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- Questions About Raises, Shuttle Fees Top Administrators Forum
A UAMS Update article about Meet Your Administrator”
- Gruenwald Is New U.S. Citizen
Michael Gruenwald becomes U.S. citizen
- Gruenwald Is New U.S. Citizen
Michael Gruenwald becomes U.S. citizen
- Doughnut Sale to Help UAMS Psychiatry Youth Program
A UAMS Update article about a bake sale
- Call-in Announcements, Forums Will Give Employees More Information
A UAMS Update article about plans to improve communication between administration and employees of UAMS Medical Center
- IT Help Desk 400,000th Call Sweepstakes
IT Help Desk 400,000th Call Sweepstates
- The UAMS Help Desk Today - Ten Years Later
The UAMS Help Desk Today - Ten Years Later
- Free Tickets for UAMS Nights at Ray Winder Field
A UAMS Update article about UAMS Night with the Travelers
- ARIA Training Sessions May 19 - June 27 at UAMS
A UAMS Update article about May 19 - June 27 training sessions
- Human Research Forum Is May 21
A UAMS Update article about human research Q & A
- Accolades, May 2003
Accolades to UAMS faculty and staff
- GCRC Deadline Changed to July 1 for Grant Proposals
A UAMS Update article about GCRC pilot grants
- History of the Help Desk
- Watch, Look & Listen: Preview of New UAMS Public Service Campaign
- Forum to Discuss Impact of HIPAA on Research
Update article about HIPAA and research at UAMS
- Human Research Q and A Forum June 27
A UAMS Update article about the human research forum
- Emailed Version of UAMS Notice of Privacy Practices
UAMS Notice of Privacy Practices
- Free UAF Symposium Aug. 14-15 on Evolution of Human Diet
A UAMS Update article about a diet symposium at UAF
- Tom Butler is Arkansas Administrator of the Year
Tom Butler of UAMS Is Arkansas Administrator of the Year
- Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.*
Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.
- Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.*
Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.
- Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
- Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
- Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure®!
Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure!
- Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure®!
Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure!
- UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
- UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
- Pharmacy Professor Elected to American College of Clinical Pharmacy
Pharmacy Professor Elected to American College of Clinical Pharmacy
- Pharmaceutical Scientists, Graduate Students Meet at UAMS
Pharmaceutical Scientists, Graduate Students Meet at UAMS
- Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D., Ed.D., Is Interim Dean of College of Pharmacy
Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D., Ed.D., Is Interim Dean of College of Pharmacy
- New COPH Survey Research Expert Eager to Develop New Ways of Measuring Public Health
New COPH Survey Research Expert Eager to Develop New Ways of Measuring Public Health
- Ready, Set, Go! UAMS, KATV Launch Get Healthy Arkansas™
UAMS, KATV Launch Get Healthy Arkansas™
- William E. Golden, M.D., Re-elected to American College of Physicians Board of Regents
William E. Golden, M.D., Re-elected to American College of Physicians Board of Regents
- Free “Matters of the Heart” Seminar Aug. 23
Free “Matters of the Heart” Seminar Aug. 23
- Free “Matters of the Heart” Seminar Aug. 23
Free “Matters of the Heart” Seminar Aug. 23
- Clinical Trial at UAMS Demonstrates Effectiveness of Wart Treatment
LITTLE ROCK – A recent large-scale clinical trial at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) of an injection-based treatment for warts has drawn national attention for demonstrating that the procedure is effective not only against the injected wart but also for distant non-injected warts.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- Fifth-Grader Wins UAMS-Sponsored Essay Contest
MAY 25, 2005 | Allegra Green, a fifth-grader at Romine Elementary School, was named the top winner in the “Get Healthy Now…Even Kids” essay contest, sponsored by a group of University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine students in conjunction with the Arkansas Medical Association.
- Fifth-Grader Wins UAMS-Sponsored Essay Contest
MAY 25, 2005 | Allegra Green, a fifth-grader at Romine Elementary School, was named the top winner in the “Get Healthy Now…Even Kids” essay contest, sponsored by a group of University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine students in conjunction with the Arkansas Medical Association.
