ahs magazine 2010-11

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AHS MAGAZINE 2010–2011 A PUBLICATION FOR ALUMNI AND FRIENDS OF OUR COLLEGE PLUS: DEAN TATE MOVES ON I AHS REMEMBERS GARY KIELHOFNER AHS MAGAZINE REASONS TO ROOT FOR ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORDS

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The publication for alumni and friends of the College of Applied Health Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago

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Page 1: AHS Magazine 2010-11

AHS MAGAZINE2010–2011

A p u b l i c At i o n f o r A l u m n i A n d f r i e n d s o f o u r c o l l e g e

PLUS: DEAN TATE MOVES ON I AHS REMEMbERS gARy kiElHOfNER

AHS MAGAZINE

reAsons to root forelectronic heAlth records

Page 2: AHS Magazine 2010-11

A MESSAGE FROM OUR DEAN

Many of you know that this is my 10th and final year as dean of this wonderful college. I have a strong belief that academic deans should leave after two five-year terms—it’s good for the dean and good for the college. We’ve had a great run with notable successes and innovations despite a less-than-optimal fiscal environment. When I came, my vision was for the college to be a lively intellectual community composed of faculty, staff and students learning together for the ultimate betterment of our society. AHS is indeed that.

At commencement I talked about transformations and those Moments in Time when something happens and our lives change directions in unexpected ways. For me, my journey to Chicago started with my interview in 1998. I had no intention of moving from Texas to Chicago; I came for the interview experience. During the visit I met a terrific group of students. One grilled me about whether, as dean, I would truly care about their education. I thought for a moment before saying yes, and it was in that Moment in Time that I knew I had to come to UIC. So I did.

Years later I was teaching on the east side of campus. Being a bit early, I sat outside the student center and chatted with someone I didn’t know. He asked me what I did. And, without skipping a beat, I said, “I am a professor.” In that Moment in Time, I knew I would return to the faculty working with students at no other place than AHS. And so I am.

I will stay with this college because I’m proud of what AHS has become during my tenure, but I know well that I didn’t do it alone. I feel immeasurable gratitude to all of you who have supported the college in ways large and small. And I hope you, like me, will stay with AHS—keeping your connection alive through our magazine, website, Facebook page (see the back cover), fundraising efforts and events.

I send my best wishes to you, your families and loved ones … until we meet again.

Charlotte (Toby) Tate, PhDDean, UIC College of Applied Health Sciences

AHS MAgAzine

2010–2011

Writer And editor

Elizabeth Harmon MillerDirector of Marketing andCommunications

deSign

Stacy Sweat Designs

Contributing PHotogrAPHerS

Anne Petersen Rebecca Betts

©2011 University of Illinois

at Chicago. All rights reserved.

Published by the Office of the

Dean (MC 518), UIC College of Applied

Health Sciences, 808 South Wood

Street, 169 CMET, Chicago, Illinois

60612-7305.

telephone (312) 996-6695

fax (312) 413-0086

e-mail [email protected]

Web site www.ahs.uic.edu

Views expressed in this

publication do not necessarily

reflect the opinions of the editor,

the college or the university.

A lETTER TO THEFRIENDS OF AHS

You will notice abbreviations throughout this

issue. They correlate to academic units in

the College of Applied Health Sciences.

bhis Department of Biomedical and

Health Information Sciences

bVis Program in Biomedical

Visualization

dhd Department of Disability and

Human Development

hi Program in Health Informatics

him Program in Health Information

Management

Kines Major in kinesiology

Kn Department of Kinesiology

and Nutrition

nut Major in nutrition

ot Department of Occupational

Therapy

pt Department of Physical Therapy

Page 3: AHS Magazine 2010-11

AHS MAGAZINE

2010-2011

tA b l e o f c o n t e n t s

FeAtureS

8 reasons to root for electronic health records

you hear them talkedabout. but what do they mean for you?

RememberingGary Kielhofner

Personal recollectionsreveal the OT iconlives on in our hearts

dePArtMentS

WhatI know now:Toby Tate

As the dean moves on, she reflects on what she’s taking with her

9

13 16notebooK

get your AHS discount for the Chicago Half Marathon & 5k on Sept. 11 . . . . . . . . 3kinesiology Club takes on RiC’s wheelchair basketball team . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7Alumna gives her all for kids with disabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

people

Social class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20Octogenarian OT alumnae still travel hundreds of miles to stay connected

honor roll of donors

The college warmly thanks its contributors of last year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

lAst shot

Numerical and photographic snapshots of the AHS Class of 2011 . . . . . . . . . . 24

Page 4: AHS Magazine 2010-11

2 Ahs mAgAZine 2010-2011

AHS NEWS AND NOTESNOTEBOOK

Prof. Shane Phillips is a candidate for an elite White House honor.

Pt

ot.Pt

Shane Phillips, Phd, assistant professor of physical therapy, has been nominated by NiH’s institute of Heart, lung and blood for the prestigious Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE). The award “is the highest honor bestowed by the U.S. government on outstanding scientists and engineers beginning their independent careers,” according to the White House website.

NiH must consider researchers across its 27 institutes and centers to put for-ward as nominees, making the nod to Phillips all the more impressive.

“Just the nomination is such an honor,” says Christina Hui-Chan, PhD, head of the Department of Physical

Therapy. “Only two U of i scholars [one from Chicago, one from Urbana-Cham-paign] have ever received PECASE grants through NiH.”

Phillips, 34, focuses his research on fighting obesity. Specifically, he has un-dertaken extensive research to examine exercise and dietary interventions for optimal cardiovascular health.

The PECASE program was commis-sioned by President bill Clinton in 1996 to recognize and support exceptional achievements of young researchers in science and technology.

learn more at www.grants.nih.gov/grants/policy/pecase.htm.

Bright and early

High jump

Young professor noticed for promising career

For the 2011-12 academic year …

received 357 applications—50% more

than for 2010-11! 357 804

the departmentof Physical therapy...

received 804 applications—57% more than for 2010-11!

the department of occupational therapy...

