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Vital Signs
Worthy of note: Honors, awards, appointments, etc.
Charles Barlowe, Ph.D., a professor of
biochemistry (top photo), and
Ronald Taylor, Ph.D., a professor of
microbiology and immunology
(bottom photo),
both received
MERIT
awards from
the National
Institutes of
Health (NIH).
MERIT stands
for Method to Extend Research
in Time. The awards, based on
"superior competence
and
outstanding
productivity,"
are designed to
spur scientific
creativity with
long-term, stable
funding. Barlowe studies intracellular
transport and Taylor
the bacterium V. cholerae.
Robert Gougelet, M.D., an assistant professor of medicine, was appointed to the Federal Emergency Management Agency's National Advisory Council.
Lori Alvord, M.D., an assistant
professor of surgery and associate
dean of student
and multicultural
affairs,
was appointed
to the National
Advi sory
Council of the
National Center
for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine, a component of the National Institutes of Health.
Dale Collins, M.D., an associate professor of surgery, was named a fellow of the Executive Leadership in Academic Medicine program.
Yolanda Sanchez, Ph.D., an associate professor of pharmacology and toxicology, was appointed a member of the Molecular Genetics Study Section of the National Institutes of Health's Center for Scientific Review.
Elaine Frank, director of the Injury Prevention
Program at the Children's Hospital at
Dartmouth, was named
New Hampshire Public
Citizen of the Year by the
New Hampshire Pediatric
Society, for her leadership
in such initiatives as the
Buckle Up New Hampshire
Coalition, the New
Hampshire FirearmSafety Coalition, and the
Youth Suicide Prevention Assembly.
Heidi Keup and Kandice Nielson, DMS Year 4s, received John Gibbons Medical Student Awards to attend the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists District I Annual Meeting.
Karen Liby, Ph.D., a research fellow in pharmacology, was presented with the
Wilson S. Stone Memorial Award by M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Texas.
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center was included among the nation's top hospitals by U.S. News & World Report. The magazine evaluated 5,462 hospitals, and only 173—just over 3%—made the top 50. DHMC was among the top 50 in three of 16 specialties—cancer care, digestive disorders, and gynecology.
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center received a Governor's Council Outstanding Achievement Award for Physical Activity and Health and the Distinguished Corporate Citizen Award from the Daniel Webster Council of the Boy Scouts of America.
DHMC Media Services received a bronze medal in the 27th Annual Telly Awards, for a video about DHMC's fertility medicine program.
Erratum: An article in the Summer issue of Dartmouth Medicine on student-initiated electives stated that an elective on medical anthropology included a lecture by a Tibetan physician; the class was listed on the syllabus but did not actually happen. We apologize for . . . well, not doing our homework.
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