- Fifth-Grader Wins UAMS-Sponsored Essay Contest
MAY 25, 2005 | Allegra Green, a fifth-grader at Romine Elementary School, was named the top winner in the “Get Healthy Now…Even Kids” essay contest, sponsored by a group of University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine students in conjunction with the Arkansas Medical Association.
- UAMS Enlists Arkansas Company to Build, Market New Bicycle Exercise Trainer for Spine Injury Patients
MAY 31, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has signed a licensing agreement with a Siloam Springs company to manufacture the Motorized Bicycle Exercise Trainer developed by UAMS researchers that counters common side effects of spinal cord injuries.
- UAMS Enlists Arkansas Company to Build, Market New Bicycle Exercise Trainer for Spine Injury Patients
MAY 31, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has signed a licensing agreement with a Siloam Springs company to manufacture the Motorized Bicycle Exercise Trainer developed by UAMS researchers that counters common side effects of spinal cord injuries.
- UAMS Enlists Arkansas Company to Build, Market New Bicycle Exercise Trainer for Spine Injury Patients
MAY 31, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has signed a licensing agreement with a Siloam Springs company to manufacture the Motorized Bicycle Exercise Trainer developed by UAMS researchers that counters common side effects of spinal cord injuries.
- UAMS Performs Two Liver Transplants on Memorial Day
JUNE 1, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) organ transplant surgery team performed two liver transplants on Memorial Day, only 15 days after the state’s first liver transplant.
- UAMS Performs Two Liver Transplants on Memorial Day
JUNE 1, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) organ transplant surgery team performed two liver transplants on Memorial Day, only 15 days after the state’s first liver transplant.
- UAMS Performs Two Liver Transplants on Memorial Day
JUNE 1, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) organ transplant surgery team performed two liver transplants on Memorial Day, only 15 days after the state’s first liver transplant.
- UAMS Performs Two Liver Transplants on Memorial Day
JUNE 1, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) organ transplant surgery team performed two liver transplants on Memorial Day, only 15 days after the state’s first liver transplant.
- Smoller Invested as Hough Chair in Pathology at UAMS
JUNE 7, 2005 | “It takes three pathologists to make a chair – but it lasts forever.”
That poignant observation was made May 4, as the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) invested the inaugural Aubrey J. Hough Jr. M.D. Chair in Pathology.
- Smoller Invested as Hough Chair in Pathology at UAMS
JUNE 7, 2005 | “It takes three pathologists to make a chair – but it lasts forever.”
That poignant observation was made May 4, as the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) invested the inaugural Aubrey J. Hough Jr. M.D. Chair in Pathology.
- Smoller Invested as Hough Chair in Pathology at UAMS
JUNE 7, 2005 | “It takes three pathologists to make a chair – but it lasts forever.”
That poignant observation was made May 4, as the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) invested the inaugural Aubrey J. Hough Jr. M.D. Chair in Pathology.
- UAMS Hosts Nigerian Delegation for Health Care Discussion
JUNE 8, 2005 | A group of medical professionals and legislators from the African nation of Nigeria visited the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) in May to learn about health care education in the United States as well as diversity practices to improve the quality of care.
- UAMS Hosts Nigerian Delegation for Health Care Discussion
JUNE 8, 2005 | A group of medical professionals and legislators from the African nation of Nigeria visited the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) in May to learn about health care education in the United States as well as diversity practices to improve the quality of care.
- UAMS Hosts Nigerian Delegation for Health Care Discussion
JUNE 8, 2005 | A group of medical professionals and legislators from the African nation of Nigeria visited the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) in May to learn about health care education in the United States as well as diversity practices to improve the quality of care.
- UAMS Hosts Nigerian Delegation for Health Care Discussion
JUNE 8, 2005 | A group of medical professionals and legislators from the African nation of Nigeria visited the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) in May to learn about health care education in the United States as well as diversity practices to improve the quality of care.
- UAMS Opens Center for Addiction Research
LITTLE ROCK – Research studies are underway in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) new Center for Addiction Research, a collaborative effort between the Colleges of Medicine and Public Health to further the understanding of the addiction process and find ways to break the cycle.
- UAMS Opens Center for Addiction Research
LITTLE ROCK – Research studies are underway in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) new Center for Addiction Research, a collaborative effort between the Colleges of Medicine and Public Health to further the understanding of the addiction process and find ways to break the cycle.
