HUFFINES DISCUSSION 6 //HD6 NOVEMBER 11, 2016 Presented By: HuffinesInstitute.org Program • Welcome - Dr. Tim Lightfoot • Speakers • Break • Speakers • Closing - Dr. Tim Lightfoot If you have questions for the speakers, please text your questions during their talk to 979-229-1969. Please give us your first name and first letter of your last name in your text. We will pick 1-3 questions for the speakers to respond to immediately after their talk. Special Thanks Thank you to the following people for their efforts in making this event a success: • Dr. Richard Kreider - Department Head, Health & Kinesiology • Dr. Adam Barry - Division Chair, Health Education • Dr. Steve Riechman - Division Chair, Kinesiology • Frank Thomas - Division Chair, Physical Education Activity Program • Dr. Matt Walker - Division Chair, Sport Management • Dell Billings - Administrative Coordinator/Live Feed Producer • Business Office staff (Mary Helen Coady, Donna Dunlap, Bryan Frugé and Sabra Jasinski) • Mike Tomchesson and the set moving crew • All of our ushers and traffic control volunteers • Huffines Institute Advisory Board • Faith A. Lightfoot, StretchToLive.com • Bryan/College Station Eagle (Kelly Brown, Linda Brinkman and Erika Liesman) • TexAgs.com (Gabe Bock and Brandon Jones) • Kim Topp (Stage Design) • Braly Morse and TAMU TTVN • Marc Chaloupka & staff of the Annenberg Conference Center • Dr. Rhonda Rahn, Dr. Meagan Shipley and Dr. Hildi Nicksic, Casey Schumacher and the Health Ambassadors (Meredith Evans, Marie Becerra, Kelsey Fishbeck, Emily Muller, Allison Valastro, Erin Drinkwater) THANK YOU 2016 Satellite Sites Thank you to the following satellite sites and associated inviduals for their efforts to make this event a success: Albion College Southwestern Adventist University Angelo State University Texas A&M University- Arizona State University Commerce Augusta University Texas A&M-Kingsville Belmont University Texas A&M-San Antonio California State University, Truett-McConnell University Fullerton University of Arkansas Central College University of Maryland Fitchburg State University University of North Carolina Georgia Institute of at Chapel Hill Technology University of North Carolina Georgian Court University at Charlotte Hardin-Simmons University University of Oklahoma Lee University University of Tennessee, Knoxville Louisiana Tech University University of Texas Michigan State University at El Paso Ohio Northern University Virginia Commonwealth University Queen’s University University of Western, Ontario Sam Houston St. University Winston-Salem Seattle University State University Welcome to Huffines Discussion 2016! Part of our mission at the Huffines Institute is to connect sports scientists, practitioners and the public in conversations about sports medicine and human performance. While we do other things – like weekly podcasts – we believe the Huffines Discussion is a unique way to form these connections and we sincerely hope you enjoy this event. We have recruited eight of the best speakers in our field, people who have big ideas, interesting perspectives and important things to say about sports, health and wellness. I hope that at the end of the Discussion, you’ll be thinking and talking about what you heard today. If so, we’ve accomplished what we set out to do – make sports medicine and its larger importance a talking point amongst sports scientists, practitioners and the public. Thanks again for being here. We’re excited to bring this event back to the Brazos Valley and to the 34 satellite sites around the nation and world that are joining us today. We will continue to bring events to our network that helps connect people around the context of sports medicine. If this interests you, look at the back of this program to see how you can stay in touch with what we’re doing in the Huffines Institute. Stay active and stay healthy! Dr. Tim Lightfoot Omar Smith Endowed Professor Director, Sydney and J.L. Huffines Institute for Sports Medicine and Human Performance [email protected] P.S.: If you want to become a part of the Huffines Institute, check our website at “HuffinesInstitute.org” – there are many ways to become involved. Also, if you like today’s presentations, catch our weekly podcasts, which are available on the website. Co-Sponsored By The Omar Smith Endowment The Huffines Endowment Staff of the Sydney and JL Huffines Institute for Sports Medicine and Human Performance Front: Dr. John Thornton, Dr. Tim Lightfoot, Kenneth McIntyre Back: Carlos Guevara, Alexis Applequist, Danielle Sanders The Omar Smith Endowment Not Pictured: Ayland Letsinger and Jorge Granados Want to continue the conversation? Go to: http://groups.google.com/group/ huffines_discussion The Huffines Endowment Dr. Bill Dexter Tufts University School of Medicine “PEDs: Not Just a Problem in