+57%

+50%

Page 5: AHS Magazine 2010-11

2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 3

otAHS

Hi

rhoda Priest erhardt, ot ’54, will receive an Alumni Achievement Award, the university’s highest honor bestowed upon alumni who have achieved great success and national or international distinction in their professional lives. The award is presented by the University of illinois Alumni Association at the annual “Alumni five” banquet in October.

Erhardt spent decades working with children with disabilities before she launched her own pediat-ric occupational therapy consulting business and a popular series of videos, books and manuals. in 1989, she established Erhardt Developmental Products, whose instructional materials and online courses are used by hundreds of universities and health clinics today.

last year, gloria Curtin was honored with the UiC City Partner Award. Curtin is vice president at El Valor, a community-based agency serving adults with disabilities. it has provided dozens of intern-ship opportunities for students in nearly every AHS program.

learn more at www.uiaa.org/uic/programs/alumni_five.

Instructor makes the grade Adjunct faculty member lesley king was honored in february 2011 with the 2010 founders leadership Award from the Healthcare information and Management Systems Society (HiMSS). king, who works full time as director of revenue cycle systems for Mayo Clinic, has been an instructor in the Master’s of Health informatics online program since January 2010.

king’s award is one of the highest honors conferred by HiMSS, a national organization recognized by healthcare technology professionals as the leader in promoting optimal use of iT to improve healthcare. Since receiving the award, she was further recognized with an appointment to chair HiMSS’ Public Policy Committee.

learn more about lesley king and her award at www.himss.org/ASP/servicesAward_leadership.asp.

Alumnato admireFor second straight year, member of the AHS community wins top university award

Lesley King is one of many high-level professionals recruited as adjunct instructors in the HI program.

Run for lesswith AHSThinking about participating in the 2011 Chicago Half

Marathon & 5k race on Sunday, Sept. 11? Then here’s a deal for you!

The race’s organizer, US Road Sports, is offering a discount to any alumnus, student, friend, or faculty or staff member from AHS: $10 off the $80 registration fee for the half marathon, or $5 off the $30 registration fee for the 5k.

And when you finish the course, look for the University of illinois tent(s) at the finish line to celebrate with fellow alumni and friends.

The race sells out every year, so don’t delay! Register now at www.chicagohalfmarathon.com. Use discount code UiCAHS2011 for the half marathon; UiCAHS20115k for the 5k.

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4 Ahs mAgAZine 2010-2011

dHd

dHd

dHd

t amar Heller, PhD, head of the Department of Disability and Human Development, was

appointed this year to the institute of Medicine’s Committee on Cognitive Rehabilitation Therapy for Traumatic brain injury. The committee’s charge is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of this kind of therapy in the treatment of individuals with Tbi.

The institute of Medicine, one of the highly esteemed National Academies,

is an independent, nonprofit, nongov-ernmental organization that provides objective and authoritative infor-mation to decision makers and the public. Appointment to an iOM com-mittee is one of the most respected honors available to scholars.

be sure to visit www.ncpad.org after Aug. 1 to view winning videos from a recent contest sponsored by the National Center on Physical Activity and Disability, based in AHS. The competition, entitled “How do you get enough?” has a twofold purpose: to show that people with disabilities can and do live healthy, active lifestyles, and to share ideas about how more people with disabilities can enjoy physical activity.

Seen enough?

learn more and view the videos (after Aug. 1) at www.ncpad.org.

Prof. Tamar Heller is recognized yet again for her outstanding leadership in disability policymaking.

AHS at IOM

Page 7: AHS Magazine 2010-11

2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 5

Pt

representatives from our department of Physical Therapy are happily serving once again as the PT partner for the Susan g. komen Chicago 3-Day for the Cure, happening Aug. 5-7. As part of the Sports Medicine Crew, they’ll provide physical therapy evaluation and treatment support to walkers.

The breast Cancer 3-Day is among the most recogniz-able fundraising events in the nation. Participants raise thousands of dollars in pledged support to benefit breast cancer research, treatment, education and prevention. Then they aim to walk 60 miles in just three days.

“The event is a life-changing journey, from the sea of pink tents at camp to the emotional remembrance tent raised in honor of those who have lost their fight with breast cancer, to the final celebration as we cheer the walkers crossing the finish line,” says Heather feldner, clini-cal instructor of PT and co-captain of the event’s Sports Medicine Crew. “it is truly the experience of a lifetime and an amazing way to use both our professional and personal talents.”

in April, the Program in biomedical Visualization sponsored a T-shirt design competition among its community of artists. The goal? To produce a tee that promotes the program and lets all people affiliated with it wear their pride on their sleeves.

The winning design by kristine John-

bViS

Alumna develops new “soft wear”

A few of the 30 PT students and alumni and six faculty and staff members who participated in the 2009 3-Day for the Cure, the first year of our PT department’s involvement

Walking aidesFor third year, AHS PTs will staff three-day walk to fight cancer

Alumni support is welcome! if you’re a PT interested in volunteering for the event’s Sports Medicine Crew, contact Heather feldner at (312) 996-6142 or [email protected].

son, bViS ’98, was selected from three finalists. All alumni, students and faculty of the bViS program were invited to enter a design and to vote.

To order the bViS T-shirt, send an e-mail to [email protected]. (Price is $20.)

Speaking of our bViS program, professor John Daugherty was named program director in January 2011. His predecessor, Scott barrows, left UiC to join a patient-education company in Reno, Nev. AHS congratulates both men on their new ventures!

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6 Ahs mAgAZine 2010-2011

Kn

AHS

On April 14, the Department of kinesiology and Nutrition hosted a research symposium and award ceremony for undergraduates. The

planned-to-be-annual event began with a “research fair” in which students who participated in studies with faculty were able to practice their research presentation skills with a real audience.

for example, kinesiology seniors Emily Muszcynski and Adam Rudd and sophomore Vered Arbel presented their project on whether clay modeling improves students’ learning of anatomy. five days later they won first place in the Humanities/Social Sciences/business Practices undergraduate category of the campuswide UiC Student Research forum.