- UAMS Opens Center for Addiction Research
LITTLE ROCK – Research studies are underway in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) new Center for Addiction Research, a collaborative effort between the Colleges of Medicine and Public Health to further the understanding of the addiction process and find ways to break the cycle.
- UAMS Teams Up to Promote Medical Careers for Disadvantaged Students
JUNE 14, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) recently teamed up to promote opportunities in medicine to a group of students from disadvantaged socio-economic backgrounds.
- UAMS Teams Up to Promote Medical Careers for Disadvantaged Students
JUNE 14, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) recently teamed up to promote opportunities in medicine to a group of students from disadvantaged socio-economic backgrounds.
- UAMS Teams Up to Promote Medical Careers for Disadvantaged Students
JUNE 14, 2005 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) recently teamed up to promote opportunities in medicine to a group of students from disadvantaged socio-economic backgrounds.
- UAMS Responds to State’s Need to Prepare for Terrorism
JUNE 16, 2005 | The threat of terrorism isn’t limited to big cities, which is why the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has already put together a plan to address any disaster, natural or manmade.
- UAMS Responds to State’s Need to Prepare for Terrorism
JUNE 16, 2005 | The threat of terrorism isn’t limited to big cities, which is why the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has already put together a plan to address any disaster, natural or manmade.
- UAMS Responds to State’s Need to Prepare for Terrorism
JUNE 16, 2005 | The threat of terrorism isn’t limited to big cities, which is why the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has already put together a plan to address any disaster, natural or manmade.
- UAMS Brings Guest Faculty for Teacher Education Program
June 22, 2005 | In the 15 years that the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has provided professional development to schoolteachers it has never looked outside the state for assistance.
Until now.
- UAMS Brings Guest Faculty for Teacher Education Program
June 22, 2005 | In the 15 years that the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has provided professional development to schoolteachers it has never looked outside the state for assistance.
Until now.
- UAMS Brings Guest Faculty for Teacher Education Program
June 22, 2005 | In the 15 years that the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has provided professional development to schoolteachers it has never looked outside the state for assistance.
Until now.
- UAMS Cytotechnology Program Produces Cellular Puzzle Solvers
JULY 5, 2005 | Perched over her microscope, cytotechnologist Jennifer Odle works to identify cancerous or potentially cancerous cells lurking amid healthy cells on a slide in the cytopathology lab at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS Cytotechnology Program Produces Cellular Puzzle Solvers
JULY 5, 2005 | Perched over her microscope, cytotechnologist Jennifer Odle works to identify cancerous or potentially cancerous cells lurking amid healthy cells on a slide in the cytopathology lab at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS Cytotechnology Program Produces Cellular Puzzle Solvers
JULY 5, 2005 | Perched over her microscope, cytotechnologist Jennifer Odle works to identify cancerous or potentially cancerous cells lurking amid healthy cells on a slide in the cytopathology lab at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS Cytotechnology Program Produces Cellular Puzzle Solvers
JULY 5, 2005 | Perched over her microscope, cytotechnologist Jennifer Odle works to identify cancerous or potentially cancerous cells lurking amid healthy cells on a slide in the cytopathology lab at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- Reis Accepts Highest UAMS Honor; Udupa Reflects on Journey
JULY 8, 2005 | Kodetthoor Bhaskara Udupa, Ph.D., faced his admiring colleagues and family from the podium and reflected briefly on his improbable journey.
- Reis Accepts Highest UAMS Honor; Udupa Reflects on Journey
JULY 8, 2005 | Kodetthoor Bhaskara Udupa, Ph.D., faced his admiring colleagues and family from the podium and reflected briefly on his improbable journey.
- Reis Accepts Highest UAMS Honor; Udupa Reflects on Journey
JULY 8, 2005 | Kodetthoor Bhaskara Udupa, Ph.D., faced his admiring colleagues and family from the podium and reflected briefly on his improbable journey.
- White Coat Ceremony Brings New Students, Proud Families
AUG. 31, 2005 | Happenstance had nothing to do with Laura Conley’s attendance at the recent White Coat Reception and Ceremony at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine.
- White Coat Ceremony Brings New Students, Proud Families
AUG. 31, 2005 | Happenstance had nothing to do with Laura Conley’s attendance at the recent White Coat Reception and Ceremony at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine.
