Posts Tagged ‘general’

USF and Florida Hospital partner to bring medical advances to local communities

Monday, March 12th, 2012

Florida Hospital and USF Health have formed a strategic alliance, combining Adventist Health System’s innovative approach to patient-centered care with the University of South Florida’s leading research, to deliver cutting-edge medical therapies in hospital and outpatient settings. Through this unique public/private partnership, Florida Hospital is making an investment of approximately $14 million in four key specialty areas to bring enhanced patient care, state-of-the-art technology and expanded services to Tampa Bay.

“Our partnership with USF Health will bring their leading-edge research right to the doorsteps of residents in communities where we have hospitals in Tampa Bay,” said Mike Schultz, President and CEO of the Florida Region for Adventist Health System, the parent company of Florida Hospital. “Patients in Hillsborough, Pinellas and Pasco counties will no longer have to travel for personalized and state-of-the- art medicine in the specialties where we have affiliations with USF Health.”

In September 2011, the Florida Hospital announced that it was developing strategic health care partnerships, including one with USF Health. Today, both organizations announced how the partnership is translating medical research advancements into cutting-edge patient treatment in the following specialty areas: cardiology at Florida Hospital Pepin Heart Institute, breast health at Florida Hospital Tampa, neuroscience at Florida Hospital Zephyrhills, and surgical oncology, melanoma and breast cancer at Helen Ellis Memorial Hospital in Tarpon Springs.

“Through these critical specialties, we’re going to transform how patients experience health care at Florida Hospital in our area,” said Dr. Stephen K. Klasko, CEO of USF Health and dean of USF Health Morsani College of Medicine. “Patients will have greater access to our world-class physicians and the new scientific discoveries at USF Health. As important, USF Health will also work with Florida Hospital and its patients to create personalized, coordinated care in cardiology, breast health and other targeted specialties.”

Cardiology

Cardiovascular patients at Florida Hospital Pepin Heart Institute will benefit from research collaboration and USF Health’s exploration in genomic screening for personalized health care. Genomic screening uses an individual’s genetic profile to customize the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular disease to each patient.

“No other providers in Tampa Bay will be able to replicate the level of how we begin to tailor procedures to individual patients to maintain their heart health,” Dr. Klasko said.

“Florida Hospital Pepin Heart Institute will now combine its personalized health care delivery and clinical research with USF Health’s leading academic medicine and research,” said John Harding, President and CEO of Florida Hospital Tampa Bay Division. “This innovative partnership will give health care consumers a broader range of treatment options for cardiovascular disease.”

Breast Health

Women across Tampa Bay have been experiencing the benefit of a comprehensive diagnostics center exclusively dedicated to breast care at Florida Hospital Tampa. Recently, USF Health partnered with an existing breast program composed of Florida Hospital Tampa, Community Medical Imaging and Tampa Bay Breast Care Specialists to build an even more comprehensive breast health and cancer program. This collaboration brings together private practices, academic medicine and a hospital to form a renowned team of expert radiologists, radiation oncologists and breast surgeons. Based at Florida Hospital Tampa, this multidisciplinary approach to breast care provides a comprehensive range of diagnostic services, cancer treatments and research protocols to patients, while offering a higher level of coordinated care. One of the major patient benefits is reducing the time from screening to diagnosis to treatment. Providing rapid diagnosis — often within the same day — increases early detection, which is a critical factor in successful outcomes for breast cancer patients.

Neuroscience

The new Neuroscience Institute at Florida Hospital Zephyrhills will have a team of USF Health neurosurgeons on-site who are trained in the treatment of brain, spine and acute stroke procedures. Time is an important factor with most medical issues, but especially with stroke and neurological conditions. The new 24/7 dedicated stroke team includes academic neurosurgeons from USF, neuro-interventional radiologists, board certified neurologists, emergency physicians and certified registered nurses to coordinate care from triage to diagnosis, treatment and recovery. Patients will have access to the latest evidence-based treatments from USF, including brain surgery, spine surgery and minimally invasive treatment of aneurysms. Having all of these services offered in one location means patients will no longer need to travel outside Pasco County, saving precious time, which is a critical factor for neurological procedures.

Surgical Oncology, Melanoma and Breast Cancer

To round off the partnership, patients in Pinellas and west Pasco counties will benefit from enhanced medical expertise at Helen Ellis Memorial Hospital. USF Health physicians will now be available for patients – a plastics and reconstructive surgeon trained in the most advanced technologies and treatments for breast cancer and other oncological disorders, and an internationally known surgical oncologist specializing in the treatment of malignant melanoma, complicated skin cancers and breast cancer. The partnership creates a comprehensive and coordinated approach to cancer care that gives patients the option to receive state-of-the-art treatment without leaving their community.

“These four affiliations are the foundation for Florida Hospital and USF Health’s plans to establish a higher standard of coordinated care throughout the market,” said John Harding. “This announcement is just the beginning of our vision to elevate health care in Tampa Bay.”

For more information, please visit www.HigherDegree.org

Heartfelt by design: Jeremy Vandermeij makes cutting-edge ideas both accessible and delightful

Friday, March 9th, 2012

YongeStreet

The idea that an isolated genius produces the best ideas has lost much of its cache in our networked and crowdsourced world. But Jeremy Vandermeij’s vision of collaborative art and design is a whole lot more individualistic and experimental than what any ordinary crowd would produce. And a whole lot more joyful.