After the fair, the department recognized student achievements ranging from the conventional (highest gPA) to the unusual (most dedicated throughout aca-demic career, highest grades in the most difficult classes).

“The formal college commencement is too large to

Emily Muszcynski (KINES ’11) and Adam Rudd (KINES ’11) pose with their award-winning research presentation.

Undergrads aglowOne department makes time for its students to shine

Gotta runthe AHS Student Council’s annual fun Run, Walk and Roll-a-thon happened on April 14. in its fifth year, the event stayed true to its original intention: offer a fun, free event to the entire UiC community, with a goal of helping fellow students relax before finals week. Unseasonably cold, drizzly weather diminished the turnout a bit, but it couldn’t dampen the spirits of all who participated.

Participants were asked to donate canned goods, but otherwise, the event was free.

The 2011 T-shirt design:Some will recognize the clever adaptation of rap group RUN-

DMC’s famous logo.

recognize every worthy accomplishment,” said Eileen Doran, AHS director of student affairs, who attended the event. “This was a fun way to celebrate students among the friends, peers and professors they’ve known for years.”

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2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 7

Kn

the Kinesiology Club hosted a March 30 basketball competition, pitting themselves against the RiC Hornets, the competitive men’s wheelchair basketball team from the Rehabilitation institute of Chicago.

The game—conceived by Shanice Hudson, kiNES ’11, as part of her internship at RiC—doubled as a fundraiser, complete with bake sale and raffle. And though the kinesiol-ogy students took a good-natured drubbing from the Hornets (in the fourth quarter, the teams agreed to stop keeping an accurate score), everyone had so much fun that the club plans to make it an annual event.

What a deal! Each participant got a T-shirt, Gatorade and an energy bar.

Officers of the AHS Student Council (L-R): Jose Montenegro, Jessica Toth, faculty advisor Demetra John, Sara Thorpe and Kevin Conley (not pictured: Staci Molinar)

Shanice Hudson (holding ball) and fellow students were really schooled by the RIC men’s wheelchair basketball team.

Good sportsStudents, wheelchair athletes compete for charity

the Kinesiology club was founded by and for students in 2010. it already has more than 100 members.

“i think the students valued the RiC team’s triumphant spirit, their will and their determination to not let their disability define their lives,” says Hudson.

in the end, students and at-tendees raised more than $500, which helped the Hornets take part in the 2011 National Wheel-chair basketball Tournament in Denver.

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Pt

AHS

On April 8, Dean Toby Tate and the AHS Alumni board treated more than 70 alumni and friends to a special friday

evening viewing of the “body Worlds & The Cycle of life” exhibit at Chicago’s Museum of Science and industry.

“The Cycle of life” is one in a series of exhibits that display real and complete specimens of the human body preserved via “plastination,” a method invented by “body Worlds” creator gunther von Hagens. AHS hosted an alumni

An organization based in Downers grove, ill., is making sure that children with special needs get the adaptive equipment they need. And at the helm is Mary Ellen (leClair) Connelly, PT ’85.

Connelly is co-founder and president of Thumbuddy Special. for 17 years the nonprofit has been supplying wheelchairs, walkers, ramps, communication devices and other equipment—as well as scholarships for special-recreation summer camps—to kids who need it most. Recipients are often from families with low incomes who cannot get equipment through insurance or public aid.

because it’s led entirely

by volunteers, the org- anization passes along 95 percent of the donations it receives (fundraising is its only source of revenue) directly to families in need.

Anyone who doubts the difference Thumbuddy Special is making in children’s lives need only visit its website or read its newsletters. both are replete with heartfelt words of deep gratitude from the families of recipients.

Connelly, who also works full time as a school physical therapist, explains what drives her involvement: “i believe that all children have the right to live to their full potential in home and school environments, and they have the right to just have fun!

Mary Ellen Connelly, PT ’85, at Thumbuddy Special’s 2010 Halloween Happy Hour. Her “buddies” Sophia (left) and Emily each received a new adapted bike.

Dean Toby Tate (back row, second from left) posed with just some of the happy alumni and friends in attendance.

Alumni in a Worlds of their own

Thumbuddy really is Special

“i am blessed to be in this position,” she adds. “Really, there are no words to describe it—seeing a child ride a bike for the first time. The parents are crying and so are we. And the child is just having a blast.”

Mary Ellen Connelly is eager to hear from readers who have an interest in Thumbuddy Special’s mission. Contact her at [email protected] or visit thumbuddyspecial.org.

event to see von Hagens’ first exhibit in 2005. The exhibit provides almost unimaginable

views of real human physiology. “it emphasized how wonderfully accommodating yet highly vulnerable the human body can be,” said Nina franklin, who graduated in 2006 with a master’s degree in movement sciences and who is now enrolled in AHS’ doctoral program in kinesiology, nutrition and rehabilitation.

for more about AHS alumni activities and how to get involved, visit www.ahs.uic.edu/alum.

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2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 9

RememberingGary Kielhofner

1949-2010

The AHS community of faculty, students, staff and alumni was shocked and saddened by the death of occupational therapy professor gary kielhofner, PhD, on Sept. 2, 2010. He joined the college in 1986. As holder of the college’s only endowed professorship, the Wade-Meyer Chair, and as former head of OT for 20 years, kielhofner was recognized and admired far

beyond his department.indeed, kielhofner was admired around the world. His

development of the groundbreaking “Model of Human Occupation” changed the face of occupational therapy practice internationally by offering a new understanding of how human occupation is motivated and performed.

During his lifetime, kielhofner gave hundreds of invited lectures and published 19 books and more than 150 scientific papers. His death prompted countless heartfelt tributes from individuals and organizations worldwide.

Here in AHS, kielhofner led our occupational therapy program to its current rank (by U.S. News & World Report) of No. 4 among all U.S. OT programs and No. 1 among those at public universities. He also was instrumental in creating our nationally renowned doctoral program in disability studies and the OT doctoral program.