Elite Athletes” Dr. Bill Dexter, a recipient of the Maine Governors Council on Physical Activity Lifetime Achievement Award, AMSSM Founders Award and the EATA Moyer Award, is a past President of the American College of Sports Medicine (2013-14). He is Professor of Family Medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine and adjunct Professor of Sports Medicine at the University of Southern Maine, where he also serves as Head Team Physician and Medical Director for the Athletic Training program. He is the school and team physician for Cheverus HS, a team physician for the Portland Red Claws (NBA-D), Medical Director of the Maine Marathon and sports medicine consultant for a number of community sports organizations. Graduating from Dartmouth College and the Medical College of Virginia, he completed his Family Medicine residency at Maine Medical Center and his Sports Medicine fellowship at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis. Dr. Dexter is active in sports medicine research and education. He has given over 170 invited presentations nationally and internationally; he serves on numerous scientific, non-profit, review, and editorial boards and in addition to co-editing a textbook on musculoskeletal ultrasound, has published over 70 book chapters, articles and abstracts. A charter member of the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine, he chairs the Faculty Development committee and is very involved in “teaching the teachers”. Married to Cindy, aka “Born to be Wild Rose” (Maine Roller Derby) and a father of three active 20-somethings, he is an avid skier (goal not yet achieved: 50 days per year!), recreational rower, a hack golfer (24 handicap) and a life-long rugby enthusiast - a former national team trialist, U-19 coach and referee - he continues his involvement in the sport on the USARFU Medical Board. Dr. Sue Bodine University of California, Davis “Skeletal Muscle and the Key to a Healthy Life” Sue Bodine, Ph.D. is at the University of California, Davis with Joint Appointments in the Department of Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior and Physiology and Membrane Biology. She also has a research appointment at the VA Northern California Health System. She received her Ph.D. in Physiological Sciences from the University of California, Los Angeles and began her academic career in 1989 as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Orthopedics at the University of California, San Diego. She spent seven years at UCSD, progressing to the rank of Associate Professor in 1995. In 1996 she left UCSD to take a position at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals in Tarrytown, New York. At Regeneron she became Director of the Muscle Biology Program and worked on the identification and development of targets to treat muscle atrophy. She left Regeneron in 2002 to become Director of Pharmacology at Elixir Pharmaceuticals in Cambridge, MA; a start up company interested in the development of drugs to treat age-related diseases. Dr. Bodine came to UC Davis in 2003 as part of a recruitment effort to build a Muscle Biology Program in the College of Biological Sciences. Dr. Bodine is a Neuromuscular Physiologist whose general field of study is Skeletal Muscle Plasticity. Her primary research interests are in understanding the mechanisms that regulate skeletal muscle size under growth and atrophy conditions. Her lab is also interested in understanding the molecular and cellular mechanisms responsible for muscle’s adaptation to exercise and inactivity, and in determining the potential role for exercise in disease prevention and increased quality of life with aging. The long-term objective of the lab is to identify and develop therapies for the treatment of muscle atrophy under a variety of conditions. Dr. Russell Pate University of South Carolina “Physical Activity - The Red-Headed Step Child of Public Health” Russell R. Pate is a Professor in the Department of Exercise Science in the Arnold School of Public Health at the University of South Carolina. He has held several administrative positions including Chair, Department of Exercise Science; Associate Dean for Research, Arnold School of Public Health; and Vice Provost for Health Sciences. Pate is an exercise physiologist with interests in physical activity and physical fitness in children and the health implications of physical activity. He has published more than 300 scholarly papers and has authored or edited eight books. His research has been supported by the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Heart Association, and several private foundations and corporations. He heads a research team that is currently supported by multiple grants from the National Institutes of Health and
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