- White Coat Ceremony Brings New Students, Proud Families
AUG. 31, 2005 | Happenstance had nothing to do with Laura Conley’s attendance at the recent White Coat Reception and Ceremony at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine.
- Snyder Urges Doctors’ Involvement in Public Policy
SEPT. 8, 2005 | Congressman Vic Snyder, M.D., of Little Rock recently urged doctors at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) to become more involved in national policies that affect their profession.
- Snyder Urges Doctors’ Involvement in Public Policy
SEPT. 8, 2005 | Congressman Vic Snyder, M.D., of Little Rock recently urged doctors at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) to become more involved in national policies that affect their profession.
- Snyder Urges Doctors’ Involvement in Public Policy
SEPT. 8, 2005 | Congressman Vic Snyder, M.D., of Little Rock recently urged doctors at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) to become more involved in national policies that affect their profession.
- UAMS Receives $4.5 Million Grant to Study Addiction Treatments
LITTLE ROCK – The Center for Addiction Research at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has received a $4.5 million grant to continue studies on substance abuse and computerized treatment.
- UAMS Receives $4.5 Million Grant to Study Addiction Treatments
LITTLE ROCK – The Center for Addiction Research at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) has received a $4.5 million grant to continue studies on substance abuse and computerized treatment.
- UAMS Surgeon to Lead NIH Study Section
LITTLE ROCK – Martin Hauer-Jensen, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of surgery and pathology at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), has been selected chairman of the Radiation Biology Study Section of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
- UAMS Surgeon to Lead NIH Study Section
LITTLE ROCK – Martin Hauer-Jensen, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of surgery and pathology at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), has been selected chairman of the Radiation Biology Study Section of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
- Pediatric Heart Specialist Jaquiss Begins Work at ACH, UAMS
Nov. 3, 2005 | Robert D.B. “Jake” Jaquiss, M.D., of Milwaukee, looked around the country and saw few opportunities better than that offered at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and Arkansas Children’s Hospital as chief of pediatric and congenital cardiac surgery.
- Pediatric Heart Specialist Jaquiss Begins Work at ACH, UAMS
Nov. 3, 2005 | Robert D.B. “Jake” Jaquiss, M.D., of Milwaukee, looked around the country and saw few opportunities better than that offered at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and Arkansas Children’s Hospital as chief of pediatric and congenital cardiac surgery.
- Pediatric Heart Specialist Jaquiss Begins Work at ACH, UAMS
Nov. 3, 2005 | Robert D.B. “Jake” Jaquiss, M.D., of Milwaukee, looked around the country and saw few opportunities better than that offered at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and Arkansas Children’s Hospital as chief of pediatric and congenital cardiac surgery.
- Good Storytelling Essential to Good Medicine, Television Producer Says
NOV. 30, 2005 | At the close of his lecture to University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) physicians, staff and guests, Neal Baer, M.D., challenged the group to use their own lives to inspire social change.
- Good Storytelling Essential to Good Medicine, Television Producer Says
NOV. 30, 2005 | At the close of his lecture to University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) physicians, staff and guests, Neal Baer, M.D., challenged the group to use their own lives to inspire social change.
- Good Storytelling Essential to Good Medicine, Television Producer Says
NOV. 30, 2005 | At the close of his lecture to University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) physicians, staff and guests, Neal Baer, M.D., challenged the group to use their own lives to inspire social change.
- UAMS Names Nationally Recognized Physician to Lead Emergency Medicine Department
LITTLE ROCK – Marvin Leibovich, M.D., nationally recognized for his work in the field of emergency medicine, has been named chairman of the Department of Emergency Medicine in the College of Medicine at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS Names Nationally Recognized Physician to Lead Emergency Medicine Department
LITTLE ROCK – Marvin Leibovich, M.D., nationally recognized for his work in the field of emergency medicine, has been named chairman of the Department of Emergency Medicine in the College of Medicine at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS Guest Lecturer Says U.S. Health Care System Must Change
DEC. 7, 2005 | Health care in the United States must change drastically to compete in a global market, Robert Brook, M.D., vice president, corporate fellow and director of health for RAND Corporation said during a guest lecture at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS Guest Lecturer Says U.S. Health Care System Must Change
DEC. 7, 2005 | Health care in the United States must change drastically to compete in a global market, Robert Brook, M.D., vice president, corporate fellow and director of health for RAND Corporation said during a guest lecture at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS Guest Lecturer Says U.S. Health Care System Must Change
DEC. 7, 2005 | Health care in the United States must change drastically to compete in a global market, Robert Brook, M.D., vice president, corporate fellow and director of health for RAND Corporation said during a guest lecture at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS’ Anderson Honored By American Lung Association
LITTLE ROCK – A nationally recognized lung health researcher at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), Paula Anderson, M.D., recently received the Emily Bissel Medical Excellence Award from the American Lung Association of Arkansas.
