Year: 2010
Classifieds — June 21, 2010
June 21, 2010
APARTMENTS/HOUSES FOR RENT Baltimore City, updated 1BR condo in secure, gated community, assigned prkng, swimming, tennis, nr hospital and university. $1,200/mo incl utils. 410-375-7748. Baltimore County, 3BR, 1.5BA restored, registered historic carriage house, on Gunpowder Falls Bike Trail, faculty/grad students only, 20 mins to Homewood. $1,150/mo (reduced). 410-472-4241. Baltimore County, renov’d 2BR waterfront cottage w/pier […]
Calendar — June 21, 2010
June 21, 2010
‘A Summer Evening at Evergreen’ A curators’ tour of Sculpture at Evergreen 6: Simultaneous Presence with five of the participating artists, the exhibition opening of From Mexico to Maine: Photographs by Duncan Whitaker and a performance by the Baltimore Shakespeare Festival will mark the 10th annual A Summer Evening at Evergreen, on Tuesday, June 29, […]
Infectious diseases cause nearly two-thirds of child deaths
June 21, 2010
Preventable infectious diseases cause two-thirds of child deaths, according to a new study published May 12 by The Lancet. Experts from the World Health Organization and UNICEF’s Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group assessed data from 193 countries to produce estimates by country, region and the world. While the number of deaths has declined globally over […]
SoN joins Md. Alliance to Transform the Health Professions
June 21, 2010
The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing has joined the Maryland Alliance to Transform the Health Professions to help address Maryland’s growing health care needs. The organization, composed of more than a dozen academic health institutions and historically black colleges and universities in Maryland, is working with the state’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene […]
Jhpiego gives international award to Ghanaian midwife
June 21, 2010
In the developing world, midwives are frontline health care providers, giving life-saving information to pregnant women, counseling HIV-positive women on how to protect their unborn children from infections, preparing women to give birth and plan their families, helping deliver babies and connecting the greater community to health care. On June 6, in recognition of the […]
Chesney-penned play now an on-demand Press paperback
June 21, 2010
Alan M. Chesney, former dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, didn’t spend all his time delving into strictly scientific and administrative matters. He wrote not only a three-volume history of the Johns Hopkins Hospital and School of Medicine but also penned a play. His 1939 one-act work, The Flowering of an Idea, presents […]
New textbook policy goes into effect
June 21, 2010
On July 1, Johns Hopkins will roll out a universitywide textbook affordability policy in compliance with new state and federal laws. The intent is to lower the cost of textbooks by ensuring that faculty, staff and students have appropriate options and pertinent and timely information when selecting and purchasing course materials. The new policy comes […]
Bioethicists examine ethical oversight in quality initiatives
June 21, 2010
New findings from Johns Hopkins suggest that most quality improvement initiatives in U.S. hospitals are reviewed internally before they are conducted but that there is not routine consideration of the ethical issues associated with them. Most of these quality improvement initiatives are reviewed internally, by a management team or office, clinicians leading the effort or […]
Restricting blood supply to prostate tumors delays disease progression
June 21, 2010
A blood vessel–blocking drug called tasquinimod slowed the rate of disease progression in a clinical trial of 200 prostate cancer patients, according to experts at Johns Hopkins, Roswell Park Cancer Institute and Duke University. The findings were presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting held June 4 to 8 in Chicago. Tasquinimod is a […]
Income, race combine to make perfect storm for kidney disease
June 21, 2010
African-Americans with incomes below the poverty line have a significantly higher risk of chronic kidney disease than higher-income African-Americans or whites of any socioeconomic status, research led by scientists at Johns Hopkins and the National Institute on Aging shows. The study, conducted in a racially and socioeconomically diverse sample of participants from Baltimore City, could […]