Health Science Center leads curricular effort to fight bioterrorism

TexasCares1_BODY
Dr. Hector Gonzalez, director of the Laredo Health Department, chairs the Texas C.A.R.E.s executive advisory board.

San Antonio (April 13, 2004) – Allied health professions students, who are critical future members of the health care team and have the potential to improve our nation’s response to acts of bioterrorism, natural disasters and other public health emergencies, are expected to benefit from training materials under development through “Texas C.A.R.E.s,” a statewide program coordinated by The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. C.A.R.E.s stands for “Curriculum for Allied Health Response to Emergencies.”

At a meeting in San Antonio this spring, Texas C.A.R.E.s participants from the Health Science Center, Dallas, Amarillo and Laredo adopted guidelines to develop training materials for allied health students in two-year, four-year and master’s degree programs. Texas C.A.R.E.s also will target high school students from a health science magnet program in Laredo and border health volunteers known as “promotoras.”

The Health Science Center is administering a two-year, $1.1 million bioterrorism curriculum development grant from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration. Marilyn Harrington, Ph.D., dean of the Health Science Center’s School of Allied Health Sciences, is the principal investigator. She enlisted the collaboration of the UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, UT Dallas, Amarillo College, the Health Science Magnet Program at Alexander High School in Laredo, and the Texas A&M University Center for Housing and Urban Development’s Promotoras Program, Central Rio Grande Region.

“The grant program will result in educational materials to be used throughout Texas and a cadre of certified volunteers and allied health personnel who are prepared to respond to public health emergencies within their communities,” Dr. Harrington said. “A required activity of the curriculum will be participation in an emergency exercise in each partnering city.”

An executive advisory board is composed of representatives from the health and fire departments of each city, bioterrorism response planners from Texas Department of Health Public Health Regions 1 (Amarillo), 2/3 (Dallas) and 8 (San Antonio), a National Disaster Medical System area manager and other members. Laredo Health Department Director Hector Gonzalez, M.D., M.P.H., chairs the board.

A separate curriculum advisory board is composed of members from each of the partners. Allied health professionals who might assist in the event of a public health emergency include emergency medical technicians, physician assistants, respiratory therapists, clinical laboratory scientists, physical therapists, occupational therapists, dental hygienists and dental laboratory technologists. The Health Science Center trains the majority of the professionals practicing these skill sets in South Texas.

Texas C.A.R.E.s will reach students in 21 disciplines through the collaboration of allied health sciences schools. Other disciplines are clinical nutrition, health information, nuclear medicine technology, orthotics/prosthetics, pharmacy technology, radiation therapy, radiology, rehabilitation counseling and surgical technology.

The spring meeting began with keynote speaker Michael Murphy, director of the Metropolitan Medical Response System, Emergency Medical Services Authority of Oklahoma City. Murphy shared his experience from two Oklahoma tragedies, the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995, and a high-intensity tornado that devastated the state on May 3, 1999.

“His message was the potential danger and disruption to the emergency management system posed by health care professionals offering help when it wasn’t solicited or when they don’t have background knowledge of emergency and disaster management,” said Elaine L. Demps, program coordinator for Texas C.A.R.E.s. “For example, in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building, a volunteer nurse died from head trauma received by going into the building. With proper training, however, health care providers can become useful and helpful volunteers; this is a focus of our grant.”

Professor receives award from American Society of Microbiology

Alderete_BODY
Alderete

San Antonio (April 13, 2004) – John F. Alderete, Ph.D., professor in the department of microbiology, has received the William A. Hinton Research Training Award from the American Society of Microbiology (ASM).

Dr. Alderete was presented this award in recognition of his commitment to helping minority students and professionals achieve their goals. He has mentored many graduate students, postdoctoral fellows and undergraduates. In addition to mentoring many pre-college students, he has also encouraged many middle and high school students to pursue a career in science through weekend science laboratory tours, career days and summer institutes.

The award is given in memory of William A. Hinton, who was a physician-research scientist and one of the first blacks to join the society.

