This session welcomes studies on MHWs from physical processes to ecological impacts. Co-chairs: Eric C. An unprecedented coastwide toxic algal bloom linked to anomalous ocean conditions Invited Variability in euphausiid size in response to the marine heatwave of off northern California She has worked extensively in China as well.
Alexandra Lipschultz '11 is earning her master's in bioethics at Penn and hopes to go to law school once she completes the MBE degree. Sicilia Lomax '18 is a research assistant at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and pursing her MPH at Penn that she started through submatriculation. Her team manages all of the large and strategic partnerships Stanford Medicine has with Industry. Shannon Macika '14 lives in Stuttgart, Germany, where she works as a consultant for BABLE, a start-up company focused on the implementation of smart city solutions across Europe.
Winston Health Policy Scholarships. This past fall, I left the newsroom to have more time to hang out with my preschoolers and work on longer-term projects. But now that every reporter is a health reporter, I'm doing a lot more editing and consulting than I expected.
And--some news I'm excited to share--my reporting was part of a couple of journalism packages honored with regional Edward R. Murrow awards this spring. I then spent a year and a half working for Philadelphia Mental Health Care Corporation as an Intensive Case Manager for individuals with dual-diagnoses in mental health and substance use disorders.
I connected these individuals to community resources and supported them in their recovery. Until then, I've taken a temporary job at Duke Hospital to help out with the Covid response here. Lavanya Madhusudan '09 works for Rep. Pramila Jayapal in Seattle as her Outreach and Policy Coordinator handling the healthcare, energy and environment portfolios.
Alexandra Malebranche '08 is a pediatric dentist practicing in Philadelphia and South Jersey. Parmpreet Mann '17 is working at Progyny as an Account Manager. Progyny is a fertility benefits management company based in New York City.
I am excited to announce that I will be attending the Harvard T. Epidemiology degree. Lauren Mendelson '11 is an internal medicine resident at the University of Massachusetts.
Brian Mertens "11 is the Director of High School Program for Summer Search Bay Area - a non-profit organization that provides mentorship, experiential learning and college and career advising to young people from low-income backgrounds.
Kathryne Mezzanotte '12 is working on the health team for a tech start-up dedicated to bringing consumers transparent cost information to make better, more informed financial decisions. Her team focuses on health financial information, topics ranging from medical billing advocates to health insurance. I recently helped develop the commercialization strategy for a number of rare disease drugs and a late stage HIV vaccine.
I think about my HSOC classes often and miss them these days! After graduating, I took a year to complete informal post-baccalaureate to fulfill medical school coursework requirements. Currently, I am finishing up my first year of medical school at Perelman in spring !
I'm grateful to have been able to stay in the Penn family. Lauren Murski '18 is working in Chicago as a senior consultant in the healthcare strategy practice at Guidehouse. Kristin Myers '15 will be entering medical school the fall of at the University of Washington, where she will be a Targeted Rural Underserved Track Scholar serving the community of Othello, Washington.
There he provides quantitative and qualitative research support and strategic advice on a broad range of healthcare business and policy issues. His research focuses on how adolescent behaviors affect health later in adulthood. Amanda Nelson Delfiner '10 recently received her MBA from NYU Stern and has begun working in strategy and operations consulting at Deloitte, with a focus on life sciences and healthcare.
Prior to business school, she was working for a healthcare tech company that focused on electronic health records. I provide intensive medical case management for refugees and immigrants who have intellectual disabilities or medical conditions, including physical disabilities and severe mental health conditions.
Within this role, I am also a coordinator for Youth programming. If you ever have students who are interested in nonprofit work, and more specifically immigrant and refugee work, I would be more than happy to talk to them about my experiences. Clara Ng '10 is working at Collective Health, a health tech startup in San Francisco that helps employers design and administer their health benefits. I'm also currently going to law school part-time. I'm a mom to 2 dogs and an active 3-year old.
Rachel Orlinsky '17 and Meghana Patel '17 are about to begin their third year of medical school at University of Maryland School of Medicine. It's a national non-profit that helps Catholic parishes and campus ministries at colleges throughout the United States, mainly through leading bible-studies and investing in personal relationships with students. I guess you can see it as the spiritual side of improving health at college.
Charlie Oshinsky '12 is working at the Aspen Center for Environmental Studies in Colorado and applying to medical school. Riddh Pakrasi '07 a primary care physician in the Chicago suburbs. Claire Park '17 worked as a medical assistant and scribe in Los Angeles and will be starting medical school at California University of Science and Medicine in July Matthew Pellegrino '14 is an analyst in the healthcare investment banking unit of Raymond James Financial.
