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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
- Photo Album: Stephens Institute Was a Highlight of Medicine Alumni Reunion
Photo Album: Stephens Institute Was a Highlight of Medicine Alumni Reunion
- Kids First in Fort Smith Celebrated Fourth in Style
Kids First in Fort Smith Celebrated Fourth in Style
- Class of 1948 Dedicates Endowment to Excellence in Education
Class of 1948 Dedicates Endowment to Excellence in Education
- 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™
- Orthopaedic Surgery Resident To Receive Community Service Award
Orthopaedic Surgery Resident Sparks will receive the M. Joycelyn Elders, M.D., Award for Community Service from the UAMS College of Medicine later this month.
- UAMS To Present Bioterrorism Talk through TV Hook-ups
Infectious disease specialist at UAMS will brief the public on bioterrorism via television hook-ups on Friday, November 9, 2001.
- UAMS To Present Bioterrorism Talk through TV Hook-ups
Infectious disease specialist at UAMS will brief the public on bioterrorism via television hook-ups on Friday, November 9, 2001.
- UAMS To Present Bioterrorism Talk through TV Hook-ups
Infectious disease specialist at UAMS will brief the public on bioterrorism via television hook-ups on Friday, November 9, 2001.
- Here’s to Your Health: Anthrax
HTYH radio program series about: Anthrax
- Here’s to Your Health: Anthrax
HTYH radio program series about: Anthrax
- Here’s to Your Health: Anthrax
HTYH radio program series about: Anthrax
- AAMC Honors Chancellor for Distinguished Service
The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) has honored UAMS Chancellor Wilson for distinguished service.
- AAMC Honors Chancellor for Distinguished Service
The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) has honored UAMS Chancellor Wilson for distinguished service.
- Pictures of Runners To Be on Exhibit
An exhibit of photographs by UAMS photographer Johnpaul Jones, Jr., will hang in the UAMS Library in November and December, 2001.
- Pictures of Runners To Be on Exhibit
An exhibit of photographs by UAMS photographer Johnpaul Jones, Jr., will hang in the UAMS Library in November and December, 2001.
- Here’s to Your Health: Refractive Eye Surgery #1
HTYH radio program series about: Refractive Eye Surgery
- Here’s to Your Health: Refractive Eye Surgery #1
HTYH radio program series about: Refractive Eye Surgery
- Here’s to Your Health: Refractive Eye Surgery #1
HTYH radio program series about: Refractive Eye Surgery
- Here’s to Your Health: Refractive Eye Surgery #1
HTYH radio program series about: Refractive Eye Surgery
- Northwest AHEC Hosts Reception for UAMS Leaders
Health care leaders in NW Arkansas gathered at the AHEC/NW to meet with Chancellor Wilson of UAMS.
- Northwest AHEC Hosts Reception for UAMS Leaders
Health care leaders in NW Arkansas gathered at the AHEC/NW to meet with Chancellor Wilson of UAMS.
- Here’s to Your Health: The Guesthouse Dream
HTYH radio program series about: Guesthouse
- Here’s to Your Health: The Guesthouse Dream
HTYH radio program series about: Guesthouse
- Here’s to Your Health: The Guesthouse Dream
HTYH radio program series about: Guesthouse
- UAMS Professor Organizes Community Concert for Peace, Diversity
K. S. Anand, MBBS, D.Phil., of UAMS and other faculty members have organized a community concert, “My Parents: My Treasure,” at Robinson Center Music Hall Thursday, December 20, 2001.
- UAMS Professor Organizes Community Concert for Peace, Diversity
K. S. Anand, MBBS, D.Phil., of UAMS and other faculty members have organized a community concert, “My Parents: My Treasure,” at Robinson Center Music Hall Thursday, December 20, 2001.
- President of Fraternal Order of Eagles Visits Cancer Center
Williams-Clark, grand madam president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, visited the Arkansas Cancer Research Center at UAMS and announced that the organization has designated ACRC as a national charity.
- President of Fraternal Order of Eagles Visits Cancer Center
Williams-Clark, grand madam president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, visited the Arkansas Cancer Research Center at UAMS and announced that the organization has designated ACRC as a national charity.
- President of Fraternal Order of Eagles Visits Cancer Center
Williams-Clark, grand madam president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, visited the Arkansas Cancer Research Center at UAMS and announced that the organization has designated ACRC as a national charity.
- UAMS Cardiologist to Run in Olympic Torch Relay
Saucedo won the honor of serving as a torchbearer during a stretch of the two-month relay to the 2002 Olympic Winter Games in Salt Lake City.
- UAMS Cardiologist to Run in Olympic Torch Relay
Saucedo won the honor of serving as a torchbearer during a stretch of the two-month relay to the 2002 Olympic Winter Games in Salt Lake City.