Dr. Alderete earned bachelor’s degrees in mathematics and biology from the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology at Socorro, and a doctorate in microbiology from The University of Kansas at Lawrence. He is a Life Member and former president of the Society for the Advancement of Chicano and Native American Scientists (SACNAS) and a member of many other professional scientific societies. Dr. Alderete is the recipient of the 2003 Distinguished Scientist from the SACNAS, was honored as a Distinguished Nominee for the Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Award for Outstanding Contributions to Science in 2000 and was honored by being included as one of the best and brightest Hispanic scientists in the nation at the National Atomic Museum in Albuquerque, N.M. in 2001. He is recipient of the 1992 Premio Encuentro Award in Science and Technology, the highest honor bestowed upon an individual by the Hispanic community in America.

S.A. trauma partnership protects local trauma resources and enhances military preparedness

TraumaIA14_BODY
Francisco G. Cigarroa, M.D. (left), president of the Health Science Center, and Brig. Gen. Charles Bruce Green, M.D., commander, 59th Medical Wing, Wilford Hall Medical Center, Lackland Air Force Base, were among the leaders to sign the trauma institute agreement.

San Antonio (April 13, 2004) – The leaders of institutions operating San Antonio’s three Level I trauma centers and the president of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio recently announced the formation of the Trauma Institute of San Antonio, Texas (TRISAT), an innovative and intensive project to more effectively marshal the region’s Level I trauma resources. University Hospital, Wilford Hall Medical Center and Brooke Army Medical Center receive the most seriously injured patients from 71 emergency medical services (EMS) agencies and 30 hospitals located in a 22-county region of South/Central Texas.

TRISAT funding is from a $2.1 million congressional appropriation made possible in large part by the leadership of U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas. Making the announcement April 6 at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio were Francisco G. Cigarroa, M.D., president of the Health Science Center; Jeff Turner, president and CEO of the University Health System; Brig. Gen. Charles Bruce Green, M.D., commander, 59th Medical Wing, Wilford Hall Medical Center, Lackland Air Force Base; Brig. Gen. C. William Fox, M.D., commanding general, Brooke Army Medical Center and the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research; and Ronald M. Stewart, M.D., associate professor of surgery at the Health Science Center, director of trauma services at the University Health System and chairman of TRISAT’s board of directors.

“We are here today to improve one of our nation’s most precious assets – the Level I trauma services provided at Brooke Army Medical Center, Wilford Hall Medical Center, University Hospital and the U.S. Army Institute for Surgical Research by personnel in military and academic medicine,” Dr. Cigarroa said. “We thank Sen. Hutchison for her efforts on behalf of San Antonio and South Texas trauma patients who cannot speak for themselves and who will continue to receive the quality care they need when they need it.”

Wilford Hall Medical Center and Brooke Army Medical Center operate the only Level I trauma centers in the U.S. Department of Defense. As such, the military depends on them to train thousands of physicians for trauma service readiness during wartime. “Trauma injuries are the closest thing to what a soldier encounters on the battlefield,” Gen. Fox said. “Health care professionals gain valuable training experience that saves the lives of military personnel engaged in the global war on terrorism.”

Gen. Green echoed these sentiments, noting: “The trauma care in San Antonio is second to none and clearly prepares Air Force surgeons for their wartime missions.”

“Due to the unpredictable nature of trauma, life-saving services must be readily available at all times,” Turner said. “This is particularly challenging when you take into consideration today’s health care funding crisis and the massive size of the trauma region we serve. This formalized partnership strengthens our ability to respond to the immediate needs of trauma victims.”

A Level I trauma center provides “comprehensive trauma care, serves as a regional resource, and provides leadership in education, research, and system planning,” according to guidelines from the American College of Surgeons (ACS). A Level I center is required to have immediate availability of trauma surgeons, anesthesiologists, physician specialists, nurses and resuscitation equipment. Texas has 12 Level I centers.

World Health Day on April 7 focuses on deadly roads

STxInjuryPrevlogo_BODYSan Antonio (April 6, 2004) – Ours is a fast-paced and mobile society. We motor at dizzying speeds to keep our busy schedules and put our nation’s children at risk in the process. We jockey for the best position on our congested highways, where, with so many cars whizzing past us, it seems only a matter of time before we will hear the sickening sound of metal crashing into metal. One miscalculation is all it takes on the racetracks of our lives.

The World Health Organization seeks to heighten awareness of this global issue with the theme road safety for its annual World Health Day on April 7. One of its partners is the South Texas Injury Prevention Research Center (STIPRC) at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.

The STIPRC conducts a number of community-based programs that seek to make children safer on South Texas roadways, including bilingual programs to encourage proper restraint of young children in automobiles. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 40 percent of the children ages 4 and younger who died in motor vehicle crashes in 2002 were completely unrestrained.