Vandermeij’s work as a self-described “creative generalist” employs friendship and camaraderie to extraordinary creative ends; no one, from a work’s creator to the attendee or consumer or patron is left out of the process. As creative director at the Gladstone Hotel, former curator of the hotel’s annual Come Up to My Room event, which invites creators to create an immersive experience in the hotel’s rooms, and co-founder of Toronto Design Offsite and Public Displays of Affection, Vandermeij has worked to surmount the often artificial boundaries between art and design, personal expression and public service.

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From local farm to restaurant table in Tampa Bay

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012

Tampa Bay Times

For the past few years Tampa Bay diners might have found Ocala microgreens or Bradenton tomatoes on local menus, but the majority of ingredients still pulled up on the back of a Sysco truck, many foods traveling thousands of miles to get here.

That’s changing, as the farm-to-table fervor that has taken hold in other parts of the country is reaching a critical mass for Tampa Bay restaurants, with major players like John Matthews’ Suncoast Food Alliance taking the lead.

On a recent day, thousands of Florida sweet onions are spread across a flatbed trailer in the gloom of a pitch-roofed barn. Matthews and Don Affolter grab a 25-pound mesh sack, squeeze each onion looking for the firm ones, and stuff the sack to capacity in minutes. Before heading back to the van, Matthews writes a $15 check and slips it into the honor-system slotted box at Cincotta Ranch.

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Manatee School For the Arts Student featured in Autoweek Article

Monday, February 27th, 2012

the Bradenton Times

Manatee School For the Arts sophomore student Nick Neri was recently featured in the February 6, 2012 issue of Autoweek in an article titled Talent and Tenacity: Meet 10 Rising Stars aiming to make it to the top ranks of Professional Racing.

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Do Students Understand the Material? A New App Helps Teachers Know For Sure

Sunday, February 19th, 2012

GOOD Magazine

One of the biggest challenges for classroom teachers is developing ways of ensuring students understand the material, especially the ones who feel self-conscious about asking questions or participating in class discussions. A new mobile app, GoSoapBox, hopes to become the go-to tool to help educators break down barriers and determine whether students are grasping what’s going on in class.

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Insulated bag enables low-carbon cooking via heat retention

Sunday, February 12th, 2012

Springwise.com

Wonderbag is an insulated device that greatly reduces fuel use by enabling cooking via heat retention.

Cooking is a major source of carbon pollution in the developing world, inspiring the innovation of carbon-negative alternatives such as the LuciaStove from Rwandan Inyenyeri. Offering a different approach to the problem, the Wonderbag is an insulated device that greatly reduces fuel use by enabling cooking via heat retention.

Suitable for cooking “anything from meaty stews or vegetable curries to simple rice and soups,” according to Natural Balance, the product’s South African maker, the Wonderbag is designed to complete cooking that has been started on the stove.

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National study ranks Pinellas Education Foundation first

Sunday, February 12th, 2012

Tampa Bay Business Journal

A national study of education foundations and funds in the 50 largest school districts ranked the Pinellas Education Foundation first in supporting public education.

Hillsborough Education Foundation was ranked fourth, and the Polk Education Foundation was sixth, a written statement said.

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Why “Infographic Thinking” Is The Future, Not A Fad

Sunday, February 12th, 2012

Fast Company, Co.design

We get a lot of infographic pitches. Almost all of them suck. Why? Because while they may well be “information plus graphics,” they often lack what designer Francesco Franchi calls “infographic thinking.” This isn’t just “how to make some numbers and vector graphics look clever together.” It’s a narrative language–it’s “representation plus interpretation to develop an idea,” to quote Franchi. He’s the art director of IL (Intelligence in Lifestyle), the monthly magazine of Il Sole 24 ORE, one of Italy’s top financial newspapers, and if you look at his work, you quickly get the sense that he knows what the #*(@ he’s talking about. He lays out his thoughts on “infographic thinking” in this video podcast from Gestalten:

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Sarasota among Penske’s top 10 moving destinations

Sunday, February 12th, 2012

Tampa Bay Business Journal

Sarasota ranked No. 9 for the second year in a row for moving destinations on Penske Truck Rental’s annual “Move Ahead” list.

The list is compiled by online consumer truck rental reservations and call center data.

“As this list indicates, U.S. residents continue migrating primarily toward warm weather areas,” said Don Mikes, Penske’s vice president of rental, on the company’s website.

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Dunedin Fine Art Center Recognizes Young Artists from Pinellas County Schools

Tuesday, January 31st, 2012

In the second installment of creative stART! DFAC’s K-5 Pinellas County Schools art showcase, a number of talented area students were chosen for special recognition.

Judge Anne Feldshue, chose David  Brown’s “Dragon Gate,”    Erin Gonzalez’s “My First Self-Portrait”   and Mike (Hien Thanh)   Le’s “Perched Parrot” to receive Artistic Merit awards.  Honorable mentions were given to Alex Arnold for “Red Berries,”   Serena Cortese for “African Cloth”  and Aiden  Eylward,  for “My Circles

The exhibition which runs through February 20th in the Kokolakis Family Gallery at DFAC features 74 works from 24 public elementary schools in Pinellas County.

Dunedin Fine Art Center – 1143 Michigan Blvd. – Dunedin, FL – 727.298.DFAC – www.dfac.org