Kasiska College of Health Professions to hold 色花堂app Day March 13 in Pocatello, Boise
February 26, 2009
The 色花堂app Kasiska College of Health Professions 色花堂app Day 2009 will be held March 13 in Pocatello and Boise, and features keynote speaker Anna L. Schwartz, author of the book 鈥淐ancer Fitness, Exercise Programs for Patients and Survivors.鈥
The event鈥檚 theme is 鈥淒ata Under Our Noses: Finding, Organizing, and Interpreting.鈥 It runs from 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Preregistration is required and can be completed at www.isu.edu/kchp/research.
Health care providers, ISU faculty, students and the public are invited to the event that features work accomplished by health researchers across the state. It will be held in the Pond Student Union and the Oboler Library in Pocatello, and at ISU-Boise. Presentations and luncheons will be held in both Pocatello and Boise. Activities will be broadcast via two-way, interactive video from Pocatello to Boise and vice versa. Four of 10 Pocatello research study presentations will be interactively linked with Boise and an additional two presentations will be given in Boise.
In total, there will be 10 research study presentations and 31 posters in Pocatello with four research study presentations and eight posters in Boise.
Keynote speaker Schwartz, a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing, will give her presentation 鈥淪ignificance of Patient Pacing: Cancer and Exercise鈥 from 9 to 9:50 a.m. Schwartz, professor and chair at Scottsdale Health Care 色花堂app in Scottsdale, Ariz., focuses on improving the quality of life of cancer patients through physical activity and symptom management. Her program of research tests the effects of different exercise regimens on the physical and emotional health of survivors during and following cancer treatment.
Schwartz maintains a practice in a clinical setting at the Northern Arizona Cancer Center where she is Breast Center program coordinator and nurse practitioner. Her book, 鈥淐ancer Fitness,鈥 was published in 2004 by Simon & Schuster and includes a forward by Lance Armstrong. 鈥淐ancer Fitness鈥 takes the current research on exercise for cancer patients and makes this information available for survivors and their families. Schwartz is an avid cyclist and former world-class racer.
Sign-in for the event is from 8 to 8:30 a.m.; Linda Hatzenbuehler, dean of the Kasiska College of Health Professions, will give a welcoming address at 8:30 a.m.; a research panel discussion will take place from 10 to 10:50 a.m., concurrent paper presentations will occur from 11 to 11:50 a.m.; and from noon to 1:30 p.m. there will be a luncheon with poster presentations.
色花堂app Day topics and speakers include:
鈥 鈥淭elepsychiatry: Increased Mental Health Access in Rural Idaho and Wyoming,鈥 by Neill Piland, research professor and director of the ISU Institute of Rural Health;
鈥 鈥淭he Effectiveness of Multimedia Instructions for Learning Psychomotor Skills,鈥 by Kevin Helgeson, ISU instructor of physical and occupational therapy;
鈥 鈥淩esponsible Conduct of 色花堂app: Data Management,鈥 by Deb Easterly, director of research development and compliance, ISU Office of 色花堂app;
鈥 鈥淩esults from Implementation of the Diabetes Prevention Program in Four Health Clinics in the Largely Rural State of Montana鈥 by graduate student Karl K. Vanderwood and advisors Willis McAleese, health education chair and professor, and Linda Rankin, health education professor;
鈥 鈥淭he Brotherhood of Pain: The Experience and Management of Persistent Pain Among College Football Players,鈥 by Gesine Hearn, ISU associated professor of sociology and criminal justice;
鈥 鈥淩ape-accepting Attitudes of ISU Undergraduate Students,鈥 by Kimberly Talbot, assistant director, advocacy, Janet C. Anderson Gender Resource Center;
鈥 鈥淓veryone Needs to Be Heard: The Phenomenology of Deafness in Rural Idaho,鈥 by Kristy Buffington, ISU anthropology master鈥檚 student;
鈥 鈥溾橵irtual鈥 Anatomy & Physiology Lab: An Oxymoron?鈥 by Bernadette Howlett, ISU associate professor of physician assistant studies;
鈥 鈥淲hat is the Impact of Spirituality on Health?鈥 by Paula Phelps, ISU clinical coordinator physician assistant studies; and
鈥 鈥淟ifeflight Ventilator Project: Identifying Teaching Styles in a Critical Care Setting,鈥 by Elizabeth Cartwright, ISU associate professor of anthropology.
ISU-Boise will have two podium presentations by graduate students:
鈥 鈥淚nvestigation of Vocabulary Acquisition for Children who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing,鈥 by Julie Crandall, a speech language pathology master鈥檚 student, whose advisor is Kristin Negilski, clinical coordinator for Communication Sciences & Disorders, and Education of the Deaf at ISU-Boise; and
鈥 鈥淎 Longitudinal Study: Comparing Receptive and Expressive Spoken Language Skills for Children who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing,鈥 by Sydney Harris, a speech language pathology master鈥檚 student, whose advisors are Rick Tivis, research associate professor at the ISU Institute of Rural Health in Boise, and Negilski.
For more information on the Kasiska College of Health Professions 色花堂app Day 2009, contact Deana L. Molinari, ISU associate professor of nursing, 色花堂app, at molidean@isu.edu or (208) 282-2982, or David Talford, ISU Clinical Assistant Professor, (208) 373-1808.
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