And it is here in AHS that gary kielhofner is missed most. On these pages, his colleagues, friends and students remember the man who touched their lives and, in many cases, shaped their futures.

gary always had a smile and a friendly hello to a colleague whether he knew you well or you were just an acquaintance. He respected people and appreciated them for who they were and what they had contributed to the profession. i truly believe he had a love for the profession and appreciated those who shared his feelings.Coralie “Corky” (Hirsch) glantzOT ’61, Professional colleague of kielhofner

2010-2011 AHS MAGAZINE 9

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gary and i worked together for 12 years, and i had gotten to appreciate his knowledge, his critical thinking skills and his intuition, but in that moment i saw his most important quality: that everything he did was done with love. toby tate, PhdDean, College of Applied Health Sciences

One of my favorite memories of gary was from an evening meeting during my first semester of graduate school. [After our class confessed to him we were feeling stressed, he said] “you guys need to get together and all go out to a bar.” He said that the camaraderie and intellectual discussion that would come from sitting with peers in a relaxed environment was just as important as having our noses buried in books every night. This one comment from him changed my approach to education and being a lifelong learner. but i think gary was just being gary—giving some humble advice to de-stress a frazzled first-year class. Joy PetryOT ’10

in the week of gary’s death, i told my friend [former UiC faculty member] Jaime Muñoz that gary was like a flare, living his life big and bold, and then dying out suddenly. He thought that gary was more like a comet, because comets shoot across the sky but leave a trail behind. We are the trail, carrying on his work and his vision. gail Fisher Clinical Assoc. Prof. of OT

gary always made time for each of his students. i remember handing him a draft of my thesis and i had it back the next day with very thorough feedback. He was never too busy for a question. He knew how to find each person’s strength and gift and encouraged each to achieve greatness. He touched many lives with his work and his leadership. i will always remember my time in grad school fondly. Most of all, i am so honored to have had the opportunity to grow and learn from such an amazing individual.renee (Moore) CornerOT bS ’91, MS ’95

The door to gary’s office was always open. i’d often check in with gary to say a quick “hello” and end up having (what was for me) the most interesting conversation of the day. His generosity with his time, intellect and love for life are deeply missed. i will be forever grateful for gary’s mentorship, which made it possible for me to fully embrace the opportunities offered by an academic career.elizabeth Peterson, PhdClinical Assoc. Prof. of OT

The last time i went to visit gary, i told him i couldn’t continue as dean. i told him that his illness had taught me that there were other things i wanted to do with my life. When i was leaving, he said, “i love you, Toby.” i said, “i love you too, gary. good-bye.” And that sums up gary kielhofner in my mind.

Kielhofner in 2006 with then-head of PT Suzann Campbell-DeLapp. He was easy to pick out at commencements, wearing the top hat he received with his honorary doctorate from the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden.

10 AHS MAGAZINE 2010-2011

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gary loved a good story, both in the telling and listening. He liked to laugh, so he liked jokes. He was a selfless mentor and a gracious colleague. He willingly assisted when asked, whether it was to review an article, discuss an idea or offer guidance through a professional issue. He never forced his view on me; rather he would state his views strongly and then expect me to make an informed decision/opinion based upon facts. i feel honored to have known and worked with gary as well as to have an understanding of the person behind the professional persona. Patricia bowyer, eddPostdoctoral fellow for kielhofner, 2004-2007

Though we only had gary teach one of our classes, his fingerprints can be found all over our program. He has helped shape not only our program, but the occupational therapy field as a whole. His teachings about client-centered and meaningful practice will help equip us on our journeys to becoming the best OTs that we are capable of being.Meghan ginterOT ’11

When i think of gary, i can’t help but remember his passion for the field of occupational therapy. His passion for helping individuals reach their fullest potential; his passion for passing on his knowledge proudly to the next generation of occupational therapists; and his passion for furthering the field were evident in everything that he said and did. He was a very charismatic professor. His enthusiasm for the field was contagious, and i feel honored to have been one of his students. Kelli PoloOT ’05

[After i joined UiC] gary became a trusted colleague, a friend, a thoughtful mentor and guiding force. i didn’t realize at the time what gary’s plan was, as he gradually exposed me to the ins and outs of administration. When he asked me to step in as head, my first reaction was shock and surprise. However, he helped

me realize that he wasn’t looking for someone to “fill in his shoes.” Rather he was looking for someone new to inherit the position he had wisely crafted for many years. Sitting now [as department head] in his former office, i often think of him as the visionary, the passionate communicator, the constant creator and seeker of knowledge, and a person who knew best how to help others find their way through life. i would never be where i am now if it weren’t for gary.Yolanda Suarez-balcazar, PhdHead, Department of Occupational Therapy

So great was his prominence in the field that Kielhofner was asked for autographs at the first UIC MOHO Institute, hosted on campus in January 2010 and attended by people from three continents.

2010-2011 AHS MAGAZINE 11

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gary managed to turn his passion into a profession—a rare feat and something to aspire to. He was always open to questions and discussion, and i knew anytime i took a trip to his office, not only would i get my question answered, but i’d be entertained by an anecdote, thoughtful story or lively discussion. He took great pride in his craftsmanship and would often pull out the magazine article which featured the log cabin he helped build. Dr. kielhofner was truly a rare individual and will be missed by the profession.Kathleen KramerOT ’07

gary worked very hard but never forgot to enjoy life. During our Monday faculty meetings, it was common for him to share stories about his weekend activities on his farm. His infectious smile and the twinkle in his eye as he shared his stories were a testament to the power of occupation and the satisfaction of a job well done, and the pleasures of building, creating and fixing things. His efforts to balance work and play remind me to take a step back and enjoy all that life has to offer. Marcia Finlayson, PhdProfessor of OT

gary’s love for and belief in the inherent goodness and value of humankind was apparent in his contributions to OT literature and theory, but even more so for those of us who were fortunate enough to have known him personally. gary displayed a true caring for everyone, and he treated all with equal respect. The stories he shared to illustrate a point