- Here’s to Your Health: Recreational Athletic Injuries
HTYH radio program series about: Recreational Athletic Injuries
- Here’s to Your Health: Recreational Athletic Injuries
HTYH radio program series about: Recreational Athletic Injuries
- Here’s to Your Health: Recreational Athletic Injuries
HTYH radio program series about: Recreational Athletic Injuries
- Campus Toy Drive Underway
UAMS employees can donate to a campus Toys for Tots Drive until December 19, 2001.
- Campus Toy Drive Underway
UAMS employees can donate to a campus Toys for Tots Drive until December 19, 2001.
- Here’s to Your Health: Holiday Blues
HTYH radio program series about: Holiday Blues
- Here’s to Your Health: Holiday Blues
HTYH radio program series about: Holiday Blues
- Here’s to Your Health: Holiday Blues
HTYH radio program series about: Holiday Blues
- Here’s to Your Health: Holiday Blues
HYTH radio program series about: Holiday Blues
- Here’s to Your Health: Holiday Blues
HYTH radio program series about: Holiday Blues
- Here’s to Your Health: Holiday Blues
HYTH radio program series about: Holiday Blues
- Campus Inclement Weather Policy
Campus Inclement Weather Policy
- Novel plasma biomarker and marker profiles for analysis of metastatic disease: A unique fragment of parathyroid hormone related protein predicts breast metastasis to bone (11-09)
Novel biomarker profile for the management of metastisis to bone of patients with breast cancer.
- Novel plasma biomarker and marker profiles for analysis of metastatic disease: A unique fragment of parathyroid hormone related protein predicts breast metastasis to bone (11-09)
Novel biomarker profile for the management of metastisis to bone of patients with breast cancer.
- Novel plasma biomarker and marker profiles for analysis of metastatic disease: A unique fragment of parathyroid hormone related protein predicts breast metastasis to bone (11-09)
Novel biomarker profile for the management of metastisis to bone of patients with breast cancer.
- Gray’s Anomaly: A Source of Empowerment
Feb. 8, 2012 | “I’ll trim it so it’s not so bulky,” James Y. Suen, M.D., said as he folded, then snipped a tiny edge of gauze off before he placed it on his patient’s right jaw. He has cared for 23-year-old Jasmine Gray ever since she was 11 when she traveled from Memphis, Tenn. to see him after first being misdiagnosed.
- Need Something Sweet for Your Valentine?
Need Something Sweet for Your Valentine?
- Need Something Sweet for Your Valentine?
Need Something Sweet for Your Valentine?
- Code Moo Now Open
Code Moo Now Open
- Code Moo Now Open
Code Moo Now Open
- Sign Up for the UAMS House of Delegates Relay for Life Team
UAMS House of Delegates Relay for Life Team
- Sign Up for the UAMS House of Delegates Relay for Life Team
UAMS House of Delegates Relay for Life Team
- Overwhelming Response to SmartCare
Overwhelming Response to SmartCare
- Overwhelming Response to SmartCare
Overwhelming Response to SmartCare
- Celebrating African American Women Firsts
Celebrating African American Women Firsts
- Celebrating African American Women Firsts
Celebrating African American Women Firsts
- Nutrition Department Hosts Food Drive
Nutrition Department Hosts Food Drive
- Nutrition Department Hosts Food Drive
Nutrition Department Hosts Food Drive
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. 11-11
Treatment of cardiovascular diseases, heart attack and stroke remain leading causes of death in the world, affecting close to 15 million individuals per year. Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. 11-11
Treatment of cardiovascular diseases, heart attack and stroke remain leading causes of death in the world, affecting close to 15 million individuals per year. Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. 11-11
Treatment of cardiovascular diseases, heart attack and stroke remain leading causes of death in the world, affecting close to 15 million individuals per year. Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
The present invention is a method of in vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. The Photo Acoustic technique based on detection of laser−induced acoustic waves provides greater sensitivity and spatial resolution in deeper tissue compared to the other optical modalities. In vivo multicolor flow cytometry, negative and positive PA contrasts integrated with focused ultrasound has potential for dynamic study of various clots directly in the bloodstream of superficial microvessels associated with different diseases (e.g., cardiovascular disorder, cancer metastasis, or infection) and their treatment (e.g., stents, implants, drugs) which otherwise could not be detected with existing techniques.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
The present invention is a method of in vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. The Photo Acoustic technique based on detection of laser−induced acoustic waves provides greater sensitivity and spatial resolution in deeper tissue compared to the other optical modalities. In vivo multicolor flow cytometry, negative and positive PA contrasts integrated with focused ultrasound has potential for dynamic study of various clots directly in the bloodstream of superficial microvessels associated with different diseases (e.g., cardiovascular disorder, cancer metastasis, or infection) and their treatment (e.g., stents, implants, drugs) which otherwise could not be detected with existing techniques.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
