enrolments open in March. 2014 course dates, structure and fees are now online at www.periopmedicine.org.au

Participants sought: Hay fever treatment with oral tablet

Rye grass is a common
allergen
The Alfred Allergy Clinic is conducting a study of oral tablet treatment for hay fever. This new oral tablet dissolves in the mouth before swallowing, and the study will investigate it as an alternative to “allergy shots”. Researchers are seeking 40 patients of both Chinese and non-Chinese background. This treatment could pave the way to relief for the large number of Chinese people who develop grass pollen hay fever in Australia. See more about the Department of Allergy, Immunology and Respiratory medicine's research.

Michael Cangkrama: What underlies skin diseases?

Michael Cangkrama's research looks at skin development and diseases. His particular topic is "Analysis of the grainyhead-like genes in mammalian development and disease".  Michael is a PhD student in the Department of Medicine, in the Epidermal Development Laboratory and his supervisors are Professor Stephen Jane and Dr Charbel Darido.  To read more, visit: http://www.med.monash.edu.au/cecs/education/profiles/cangkrama.html
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