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40 results for "East Carolina University. Brody School of Medicine"
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Record #:
31601
Author(s):
Abstract:
East Carolina University, after twelve years of planning and preliminary accreditations, was approved this spring for the enrollment of its first four-year medical class. Dr. William E. Laupus, dean of the School of Medicine, believes the family medicine program will be one of the school’s strongest assets and offer the training needed to prepare doctors for rural medical practices.
Source:
Carolina Country (NoCar HD 9688 N8 C38x), Vol. 9 Issue 9, Sept 1977, p6-8, il, por
Record #:
34409
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dr. Donna Lake is a clinical associate professor in the East Carolina University College of Nursing and Brody School of Medicine, and a retired Colonel in the United States Air Force Nurse Corps. After twenty-five years serving in the military, Lake works in the front lines of nursing to change the way health care providers are trained so that they work as a team. Currently, she is working on ways to help military nurses transition to academic faculty positions and to prepare nurses for hospital leadership.
Source:
Greenville: Life in the East (NoCar F264 G8 G743), Vol. Issue , Summer 2018, p28-34, por
Record #:
34410
Author(s):
Abstract:
The history of nursing in Greenville, North Carolina highlights the progression of the Vidant Medical Center and the East Carolina University College of Nursing. Vidant Medical Center began in 1923 as the Pitt Community Hospital, and currently serves as a medical hub for eastern North Carolina. The East Carolina University College of Nursing opened in 1960 and is one of the top producers of new nurses among North Carolina universities.
Source:
Greenville: Life in the East (NoCar F264 G8 G743), Vol. Issue , Summer 2018, p40-45, il, por
Record #:
35607
Author(s):
Abstract:
The possible dream, as noted by Dr. Moore and supported by ECU’s President Jenkins, was the creation of a medical school at East Carolina University. Their goal was to supply a medical school that would adequately meet the needs of North Carolinians, particularly those residing in Eastern NC. How it would do so was by equipping its doctors to provide care comparable to the care offered by doctors graduating from the other medical schools in the state.
Source:
New East (NoCar F 251 T37x), Vol. 1 Issue 5, Nov/Dec 1973, p7, 9-10, 32
Record #:
35608
Author(s):
Abstract:
Wooles’ companion piece to “The Possible Dream” echoed many of the same assertions contained in Moore’s article. However, there were two distinctive features in Wooles’ article. One was defining what a medical school is. The other was how it prepares medical students for the profession in term of knowledge and clinical training.
Source:
New East (NoCar F 251 T37x), Vol. 1 Issue 5, Nov/Dec 1973, p18-19, 27
Record #:
36041
Author(s):
Abstract:
The standing room only event was the debut of ECU’s Four Seasons Chamber Music Festival. Spotlighted for the special event included the unveiled drawing of ECU’s planned new Performing Arts Theatre. Other visual accompaniment were photos of performers, Chancellor Steve Ballard, the New York Metro Alumni Chapter, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Record #:
36049
Abstract:
Talent was present; absent was funding. In a campus meeting, Senator Burr heralded Johnson and Johnson’s offer to help ECU fulfill medical missions like curing diabetes. A research university springing from a teacher’s training school, then, may seem off the beaten path. Realizing this intent—improving the quality of life—made it obvious ECU has stayed on course.
Record #:
36274
Abstract:
Medical advancements possible over the next decade included cryopreservation, controlling prosthetic limbs with the mind, and nanotechnology. Areas projected for improvement or further development over the next ten years included gene therapy, noninvasive technology, and cure of Dementia diseases. As for an area the author acknowledges is not clear, it involves medical ethics: when to cease providing procedures, especially where age is concerned.
Record #:
39660
Author(s):
Abstract:
Collaborative endeavors between East Carolina University and Pitt Community College are making a positive economic and occupational impact, particularly in local industrial and private sectors. Countywide collaborative yields include PCC’s Walter and Marie Williams Science and Technology Building; VECU, a fusion of ECU and Vidant Health’s 80 medical practices; Farmville’s East Carolina ArtSpace gallery; and Ayden's Quilt Lizzy US LLC.
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Record #:
40065
Author(s):
Abstract:
The profiled ECU physician’s assistant program graduate helps generate Vance Family Medicine’s family-like atmosphere. As for the combination of caring and capability medical professionals like Tanya Darrow exhibit, it’s particularly valuable for the region she works. It contains a considerable number of communities medically underserved as well as rural.