- UAMS’ Anderson Honored By American Lung Association
LITTLE ROCK – A nationally recognized lung health researcher at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), Paula Anderson, M.D., recently received the Emily Bissel Medical Excellence Award from the American Lung Association of Arkansas.
- Judith McClain Named UAMS Medical Alumni Affairs Director
LITTLE ROCK – Fort Smith native Judith McClain has been named executive director of medical alumni affairs at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine.
- Judith McClain Named UAMS Medical Alumni Affairs Director
LITTLE ROCK – Fort Smith native Judith McClain has been named executive director of medical alumni affairs at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine.
- Richard Evans, Joint Reconstruction Surgeon, Joins UAMS
LITTLE ROCK – Richard Evans, M.D., a joint reconstruction surgeon, has joined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as a hip and knee replacement specialist, taking over the clinical practice of Carl Nelson, M.D., a renowned surgeon who died last year.
- Richard Evans, Joint Reconstruction Surgeon, Joins UAMS
LITTLE ROCK – Richard Evans, M.D., a joint reconstruction surgeon, has joined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as a hip and knee replacement specialist, taking over the clinical practice of Carl Nelson, M.D., a renowned surgeon who died last year.
- UAMS Commemorates Life, Work of Martin Luther King Jr.
FEB. 9, 2006 | Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had a vision of equality of opportunity and political and economic justice for all people, Pulaski County Circuit Judge Marion Humphrey said at a University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) tribute to the civil rights leader.
- UAMS Campus Skyline Changes in 2008
UAMS Campus Skyline Changes in 2008
- UAMS Cafeteria Announces Holiday Schedule
UAMS Cafeteria Announces Holiday Schedule
- UAMS Cafeteria Announces Holiday Schedule
UAMS Cafeteria Announces Holiday Schedule
- Rye Receives National Respiratory Care Educator Award
LITTLE ROCK – Kathy Rye, Ed.D., a faculty member in the respiratory care program at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), recently received the Specialty Practitioner of the Year Award from the Education Section of the American Association for Respiratory Care (AARC).
- Rye Receives National Respiratory Care Educator Award
LITTLE ROCK – Kathy Rye, Ed.D., a faculty member in the respiratory care program at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), recently received the Specialty Practitioner of the Year Award from the Education Section of the American Association for Respiratory Care (AARC).
- CHRP Remembers Bittengle
Dec. 23, 2008 | Colleagues and students of UAMS assistant professor Joseph Bittengle said they will miss his professionalism, his love of teaching and his humor.
- Logician EMR Database to Be Offline Tonight, 7 p.m. - 8 p.m.
Logician EMR Database to Be Offline Tonight, 7 p.m. - 8 p.m.
- Logician EMR Database to Be Offline Tonight, 7 p.m. - 8 p.m.
Logician EMR Database to Be Offline Tonight, 7 p.m. - 8 p.m.
- JEI December 2008 Outlook Newsletter
- UAMS and Red Cross to Sponsor Training for Family Caregivers
LITTLE ROCK – Caring for an elderly or ill family member can present many challenges. The Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and the American Red Cross of Greater Arkansas are offering nine free classes for caregivers with topics ranging from healthy eating to dementia.
