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5 24 21 Summary Corona Virus Update by H. Robert Silverstein, MD, FACC for the Preventive Medicine Center
5 24 21 Summary Corona Virus Update by H. Robert Silverstein, MD, FACC for the Preventive Medicine Center Clyde W. Yancy, MD, Vice Dean for Diversity and Inclusion Chief of Cardiology in the Department of Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago Clyde W. Yancy, MD: “I’m exhausted by the stress; disheartened by the toll on human life; concerned deeply about the exposure to healthcare workers- BUT, I am emboldened by the display of courage, selflessness, compassion, and sacrifice that I see in physicians, nurses and health care workers across the country.” “It is not a case of ‘don’t confuse me with the facts’, but the best clinical insights exceed so called knowledge by at least one step.” History, precedents, similarities, virus structure and invasion, pathology, physiology, lethality vs safety in perspective, China, geography, EU vs USA comparison, time-line, media, politics, pandemic modelling, symptoms, lockdown, economics, joblessness, vascular-platelet-glycocalyx clotting, testing, ventilators, medications, vaccines, supplements, diet: This 2019 corona virus CoV2-19 is an entirely new RNA virus with 30 proteins. Corona viruses have the largest known viral genome. The RNA of a corona virus is single-stranded. The word 1 “VIRUS” means “poison.” A human cell has 20,000 different proteins. Being an RNA virus, it is similar to hepatitis C; it is not a DNA virus like hepatitis B. There are 200 viruses that can cause the common cold and several of these are corona viruses. “Corona” is Latin for “crown” which is how the virus looks in the microscope as if it has an encircling crown. -
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M A Y 2 0 0 1 Can you believe his eyes or his nose or his smile? Facing the Truth Using Science to Evaluate Expressions Hypertension • DNA’s Machinery • Classroom Design • Molecular Art 18 Touching the Invisible One Molecule at a Time Carlos Bustamante, who took apart toy cars as a boy, is now exploring the machinery of DNA. Cover: Courtesy of Paul Ekman M AY 2 0 0 1 FEATURES VOLUME 14 NUMBER 2 12 Facing the Truth 22 Solving 28 Overcoming the A New Tool to Analyze Hypertension’s Intractable Our Expressions Deadly Puzzle Problem Rick Lifton’s Team at Increasing the Numbers of Yale Is Putting the Pieces Underrepresented Minorities Together in Science 34 N OTA B ENE 2 Awards and Honors 39 Teens Tend to Be Night Owls HHMI TRUSTEES ETTERFROM James A. Baker, III, Esq. L HHMI Awards $15 Million to Senior Partner THE P RESIDENT Baker & Botts European Researchers Alexander G. Bearn, M.D. Executive Officer American Philosophical Society 3 The Other Genome Race Adjunct Professor 40 Untangling the Web of Yeast The Rockefeller University Professor Emeritus of Medicine Protein Interactions Cornell University Medical College Frank William Gay Former President and Chief Executive Officer U P F RONT SUMMA Corporation 41 Vaccination Experiment Casts James H. Gilliam, Jr., Esq. Former Executive Vice President 4 The Human Genome Goes to a Key Guilty Vote Against and General Counsel, Beneficial Corporation Hanna H. Gray, Ph.D., Chairman Amyloid in Alzheimer’s President Emeritus and High School Harry Pratt Judson Distinguished Service Professor of History The University of Chicago 6 Fruit Fly Gene Survey Finds Garnett L. -
7/20/21 Summary Corona Virus Update by H. Robert Silverstein, MD, FACC for the Preventive Medicine Center
7/20/21 Summary Corona Virus Update by H. Robert Silverstein, MD, FACC for the Preventive Medicine Center Clyde W. Yancy, MD, Vice Dean for Diversity and Inclusion Chief of Cardiology in the Department of Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago Clyde W. Yancy, MD: “I’m exhausted by the stress; disheartened by the toll on human life; concerned deeply about the exposure to healthcare workers- BUT, I am emboldened by the display of courage, selflessness, compassion, and sacrifice that I see in physicians, nurses and health care workers across the country.” “It is not a case of ‘don’t confuse me with the facts’, but the best clinical insights exceed so called knowledge by at least one step.” “Early 2020 saw the world break into what has been described as a "war-like situation": A pandemic, caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the likes of which majority of the living generations across most of the planet have not ever seen. This pandemic has downed economies and resulted in hundreds of thousands of deaths.” Tokyo University of Science 7/1/21 1 History, precedents, similarities, virus structure and invasion, pathology, physiology, lethality vs safety in perspective, China, geography, EU vs USA comparison, time-line, media, politics, pandemic modelling, symptoms, lockdown, economics, joblessness, vascular-platelet-glycocalyx clotting, testing, ventilators, medications, vaccines, supplements, diet: This 2019 corona virus CoV2-19 is an entirely new RNA virus with 30 proteins. Corona viruses have the largest known viral genome. The RNA of a corona virus is single-stranded. -
October 27, 2020 PROFESSOR STEPHEN HEDRICK, Professor
ACADEMIC SENATE: SAN DIEGO DIVISION, 0002 UCSD, LA JOLLA, CA 92093-0002 (858) 534-3640 FAX (858) 534-4528 October 27, 2020 PROFESSOR STEPHEN HEDRICK, Professor Division of Biological Sciences PROFESSOR MITCHELL KRONENBERG, Professor Division of Biological Sciences PROFESSOR KIT POGLIANO, Dean Division of Biological Sciences PROFESSOR ASA GUSTAFSSON, Chair Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program SUBJECT: Proposal to establish PhD Specialization in Immunology At its October 12, 2020 meeting, the Graduate Council approved the proposal to establish a PhD specialization in Immunology, to be offered to students in the Division of Biological Sciences and the Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program. The Council supports the creation of the following degree titles: PhD in Biology with a Specialization in Immunology PhD in Biomedical Sciences with a Specialization in Immunology Final approval from the Representative Assembly is required to establish the new degree titles. Prior to forwarding the proposal for placement on an upcoming Representative Assembly agenda, please provide an addendum to the proposal that clarifies the requirements for doctoral committee membership for the specialization to Senate Associate Director Lori Hullings ([email protected]). Rather than provide links to the committee membership for each program, please clearly state the committee membership for a student in the Immunology specialization. It would be helpful to include if a co-chair is required if the Immunology faculty advisor is not from the student’s home department and who is eligible to serve as the tenured outside member. If approved, the new degree titles will be available to students in Fall Quarter 2021. Sincerely, Lynn Russell, Chair Graduate Council cc: M.