The present invention is a method of in vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. The Photo Acoustic technique based on detection of laser−induced acoustic waves provides greater sensitivity and spatial resolution in deeper tissue compared to the other optical modalities. In vivo multicolor flow cytometry, negative and positive PA contrasts integrated with focused ultrasound has potential for dynamic study of various clots directly in the bloodstream of superficial microvessels associated with different diseases (e.g., cardiovascular disorder, cancer metastasis, or infection) and their treatment (e.g., stents, implants, drugs) which otherwise could not be detected with existing techniques.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
The present invention is a method of in vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. The Photo Acoustic technique based on detection of laser−induced acoustic waves provides greater sensitivity and spatial resolution in deeper tissue compared to the other optical modalities. In vivo multicolor flow cytometry, negative and positive PA contrasts integrated with focused ultrasound has potential for dynamic study of various clots directly in the bloodstream of superficial microvessels associated with different diseases (e.g., cardiovascular disorder, cancer metastasis, or infection) and their treatment (e.g., stents, implants, drugs) which otherwise could not be detected with existing techniques.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
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DEC. 6, 2001 | Bettye Caldwell, Ph.D., professor emeritus at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), recently received one of early childhood education’s most prestigious awards.
Dr. Caldwell, retired from the faculty of the Department of Pediatrics in the UAMS College of Medicine, accepted the 2001 Dolley Madison Award for Outstanding Lifelong Contribution to the Development and Well-being of Very Young Children and Their Families in San Diego last week.
Previous recipients of the Madison Award include Anna Freud, the psychoanalyst and daughter of Sigmund Freud; Benjamin Spock, M.D., the world-famous pediatrician and author of Baby and Child Care; Urie Bronfenbrenner, Ph.D., one of the world’s leading theorists of developmental psychology; and Edward Zigler, Ph.D., the architect of the federal Head Start program.
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 Bettye Caldwell, Ph.D.
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Zero to Three, the National Center for Infants, Toddlers and Families, presented the award to Dr. Caldwell at its National Training Institute in San Diego Dec. 1.
The award is named in honor of former First Lady Dolley Madison, who established the first federally funded child welfare program, a home for orphans of the War of 1812.
Zero to Three is a national, nonprofit organization located in Washington, D.C., dedicated to advancing the healthy development of babies and young children. Founded in 1977 by top developmental experts, the organization disseminates key developmental information, trains providers, promotes model approaches and standards of practice, and works to increase public awareness about the significance of the first three years of life.
Dr. Caldwell is a past president of the National Association for the Education of Young Children and is internationally recognized for her research on the relationship between home environment and cognitive development in very young children.
Zero to Three praised Dr. Caldwell as “a passionate and practical advocate for infants, toddlers, and their families.” The organization’s full statement in recognition of Dr. Caldwell follows:
Bettye Caldwell is a woman who is typically ahead of her time – usually by about 30 years. In the early 1960s, she and Julius Richmond studied the experiences of infants and toddlers in low-income families. They concluded that high-quality infant/toddler child care, combined with ongoing support for families, might yield important emotional and cognitive gains for the children. Longitudinal findings from the Syracuse University Family Development Research Program proved them right. Then, in 1994, Bettye and her colleagues on the Advisory Committee on Services for Families with Infants and Toddlers incorporated these insights into the plans for Early Head Start.
Bettye Caldwell believes that “direct observation is the best way to learn something.” Her Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment – known everywhere as “the HOME” – has helped researchers and practitioners alike become keen observers of the elements of a supportive home environment for young children – sensitivity and responsivity, acceptance, organization, learning materials, involvement, and variety. In the more than 35 years since its original construction, Bettye’s HOME has been an open house. In addition to the more than 60 studies that Bettye and her colleagues have produced, more than 300 studies by other researchers have used the HOME.
Bettye Caldwell is a passionate and practical advocate for infants, toddlers, and their families. She knows the power of words. To capture the critical link between child care and education, she coined the term “educare.” It has caught on in Chicago and Colorado – stay tuned!
Bettye Caldwell has made outstanding contributions to the well-being of very young children through research, teaching, program development, advocacy, writing, and speaking – within the United States and internationally. Members of ZERO TO THREE’s extended family, as well as the growing infant/family field, honor the impact of her work and the inspiration of her vision.
Links on This Page
Zero to Three: http://www.zerotothree.org National Association for the Education of Young Children: http://www.naeyc.org/
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