A note to those who submitted remembrances: Due to space constraints, some submissions were condensed with the utmost care to preserve original sentiments.

gary

Eyes so full of ZealSimultaneously Tranquil yet Exacting Examining your Attempts at Self-improvementPast all that should logically Hinder your SuccessUnderstandingSumming up the UnknownReaching beyond All Conceptualization and AbstractionProblem Solving is germaine to the SolutionThoughts become Actions, Problems Cease to Existgary left our lives in a New yearAnd Taught us to Rebuild inA New WayMatthew LynchOT ’11

revealed a down-to-earth man whose strongest desire was to share of his expertise in order to prepare the next generation of occupational therapists. i consider myself lucky to have been one of his last students, and i intend to follow through with his charge to us to carry over his lessons into practice, to become the best occupational therapist that i can be.rachelle berloveOT ’11

Kielhofner posed with his students at the celebration of his 20th anniversary at AHS.

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2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 13

The federal stimulus plan designated billions of dollars to accelerate adoption of electronic

health records. Larry Pawola, head of AHS’ program in health informatics, explains why you

should support this goal regardless of your politics.

The topic of electronic health records, or EHRs, is popping up in the news media with increasing frequency. That’s due in large part to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed in 2009. The act provides for roughly $20 billion to be invested in healthcare technology—not surprising given the bipartisan

agreement that digitizing Americans’ health records will reduce medical errors, improve care and reduce the cost of healthcare across the board.

Sounds great, but what does it really mean to individuals? Why should you, dear reader, care whether your doctor gets on board with electronic health records?

AHS Magazine sat down with larry Pawola, PharmD, professor and head of AHS’ program in health informatics, who outlined eight benefits to electronic health records and gave some concrete examples of how they will change your life for the better.

With the field in its relative infancy, the terminology of healthcare information technology is still evolving. for purposes of this article, the term “electronic health records” or “EHRs” is used to signify healthcare technology systems of all kinds working together to document a patient’s treatments and status—from software that keeps the healthcare history of an individual to extensive software packages that complement and expand record-keeping applications.

reasons to root for electronic health records

A note about terms

COVER STORY

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Preventive care gets easier“Your primary care clinician will ask, ‘When was your last tetanus shot?’” says Pawola. “you only get one every 10 years, so can you recall from memory when your last one was?”

An EHR would obviously contain the answer, but it can also send an alert to your clinician when you’re due for a booster.

Similarly, EHRs can remind your doctors to notify you when you’re due for routine health screenings, based on your age, gender and medical history. for instance, most women are recommended to have a mammogram every two years beginning at age 40. but if the EHR recognizes a family history of breast cancer or a personal history of hyperplasia in your data, it might recommend an amended schedule for you, perhaps starting younger or being tested more frequently.

one of the most impressive functions of EHRs is their ability to “advise” clinicians.

“No one clinician has time to keep up with all the new medical research coming out,” says Pawola. “Now in many EHRs there’s software that aggregates and summarizes the research published in dozens, maybe hundreds, of sources. it even provides [language] translations.”

The result is that a clinician can input a disease or condition and receive an outline of any relevant new knowledge available.

And just as one clinician can’t stay on top of all current research, she also can’t immediately recognize every possible disease or condition. Some software allows her to input a list of symptoms and get suggestions of possible causes and other considerations.

“by itself, the software can’t diagnose,” says Pawola, “but it can accelerate a diagnosis by prompting thinking and giving leads for the clinician to pursue.”

EHRs can also talk to each other. “in many cases, you and your primary physician can get lab results, consultation summaries, test summaries, etc., in just minutes,” says Pawola. “That might take days or weeks in a manual environment.”

there is a true story, famous among health informaticists, about a veteran physician at a major medical center in los Angeles. for 20 years, the doctor had been prescribing 10 times the accurate dosage of a certain drug. luckily for patients, the nurses in his unit knew of his continual error, simply corrected it, and continued with their work.

What if a new nurse were on duty when you were that doctor’s patient? EHRs can recognize these kinds of errors when the doctor types in the dosage.

“EHRs can also recognize details in your medical history that might make a certain drug or treatment inadvisable for you,” says Pawola. He cites the example of beta blockers, which are prescribed for a host of conditions, including high blood pressure,

but are contraindicated for people with asthma or obstructive lung disease.

“but you don’t have to know that,” Pawola says, “if your physician uses a technology system that alerts him to the asthma in your history when he inputs your prescription for beta blockers.”

Or, imagine you had a hip replaced several years ago. Today, your primary care physician orders an MRi to diagnose your complaints of abdominal pain. is the MRi safe for you? is there metal in the hip joint? Do you remember? your orthopedist knows the answer, but does the MRi technician? A portable electronic health record of your entire medical history can answer the question with a few clicks of a mouse.

Patient safety is enhanced

Productivity increases

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2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 15

Americans are getting used to doing business on the internet. We shop, bank, book travel and apply for jobs online. yet we can rarely schedule a healthcare appointment via the internet. EHRs can include the capacity for online scheduling, complete with appointment reminders sent automatically via text or e-mail.

Just a few other hassles that could be minimized: your prescription can be sent directly to the pharmacy; no illegible penmanship to cause serious trouble, and no little slip of paper to lose before you get to the pharmacist. your patient chart will not be misplaced or accidentally slipped into another patient’s file. And when you see a specialist, maybe you won’t have to fill out several pages of demographic and medical-history forms with information your primary physician already has on file.

Another example: “Most colleges and even graduate schools require students to provide proof of childhood immunizations before enrolling,” says Pawola. “by age 18, how many people know if, much less when, they got the chicken pox vaccine?”

EHRs to the rescue once again.

Providers get paideHrs help ensure clinicians code their services accurately and honestly, reducing the number of erroneous codes, missing codes and “upcodes” (dishonest charges for services that cost more than the ones actually performed). These errors are often caught by insurance companies, resulting in costly invest- igations and disputes.

“When insurance companies can process payment transactions without dispute, they save money, and these savings should be passed along to customers as lower premiums,” says Pawola.

