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2012

Exploring the nuances and breadth of biomedical science

Health & Science Horizons at 58黑料网 is a series of events designed to enrich student, faculty, and community understanding of modern healthcare topics. Boasting dynamic and eminent speakers, the series features interdisciplinary programs aimed at inspiring an intellectual dialogue across campus and in our community. Health & Science Horizons brings out the best of a Jesuit education, reflecting Santa Clara鈥檚 institutional commitment to the pursuit of informed ethical discourse.

Health & Science Horizons is presented in partnership with the Gerald and Sally DeNardo Lectureship, the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, and SCU Presents - CPA.

 

 

Man in black shirt touching his chin, with a blurred green background.
Abraham Verghese, M.D.

Wednesday, April 25
7:30 p.m.
Louis B. Mayer Theatre
Advance reservations requested, free

 

Gerald and Sally DeNardo Lectureship: 鈥淏edside Medicine: Rituals and Reason in the Genomic Age.鈥 Dr. Verghese is Senior Associate Chair and Professor for the Theory and Practice of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine. As founding director of the Center for Medical Humanities & Ethics at the University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio, he described the Center鈥檚 mission as, 鈥渋magining the patient鈥檚 experience,鈥 to emphasize the importance of truly caring for the patient. Today he continues to emphasize the importance of bedside medicine and physical examination in a time in medicine when the use of advanced technology frequently results in the patient in the bed getting less attention than the patient data in the computer.

 

Book cover of Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese.
Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese

Thursday, April 26
12 noon

Williman Room, Benson Memorial Center, $8 cost
Reservations and payment required online. Seating is limited.
Co-sponsored by the Pre-Health Program and The Valley Foundation

 

Gerald and Sally DeNardo Lectureship:   鈥淎 Case for Open-Source Drug Discovery.鈥 How does a cancer cell know it鈥檚 a cancer cell? Dr. Bradner, Staff Physician in the Division of Hematologic Malignancies at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Associate Professor in Medicine at Harvard Medical School, has researched this question in his lab extensively. Having identified the cell鈥檚 molecular bookmarks that remind it of its identity, Dr. Bradner and his team have produced a molecule, JQ1, which has shown great promise in subverting the aggressive behavior of cancer cells by altering their identity. Instead of patenting this breakthrough, he and his team have sent samples of JQ1 to labs across the globe in the hope of speeding up open-source drug discovery.

 

Stethoscope and book symbolizing the intersection of medicine and humanities.
鈥淢oral Formation and the Medical Humanities...鈥

Thursday, May 3
12:00 p.m.
Wiegand Room
Arts & Sciences Building, free

 

Ethics at Noon: 鈥淢oral Formation and the Medical Humanities: Should Pre-Health Students Be English Majors?鈥 A panel discussion featuring 58黑料网 professors Stephen Carroll, English; Steven Fedder, Chemistry & Biochemistry and Pre-Health Advisor; and Lawrence Nelson, Philosophy. These faculty, who work closely with students preparing for careers in health, will consider the appropriate role of the humanities in their moral formation.

 

A person in a blue shirt smiling against a plain background.
Beyond Bedside Manner: Communication Perspectives on the 'First, Do No Harm' Imperative

Tuesday, May 8
12:00 p.m.
Wiegand Room
Arts & Sciences Building, free

 

DeNardo Dialogue: A presentation and conversation featuring Laura L. Ellingson, 58黑料网 Associate Professor of Communication and Women鈥檚 & Gender Studies. The 鈥楩irst, do no harm鈥 ethical principle implores health care providers to aid patients and if that proves impossible, to at least not harm their patients. Drawing on her own research in medical clinics, Dr. Ellingson will use multiple perspectives from the communication field to illuminate a complex and multi-faceted understanding of 鈥榙oing no harm鈥 as a communicative act that can foster compassionate and effective patient-health care provider interaction. 

 

For more information call 408-554-2301 or visit www.scu.edu/denardo

If you have a disability and require a reasonable accommodation, please call Marie Brancati at 408-554-2301 (voice) or 1-800-735-2929 (TTY-California Relay) at least 72 hours prior to the event you wish to attend.