- Office of Human Resources Announces New Employee Self Service Kiosks
Office of Human Resources Announces New Employee Self Service Kiosks
- Office of Human Resources Announces New Employee Self Service Kiosks
Office of Human Resources Announces New Employee Self Service Kiosks
- Registration Now Open for Rasco Symposium on Colorectal Cancer
Registration Now Open for Rasco Symposium on Colorectal Cancer
- Registration Now Open for Rasco Symposium on Colorectal Cancer
Registration Now Open for Rasco Symposium on Colorectal Cancer
- UAMS Voicemail System to be Offline on Tuesday, 8 p.m.-Midnight
UAMS Voicemail System to be Offline on Tuesday, 8 p.m.-Midnight
- UAMS Voicemail System to be Offline on Tuesday, 8 p.m.-Midnight
UAMS Voicemail System to be Offline on Tuesday, 8 p.m.-Midnight
- UAMS Voicemail System to be Offline on Tuesday, 8 p.m.-Midnight
UAMS Voicemail System to be Offline on Tuesday, 8 p.m.-Midnight
- Patient Move Volunteers Needed
Patient Move Volunteers Needed
- Turnage Named UAMS Surgery Department Chairman
Jan. 6, 2009 | Richard H. Turnage, M.D., who has led surgery programs in Texas and Louisiana, has joined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as chairman of the Department of Surgery.
- Turnage Named UAMS Surgery Department Chairman
Jan. 6, 2009 | Richard H. Turnage, M.D., who has led surgery programs in Texas and Louisiana, has joined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as chairman of the Department of Surgery.
- Turnage Named UAMS Surgery Department Chairman
Jan. 6, 2009 | Richard H. Turnage, M.D., who has led surgery programs in Texas and Louisiana, has joined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) as chairman of the Department of Surgery.
- Fidelity Investments Representative on Campus Jan. 15-16
Fidelity Investments Representative on Campus Jan. 15-16
- Fidelity Investments Representative on Campus Jan. 15-16
Fidelity Investments Representative on Campus Jan. 15-16
- Patient Receives Stents and Bypass – a UAMS First
Patient Receives Stents and Bypass – a UAMS First
- UAMS Dance Class Schedule Set for January
UAMS Dance Class Schedule Set for January
- UAMS Dance Class Schedule Set for January
UAMS Dance Class Schedule Set for January
- A Message About Your Annual Tuberculosis Screening
A Message About Your Annual Tuberculosis Screening
- A Message About Your Annual Tuberculosis Screening
A Message About Your Annual Tuberculosis Screening
- UAMS Prepares for Move into New Hospital
UAMS Prepares for Move into New Hospital
- UAMS Seeks Patient Move Volunteers
UAMS Seeks Patient Move Volunteers
- UAMS Seeks Patient Move Volunteers
UAMS Seeks Patient Move Volunteers
- Presidential Inauguration Events to be Broadcast on Campus
Presidential Inauguration Events to be Broadcast on Campus
- Presidential Inauguration Events to be Broadcast on Campus
Presidential Inauguration Events to be Broadcast on Campus
- Free Workshops on Lead-Safe Practices to be Held in North Little Rock on Jan. 21, 26
LITTLE ROCK – A coalition of public health advocates that includes the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), will host a pair of free workshops this month in North Little Rock on reducing health risks associated with lead-based paint, targeting parents along with contractors who are renovating old homes.
- Free Workshops on Lead-Safe Practices to be Held in North Little Rock on Jan. 21, 26
LITTLE ROCK – A coalition of public health advocates that includes the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), will host a pair of free workshops this month in North Little Rock on reducing health risks associated with lead-based paint, targeting parents along with contractors who are renovating old homes.
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JULY 1, 2005 | Addiction, whether from drugs, tobacco or alcohol, ruins lives and has a huge impact on rural communities in Arkansas. Yet, within a state battling demons like methamphetamine, there is a glimmer of hope. The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) new Center for Addiction Research has begun clinical trials to unlock the mysteries of substance abuse.
“Our mission is to become one of the nation’s premier centers on addiction,” said Warren K. Bickel, Ph.D., the new center’s director and professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences in the UAMS College of Medicine. Bickel said he sees the new center incorporating almost every field of study on the UAMS campus, and influencing how treatment for addiction is handled worldwide.
Bickel is a national authority on examining the underlying behavioral processes of drug dependence in humans and has conducted research that examines novel cost-effective ways to deliver treatment. He holds the Wilbur D. Mills Chair in Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Prevention at UAMS.
“The Center for Addiction Research will allow the UAMS Department of Psychiatry to increase its cutting-edge research that will provide the basis for future treatments for addiction and mental illness,” said G. Richard Smith, M.D., professor and chairman of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the UAMS College of Medicine.