The STIPRC also conducts drunken driving prevention programs. “We know that in San Antonio 40 percent of traffic fatalities are related to alcohol,” said Michelle Price, director of the injury prevention center. “To address this problem where it starts, we have an underage drinking prevention program funded by the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission.”

The Texas Department of Transportation also supports STIPRC with a grant to improve community traffic safety. A four-year, $200,000 grant to the University Health System and the Health Science Center from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation supports STIPRC programs to prevent childhood injuries.

Price is assisting with an upcoming binational conference on border traffic injury prevention. The conference, organized by The University of Texas Pan American, is April 14-16 on South Padre Island. Representatives are expected from all the Mexican states that border the United States. “The conference is in response to World Health Day recognition that road traffic injuries are the No. 1 cause of death for people under the age of 34,” Price said.

Border traffic safety issues converge around the large number of people who frequently drive across the border. “Child safety seats are not required in Mexico but are in Texas,” Price said. “The infrastructure is different. In this country our biggest concerns are driver behaviors like speeding, aggression and drinking, but in other countries the worry is about unsafe road conditions and inadequate signage, things we take for granted.”

An estimated 1.2 million people a year die on the world’s roadways. Several hundred thousand others are seriously hurt. For more information about road safety and World Health Day, go to www.who.int/world-health-day/2004/en/ or www.cdc.gov/ncipc/whd2004/default.htm. The South Texas Injury Prevention and Research Center is at sthrc.uthscsa.edu/stiprc/.

Note to media: Michelle Price will be available for interviews starting Monday, April 5. Interviews in Spanish with a STIPRC staff member also are available.

Professor appointed to Texas Cancer Council

CroftL_BODY
Croft

San Antonio (April 6, 2004) – Lloyd Croft, D.D.S., clinical associate professor of periodontics, has been appointed as the first dentist to serve on the Texas Cancer Council (TCC).

“Since I am the first dentist to serve on the TCC, one of my goals is to ensure that we continue to have programs that will teach prevention and early recognition of oral cancer,” Dr. Croft said.

The TCC, formed in 1985 by the Texas Legislature, works to reduce the human and economic impact of cancer by promoting and collaborating innovative and effective programs and policies on cancer prevention and control.

The TCC is responsible for developing and implementing the Texas Cancer Plan, the state’s comprehensive control plan. The TCC funds $3 to $4 million each year to support this plan. Dr. Croft’s major duties on the council will include evaluating applications and granting awards to programs that support the Texas Cancer Plan.

Dr. Croft has held numerous leadership roles. He is the past president of the Texas Society of Periodontists, the Southwest Society of Periodontists and has served on the Board of Trustees of the American Academy of Periodontology. He is also the immediate past president of the American Academy of Periodontology Foundation. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Trinity University and his doctor of dental science from The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Dental Branch.

Texas Radiological Society to honor S.A. medical physicist

Levy_BODY
Levy

San Antonio (April 6, 2004) – Louis B. Levy, a prominent medical physicist who earned his Ph.D. in biophysics from The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio in 1974, will receive the Gold Medal Award at the Texas Radiological Society’s annual scientific meeting April 16 in Dallas.

Dr. Levy, who helped establish the radiation therapy service at Brooke Army Medical Center during a 24-year military career, was one of the first graduates of the Health Science Center’s Ph.D. program in radiological sciences and was the first black medical physicist to gain board certification from the American Board of Radiology. He is a fellow of the American College of Radiology and the American Association of Physicists in Medicine. “Dr. Levy served on the staff of the Cancer Therapy and Research Center (CTRC) for many years and taught in the graduate program in radiological sciences at the Health Science Center. He had several Ph.D. graduates under his mentorship,” said his colleague, James Hevezi, Ph.D., chief of physics at the CTRC and professor of radiology and radiation oncology at the Health Science Center.

Dr. Levy founded Radiological Physics Associates, L.L.P., in San Antonio in 1982 and is senior medical physicist with the firm. In March 1998, Gov. George W. Bush appointed Dr. Levy to the Texas Board of Licensure for Professional Medical Physicists and he served as chair on the board until his term expired in 2003.

Medical physicists apply concepts of physics to the diagnosis and treatment of human disease, including cancer.