Ruchita Pendse '16 is a medical student at Stanford continuing to study health policy and health systems, especially in India, and am also involved in the bioethics community at Stanford.
She then ran multiple pharma-backed patient support programs designed to improve medication access and adherence for patients in the Middle East and Africa. She has been accepted to begin an MBA program in Switzerland in Always thankful for what HSOC has given me! Harivony Rakotoarivelo '10 is currently in her second year of MSc. He is excited to be returning to Penn in Fall to attend law school. Go Quakers! Tasneem Rangwala '05 graduated from dental school and is currently doing a residency in Orthodontics in NYC.
Gabrielle Ritaccio '10 did at post-bac at Bennington and is now studying medicine at Upstate Medical College. Maria E. Oscar is a startup using technology and a focus user experience to reshape how patients engage with their health insurance companies.
Andrew J. Learning about the dynamics of the healthcare world has definitely given me a leg up. Amanda Ruffner '14 is working as an editorial assistant at the University of Pennsylvania Press. Sarah Schulte '14 is a Princeton in Latin America fellow, teaching public health to 9th and 10th graders and helping them develop public health outreach projects.
After that she will be in Chile, studying on a Fulbright grant, and she hopes to be matriculating in medical school in the fall of Will Schupmann '17 will begin a Ph. Becky Shasha '15 is a Senior Program Coordinator at Jhpiego, a non profit organization affiliated with Johns Hopkins University that focuses on maternal and child health around the world.
She is the student leader for a mobile clinic that travels from health fair to health fair, giving medical students the opportunity to do important health screenings for a lot of Katrina-survivors who lost their main access to health care with the shutting down of Charity Hospital. Shrestha Singh '12 will be attending Harvard Divinity School in the fall of as she works toward her Master of Divinity degree.
She plans to study feminist theology and the intersections of spirituality and social change. Most recently, she has been back home in California, spending her time farming in San Jose, doing restorative justice work in Oakland, and hiking with her amazing family. Taylor Smith '15 has a post-bac at St.
Liz Spangler '06 worked for two years in NYC for a small healthcare consulting firm in Manhattan Easton Associates doing strategy work for pharmaceutical, biotech, and medical device companies.
She is now in Iasi, Romania helping start a church for English speaking internationals in the city. Line Stensland '13 has an M. She was previously a manager with Deloitte's healthcare valuation and modeling practice where she focused on hospital and payer finance and strategy. She was awarded the Dean's Research Scholarship and, this summer will be doing research in the Department of Public Health Dentistry examining the oral health status of developmentally disabled patients treated under general anesthesia.
I am so fortunate for my Penn education, particularly my HSOC studies, so much so that I wanted to continue learning about these social determinants of health. She works to reimagine the American healthcare experience using technology for patients and one of the largest payors in the industry, self-insured employers.
In her spare time, Sophia continues to work with international NGOs to boost development work in the girl's education space. She is happy to discuss this work with anyone interested in health tech or moving to SF.
David Thai '18 i s working at Windrose Consulting Group as a first-year analyst. He recently completed a Fulbright Fellowship in Vietnam. Additionally, David serves as the Vice President of Rise First, an online platform of resources for first-generation, low-income students across the country.
I am a pediatric dentist in Long Island. Katherine Tuider '07 "After a year and a half of travel, research, writing and editing, my book, Dominican Republic Other Places Travel Guide has finally been published today. I hope to actually focus on the healthcare sector once I have more experience.
As of August , I have been living and teaching fifth grade in Mexico City. It's been quite an experience to live through Covid in a foreign country - from both a public health and education perspective. Louis Chen received the maximum prison sentence Friday for the knife slayings of his partner and their 2-year-old son five years ago. His attorneys had argued Chen suffered from mental illness worsened by an adverse reaction to medications, including a drug in cough syrup.
Was Dr. Louis Chen psychotic or simply enraged when he killed his long-term partner and their toddler son in a Seattle penthouse five years ago? Raz argued that Chen, 43, deserved 49 years, the longest possible sentence within state guidelines. Worse, the toddler did not die immediately, but ran down the hall from the bedroom to the living room where he sought help from Eric Cooper, only to find his primary caretaker dead.
They said Chen was considered gentle, kind and thoughtful by colleagues and had a history of hard work, dedication and good deeds until he began to deteriorate mentally.
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