Joining Bickel is Alison Oliveto, Ph.D., professor and vice chair for research in psychiatry and behavioral sciences in the UAMS College of Medicine as well as a senior scientist in the new center. Oliveto previously was on the research faculty at Yale where she served as scientific director of the Yale Medications Development Research Center. At Yale, she helped develop and test new medications for the treatment of substance abuse. She has an active research program that examines the behavioral and cognitive effects of designer, or club, drugs as well as medications to treat cocaine dependence.
One of Bickel’s projects, a continuation of studies he started at the University of Vermont in Burlington, involves computerized therapy for drug addicts. Bickel said that in today’s information age, people are more comfortable with computers, and he has found in previous studies that it works at least as well as regular meetings with a substance abuse counselor, and is more cost effective.
“Most communities don’t have many resources available for substance abuse. We are looking at ways to increase treatment availability, especially in rural states. By using information technology, we are able to extend the reach of programs and provide better access,” he said.
In the computer therapy study, participants will go to a clinic and be asked to provide a urine sample. They then will access a computer program using an identification card that contains their unique identification.
If they have used drugs recently, as indicated by the urine sample, the computer program will coach participants on ways to avoid drugs. If they are negative for drug use, the program takes them through 49 modules which improve skill development and problem solving techniques. The modules help participants interact with others and modify their behavior. Each module takes 20 to 40 minutes to complete.
The clinical trial has three parts: one group will have the computer-based treatment three days a week with a face-to-face counseling session every two weeks, the second group will have sessions with a counselor three days a week and a control group will have sessions with a case manager periodically, Bickel said.
“One of the challenges is that treatments are often laborious for drug addicts to adopt in the real world,” he said. Some of Bickel’s more prominent work has involved measuring how addicts discount the future. While people without addictions may plan an average of 4.7 years in the future, Bickel’s previous studies with heroin addicts show they typically plan for about nine days into the future.
“If you’re only worried about the next nine days, you’re not worried about sharing dirty needles,” he said. This behavior, which is seen in varying degrees in those addicted to drugs, alcohol and even tobacco, makes it difficult for treatment programs to take effect because the addict cannot comprehend making long-term goals to create a better life. One positive observation, Bickel said, is that the further a person progresses from their addiction, the more they begin planning for the future like a person without an addiction.
To study the actual areas of the brain that correlate with discounting the future, Bickel has teamed with Diana Lindquist, assistant professor of radiology in the UAMS College of Medicine, to use brain imaging to show which part of the brain is engaged when people with addictions make decisions. A previous study determined that when people without addictions make general choices, a more primitive part of the brain becomes engaged, but when they make decisions about the future, a more modern part of the brain is engaged. It is possible, Bickel said, that addicts are making choices about the future in the more primitive part of the brain, which may not be able to rationalize beyond basic survival instinct.
“This is a great opportunity to collaborate and determine how addiction changes brain function as it invokes short term vs. long term gain,” he said.
For Oliveto, studies focus more on the pharmacology of drugs of abuse and how different medications may help relieve the powerful draw of addiction.
She said opiate-based drugs, like heroin, have well-established medical substitutes that can relieve withdrawal symptoms while the person receives therapy and learns to change his behavior. But for many drugs, there are no medical substitutes to quell the addictive urges.
“As long as I’ve been in this field we’ve been looking for a solution to cocaine addiction,” she said. She has already started recruitment for one trial on dual opiate and cocaine addiction. Another clinical trial will begin very soon on cocaine addiction and depression. This trial, which will place participants in a residential treatment center for two weeks and then continue therapy on an outpatient basis, will look closely at the time and percentage of relapse while participants are being medicated with various therapeutic drug combinations, including the antidepressant sertraline (Zoloft), an anti-convulsant and a placebo. Oliveto said that while most trials look closely at the initiation of treatment, few actually focus on relapse, which could hold clues on how and why addicts fall back into their old habits.
Bickel is in the process of recruiting well established investigators in the field of psychiatry to the new center at UAMS. He said he anticipates the work they will accomplish will have a far reaching influence, not just at UAMS, but across the state and region.
People interested in participating in the clinical trials can call 501-526-7969. All calls are confidential.
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