“there’s an aspect of artificial intelligence to electronic health records,” says Pawola.

for instance, several applications exist that can track a patient’s condition based on 20 or more vital indicators. With these data, nurses—who care for multiple patients and change shifts several times during each 24-hour period—can assess a patient’s wellness using not only current vital signs, but also the upward or downward trends of other critical data measurements not usually considered.

“The software cross-references a current patient’s data with data from hundreds of thousands of other patients in the database to predict whether this patient will have an episode,” says Pawola. “That gives the clinician a chance to intervene earlier and possibly prevent a turn for the worse.”

“All these reasons point to one overarching

benefit of EHRs: the quality of care delivered

to you, the patient, should improve.

EHRs could contain your entire medical

history in one place that is accessible from

virtually anywhere. With a picture of your

total health, every clinician you see has all

available healthcare knowledge to give you

the best treatment possible.”larry Pawola

Predictive modeling expands

“Hassle factors” decrease

Continued on page 19

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16 Ahs mAgAZine 2010-2011

dean Charlotte A. tate retires this summer after serving 10 years as dean of the College of Applied Health Sciences and two years as interim provost for UIC. But the woman most people on campus know best as Toby won’t go far; instead she’s embracing her role as professor, with posts in both the Department of Disability and Human Development and the Department of Kinesiology and Nutrition.

Here, she contemplates her years since coming from Texas to become a UIC administrator, and she re-counts in her own words some of what she’s learned about people, places, issues and most importantly, herself.

> representing a diverse college like this is easy because it’s not all the same thing. The variety of pro-grams—and of the types of people working and studying here—makes it more interesting to think about and talk about than when I was in a pharmacy school or a medical school.

> What does disability mean? Here’s one example: A friend of mine—a big, strapping guy—came to visit a few years ago. We were about to come in the front entrance of my office building, and he asked if there was another way in. He said he couldn’t walk up the stairs. Turns out his spinal column had collapsed from bone disease, and he had titanium rods in his back. One result was that he couldn’t climb stairs. In that moment, he was disabled, but once he had another way to get in, he wasn’t disabled anymore. The environment defined his disability.

> disability is a social construct. It’s a label, sometimes an opinion. That’s what’s struck me the most in my years here. The word “disabled” shouldn’t be a judgment.

> People without disabilities can learn a lot from people with disabilities about how to live well.

> When you’re in leadership, people have a hard time viewing you as anything other than the title you have, and that makes it lonely at times.

> team-building is something you either can do or you can’t do. I don’t think you can learn it. Formulas don’t work. It has to come from the heart.

> if people who are working together don’t have a common purpose and goal, they’re not going to coalesce as a group. I can’t force [the coalescence], but I can provide the goal and an environment for teamwork by not trying to cram my own thoughts and ideas down people’s throats.

> When you’re communicating, you have to be present in the communication. I can answer your ques-tions without caring, without being connected to you, but good communication requires connection. Still, connection doesn’t guarantee understanding.

> i can’t control how other people understand me. Though I strive to be clear, I can’t control how you’ll hear me. It’s one of the hardest things to learn in life.

> Anyone who’s had personal experience with both physical and occupational therapists—as I had this year to rehab a broken wrist—will understand the differences between them and why the world truly needs both.

> the electronic medical record is a wonderful tool, and it’s revolutionizing healthcare, but you can’t just throw it at clinicians. You can’t introduce that level of change to an organization without addressing the natural human responses to change. We teach HIM and HI professionals to consider the people as well as the technology.

Whati know

now

Toby TateDean Tate reflects on 12 years at UiC as she winds down her administrative career and heads back to the faculty

CONTINUED ON PAGE 18

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2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 17

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18 Ahs mAgAZine 2010-2011

> the illinois state budget for UIC is historically driven, and not based upon the realities of public, urban universities in the 21st century. It results in a campus that is drastically underfunded for the mission that it somehow accomplishes anyway.

> uiC freshmen are incredibly refreshing, enlivening and full of potential. I’ve loved teaching them.

> biomedical visualization helped me realize a dream I had 40 years ago: to actually see what goes on inside the cell. Jane Hurd [BVIS ’68, who presented at AHS in 2010] made me teary-eyed because her work showed visually what I had studied for years in a lab and could only describe mathematically.

> My vision for this college when I arrived was to create a lively, intellectual environment. I think we are that now. I’m proud of that.

> When i was younger I was all about work, career development, climbing the ladder. I know now that work and life aren’t separate; work is part of life. But I also see, much more than I used to, that family and friends are just as important as work, if not more so.

> Coming to Chicago from the South broadened my notion of diversity. But I also think diversity is a misused term—so narrowly focused on race, ethnicity, gender, etc., that it misses out on the rich complexity of variations among people.

> Chicago is a city made up of homogenous com-munities that are woven together in probably the most interesting mosaic of people I’ve ever expe-rienced in my life. It’s lovely. But winters here are tiresome.

> What i personally know now about cancer, [long pause] I wish I didn’t know. (Dean Tate battled thyroid cancer in 2000. In the past year, she’s lost four dear friends to cancer.)

> though i write about it and speak about it, ag-ing well is hard to do. I think I’m aging gracefully but not optimally.

> Aging well is in the mind of the individual. You could look at someone who has a chronic disease and say, “Oh, he’s not aging well,” but that person may be very happy with his life. That’s a big part of aging well.

> My days have been constructed for me for almost two decades. When I leave [the deanship], my time will be almost entirely defined by me. That’s the thing I’m most nervous about and also the thing I’m most looking forward to.

> i don’t think i’m going to live long enough to know everything I’d like to know, or to experience everything I’d like to experience. So I’m trying to prioritize the most compelling things I’d like to do and know. For one thing, I want to go to the Swiss Alps.

Whati know

nowToby TateCONTINUED FROM PAGE 16

Dean Tate at the celebration of her10th anniversary at UIC

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2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 19

Using EHRs is a social servicethe data in eHrs, stripped of the information about who it belongs to, will create an enormous pool of valuable, real-world health and medical data for research purposes.

“The data are fully de-identified,” Pawola emphasizes. “They’re just raw bits of data without any names attached, but the questions they’ll allow us to ask and answer—in addition to the research they can support—will be of enormous help to all of us.”

the most pervasive concern about electronic health records is confidentiality, and yet as Pawola points out, “manual records have always been very insecure, very easy to share accidentally or deliberately. When you see a wall of files at your doctor’s office, is that secure?”

EHRs have the advantage of being lockable so that each part is accessible only to people with “need to know” status. They are also stored remotely, a feature that countless New Orleans residents would have liked after Hurricane katrina, which wiped out the paper-based medical histories of an immeasurable number of people.

On the flip side was the scenario for residents of Joplin, Mo., following the tornado disaster in May. “St. John’s Regional Medical Center was destroyed, but patient records were accessible through a remote data center as soon as a mobile care-delivery location was established,” says Pawola. “Paper records would have been obliterated by the storm.

“The questions of privacy protection and security are always going to be real,” admits Pawola. “Hacks do happen, and are always big news when they do, but they’re very rare. On a day-to-day basis, i believe a digital file is enormously more secure than a paper file. And the industry is working constantly to create better security and more efficient data-recovery in the event of hacking or disasters.”

eHrs sound great, so why isn’t every clinician already using them?

The truth about implementing an EHR is that it’s a massively complex undertaking requiring much time and deep resources. The industry has been unable to set and accomplish shared goals because it’s still hotly debating some fundamental questions: What data should be collected? How much data should healthcare providers share? Who is going to pay for the software, hardware and networks? Who will support them? What technology platforms should be used? How far should data be shared: locally, regionally, nationally?

While those issues remain unsettled, two trends are developing now.

The first is that major healthcare systems are adopting EHRs for patients who receive care at any of their facilities. Take Advocate Health Care in Chicago, which is working to link its 10 hospitals, dozens of outpatient facilities, and the offices of hundreds of physicians and specialists in its network. Eventually, the system will allow a patient’s medical data to be pulled up by any authorized provider in the Advocate system.

“Say your doctor at Condell hospital in libertyville sends you to a specialist in Des Plaines who admits you to lutheran general hospital in Park Ridge. They’ll all be informed—and keep each other informed—by one, seemingly unified system using a variety of integrated technologies,” says larry Pawola, PharmD, head of AHS’ program in health informatics.

A second, separate trend is toward heath information exchanges, or HiEs. An HiE is the electronic sharing of health information across a health system, a community, a state or an entire region to promote the delivery of quality healthcare for its participants or citizens.

“HiEs are ideal,” says Pawola, “but so far they’re more workable in small markets where healthcare providers aren’t hypercompetitive.” He cites the Veterans Health Administration, MedVirginia and the Delaware Health information Network as early adopters of a working HiE.

That competitiveness among health systems, so pronounced in large markets, is a top reason that the fundamental questions above are so difficult to answer.

Another obstacle to implementing EHRs is cost. While the $20 billion designated by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is an unprecedented investment, implementing an EHR at just one large healthcare system can cost several billion dollars.

“Still,” says Pawola, “it’s extremely encouraging that the government is beginning to support and offer incentives to move the healthcare industry toward increased technology use that could benefit all of us.”

8 reasons CONTiNUED fROM PAgE 15

O EHR,Where Art Thou?

Larry Pawola, PharmD, head of AHS’ program in health informatics

Patientrecordsare secure

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20 Ahs mAgAZine 2010-2011

PEOPlE

Social class

T hink back to your high school or col-lege class. Do you remember your classmates very well? Are you still in touch? Do you make a point to see

one another? (Note: In this case “you” means many of you, not just two or three.)

If you were able to answer yes to all the questions above, here’s one more: Have 60 years passed since your graduation?

That’s the story of the occupational therapy Class of 1951.

In 2001, alumnae Lois (Frase) Browning and Carol (Dillon) Tengdin had the idea that their classmates should get together for a 50th reunion. They would include graduates from December 1950 and June 1951. (At that time, the program had two graduations each year, but students who finished in December functioned much like one class with those who were to graduate the following June.)

A total of 10 of the 12 alumnae were still living, and Tengdin was able to reach them all. In April 2001, eight of the classmates met in Kerrville, Texas, where Browning makes her home. She served as “host” for the reunion, and they all had such a wonderful time that they promised to gather at least every other year, traveling to each other’s hometowns as they rotated hosting duties.

Since Kerrville, the group has met in Bran-son, Mo.; Tucson, Ariz.; State College, Pa.; and Glenview, Ill. They also took a Canadian train tour together in 2008. Most recently they met in October 2010 in San Diego, where Brown-ing’s daughter lives; she offered to help host.

The cast of each reunion varies slightly. Sometimes, some husbands attend. Not all the classmates can make it to every reunion. But “we are strong in our desire to get together,” says Corinne (Simon) Kulick, “and the most fun we have is reminiscing about the good old times.”

The women are now in their early 80s and intend to continue the reunions until they no longer can. For 2012, they’re contemplating a return to Chicago, including a visit to campus, where members of the OT department will be happy to greet them and show them around their old neighborhood. “That’d be such a hoot,” says Kulick.

Alumnae stay connected despite decades and distance

“I’m forever indebted to my years studying occupational therapy, for that became the springboard for all my personal and professional growth. My desire to learn new things, take educational classes, and get involved has not waned.”- Corinne (Simon) kulick, OT ’51

To read all about Corinne’s personal and professional growth,visit www.ahs.uic.edu/OT51.

1951

Nine of the graduates on June 15, 1951: Dreymiller, Browning, Norris (hidden), Leila (Hodes) Newar, Kulick, Jane (Merrill) Fritson, Cynthia (Clark) Smith, OT program founder and head Beatrice Wade, Kennedy, Susie (Yoshikawa) Aoyama

The seven classmates who finished the OT program in December 1950: Lois (Frase) Browning, Marcia Dreymiller (deceased), Helen Fecenko (deceased), Jane (Rich) Norris, Carol (Dillon) Tengdin, Alice Kennedy, Corinne (Simon) Kulick

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2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 21

“I was at a small Quaker school in Indiana when Seventeen magazine had an article about OT programs. My mother went to meet Bea Wade and thought that it would be a good field for me.”- Jane (Rich) Norris, OT ’51

“I wanted to have a career in the medical field but my father was not happy with my choice to become a nurse because, in 1946, nurses were carrying bedpans. My friend gave me a brochure on OT. I had never heard anything about OT, but that pamphlet changed my life!”- leila (Hodes) Newar, OT ’51

To read more about where leila’s life would go from there, visit www.ahs.uic.edu/OT51. Spoiler alert: She’s still working full time!

2001

2005

2010

The first reunion in Kerrville, Texas: Aoyama, Newar, Browning, Fritson, Tengdin, Norris, Kulick, Smith

In Tucson, Ariz.: Newar, Browning, Fritson, Tengdin, Norris, Helen (Baranyi) Montgomery, Kulick, Smith

In San Diego: Newar, Browning, Tengdin, Norris, Kulick, Smith

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22 Ahs mAgAZine 2010-2011

the uiC College of Applied Health Sciences is made better every day by the generosity of alumni, friends, corporations and foundations who support our programs through private donations, in-kind donations and corporate matching gifts. We are honored to acknowledge the donors who contributed to the college during the 2010 fiscal year, ending June 30. Their concern for the future—and present—of AHS helped us improve the student experience by upgrading classroom technology, sending students to professional conferences, and providing enhanced learning and living spaces. It also created seed funding for additional scholarships. To each donor, our deepest thanks.

CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION DONORS

$500,000 and above

Ethel louise Armstrong foundation

$100,000 - $499,999National Multiple Sclerosis Society

$50,000 - $99,999The Michael J. fox foundation for

Parkinson’s Research

The National Pancreas foundation

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Crohn’s and Colitis foundation

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Special Olympics international

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Chicago

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ida Miriam Stern Memorial fund inc.

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kPMg foundation

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Chicago Area Health information

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illinois Health information

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Todd buck illustration inc.

University of illinois Alumni

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$5,000 - $14,999 Randolph P. frieser

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$500 - $999 Evelyn J. Alston

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$250 - $499 fabricio E. balcazar and

yolanda Suarez-balcazar

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2010-2011 Ahs mAgAZine 23

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and Jeffrey lee Schvimer

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and Jill M. Joyce-Hazard

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Althea V. Walton

Margaret J. Watson

June D. Wencel-Drake

Cheryle J. Wilcox

Joan M. Willems

Renae J. Williams

Mary T. Wilson

Susan R. Witz

karen Wolfeiler-fleischer

William C. Wombles

Roland E. Wozniak

Nancy J. yeagle

Rosa M. yepez

June gatch Zaragoza

Jordana Zavos

lois M. Zentner

Wei Zhou

A World of gratitude …dorothy omori bergeron, OT ’53, joined the Centuria

Circle of the President’s Council of Donors in December

2010, when her total gifts to UiC topped $100,000.

Words are inadequate to express our deep thanks.

Page 26: AHS Magazine 2010-11

24 Ahs mAgAZine 2010-2011

lAST SHOT

Class dismissedA total of 363 degree-earners graduated in 2011*—and 66 certificate-earners also finished their pro-grams this year. Though a few will stay with us to pursue advanced degrees, most have left AHS, headed to the Next big Thing in each of their lives. We wish them all the best. We know we’ve given them the tools to succeed, and we hope they’ll remember us as they grow.

4 doctors of occupational

therapy

3 PhDs in disability

studies

2 PhDs in kinesiology/

movement sciences

1 PhD in kinesiology,

nutrition and rehabilitation

sciences

30 doctors of physical therapy

37 masters in health informatics

49 post-baccalaureate health informatics certificates

35 masters in occupational therapy28 masters in

biomedical visualization

9 assistive technology certificates

156 bachelors in kinesiology

21 bachelors in health

information management

16 bachelors in nutrition

6 post-master’s health informatics

certificates

2 management and leadership

certificates

14 masters in kinesiology

12 masters in nutrition

6 masters in disability and

human development

1 master in rehabilitation

sciences

The good doctors

Students of the first degree

Masterful grads

40 133

193Certified experts

66

*includes students whose degrees were conferred in may 2011, August 2010 and december 2010

Page 27: AHS Magazine 2010-11

1 Fulbright Fellow: kevin Conley, bS, kinesiology

One of 80 U.S. students selected to spend a year teaching English in korea; afterward he’ll return to attend med school at UiC.

1 inductee into the U of i Alumni Association’s Activities Honorary Society: Tadas Stonkus, bS, kinesiology

One of 15 students UiC-wide selected for actively participating in three or more student organizations, and serving as a leader in at least one; he’s currently finishing prerequisites for med school and preparing to take the MCAT.

4 recipients of the U of i Alumni Association’s Student leadership Award

Award recognizes profound impact on one or more UiC student organizations, volunteer services or campus departments.

AHS congratulates the Class of 2011!Snapshots from Commencement

May 5, 2011, at the UIC Forum

Among the graduates are …

12 fellows of the Urban Allied Health Academy

UAHA fellowship requires dozens of hours of events and volunteer service to prepare for working with underserved populations.

15 recipients of the Chancellor’s Student Service Award

Award recognizes significant time, effort and creativity contributed to campus and community-service projects.

31 undergrads who earned University Honors

16 cum laude

10 magna cum laude

5 summa cum laude

Page 28: AHS Magazine 2010-11

University of Illinois at Chicago

Office of the Dean (MC 518)

College of Applied Health Sciences

808 South Wood Street, 169 CMET

Chicago, Illinois 60612-7305

Address Service Requested

non-profit

orgAniZAtion

u.s. postAge

pAid

permit no. 4860

chicAgo, il

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