1,997 research outputs found
Jefferson Journal Award
The Jefferson Journal Award has been established to honor the best paper submitted during each calendar year to the Jefferson Joumal of Psychiatry:A Resident Publication. An award of one thousand dollars is given to the chosen author, with an additional one thousand dollars to be given to the residency program or fellowship in which the author is enrolled. The winning submission is selected by the Journal\u27s editorial board from manuscripts submitted on any subject related to psychiatric practice or research
Jefferson Journal Award
The Jefferson Journal Award has been established to honor the best paper submitted during each calendar year to the Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry: A Resident Publication. An award of one thousand dollars is given to the chosen author, with an additional one thousand dollars to be given to the residency program or fellowship in which the author is enrolled. The winning submission is selected by the Journal\u27s editorial board from manuscripts submitted on any subject related to psychiatric practice or research.
The editorial board of the Journal is proud to announce the recipient of the 1993 Jefferson Journal Award: Scott A. West , M.D., for his article entitled Pharmacologic Advances In The Treatment of Schizophrenia. Dr. West is a Fellow in the Biological Psychiatry Program at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
The New Jefferson: Thinking Globally, Acting Locally
Stephen K. Klasko, MD, MBA
Stephen K. Klasko is President and CEO of Thomas Jefferson University and Jefferson Health and author of 2016’s “We Can Fix Healthcare in America: The Future Is Now.” He previously served as CEO of USF Health and dean of the Morsani College of Medicine at University of South Florida. A board certified OB-GYN, he is bridging the art and science of medicine and healthcare information technology through an entrepreneurial-academic model. After receiving his M.D., and completing his obstetrics and gynecology residency, he completed his M.B.A. at the Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania.
At Jefferson he leads an academic medical center that consistently ranks among the top academic health systems in the country and has grown over the last two years to include 29,000 employees, twelve hospitals and over 2,000,000 patient visits. In 2015, he led the merger of Thomas Jefferson University and Health System and Abington Health Network in one of the nation’s first shared governance, “hub and hub” academic medical center mergers. He has also attracted Aria Health System and Kennedy Health, two premier community academic medical centers in Pennsylvania and New Jersey to join this unique system. Within the last year, Jefferson has also announced the plan to merge with Philadelphia University, a top ten design university in suburban Philadelphia.
He has authored over 200 publications and completed a multi-institutional grant on “Biases Physicians Bring to the Table” and has written two other books, “The Phantom Stethoscope: a field manual for an optimistic future in medicine” and Mamas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be OB-GYNs.
Adorn the Halls: History of the Art Collection at Thomas Jefferson University
On March 11, 1871 Samuel D. Gross, M.D., the internationally celebrated surgeon and author, entreated fellow Jefferson alumni to adorn the halls with portraits of those who had devoted their lives to the service of the school, and thus inspire the pupil with ambition to excel in great and noble works. This clarion call to emulate European medical and scientific institutions by memorializing their great men was taken up almost immediately.
One hundred and twenty-five years later, Thomas Jefferson university is still securing portraits, accepting art donations and bequests, and exhibiting art works effectively. By manifesting an appreciation for the power of art to teach, inspire, and enlighten, the university continues to honor Gross\u27s profound idea. The consciousness of succeeding generations of Jeffersonians, who undergo daily the intense pressures of professional study and practice, has been uplifted by an abundant display of visual arts.
Individual art objects considered collectively can construct a pictorial history of and describe the spirit of the institution. The Jefferson collection is diverse enough to trace a meaningful history of public portrait trends in late-nineteenth- and twentieth-century Philadelphia.
By Julie S. Berkowitzhttps://jdc.jefferson.edu/jeffersonhistorybooks/1002/thumbnail.jp
A Word from the Writing Team (March 2024)
This issue includes: Join Us for Our Virtual Writing Retreat on March 1st Attend Inclusive Writing and Language Workshop at EF Come and Judge the Jefferson Science Slam Publication Spotlight Jefferson\u27s AI Library Guide is Available The OPWPC Canvas Page Offers Helpful Tools Scott Memorial Library Renovations Continue Wiley Open Access Fees Waived for Jefferson Author
Storm of the word: conversation on The Tempest between Teddy Jefferson and Martino Marazzi
A dialogue-afterword on the occasion of the publication of New York-based playwright and author Teddy Jefferson's Rorschach Tempest / La Tempesta alla prova, Sedizioni editore
A Word from the Writing Team (August 2023)
This issue includes: Latest Issue of Evanescent is Out First Friday Writing Retreats Return in October Academic Commons Website Update Publication Spotlight Reminders Scott Memorial Library Renovations MS4 Residency Personal Statement Workshops Jefferson Faculty APA Style Guide for Faculty Wiley Open Access Fees Waived for Jefferson Author
[Letter] June 16, Paris [to] Col. Smith / Thomas Jefferson.
See also Jefferson\u27s biography and the research collections of his papers (http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=J000069), as well as his official White House biography (http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/tj3.html).Jefferson makes financial arrangements to pay for a printing press and related equipment which he arranges to be sent to him in Paris. He asks his correspondent for news of America as he has not seen a report of Congress since October 10 or a letter from the Office of Foreign Affairs later than January. Jefferson further states that there is a "violent contest" between the king and parliament in France. Jefferson was active in the early republic as a member of the Continental Congress (1775-76, 1783-84), primary author of the Declaration of Independence (1776), Governor of Virginia (1779-81), Minister to France, Secretary of State under John Adams (1797-1801), and third President of the United States (1801-09). He also helped to found the University of Virginia and part of his library began the collection at the Library of Congress
A Word from the Writing Team (April 2024)
This issue includes: Join Us for Our Virtual Writing Retreat on April 5th Attend a Packback Workshop Check Out the Spring 2024 Research Support Newsletter Learn about the Ethics of AI at Jefferson\u27s Research Compliance Symposium Attend a Reception for the Drs. Theresa and Charles Yeo Writing Prize Winners on April 25th Publication Spotlight Jefferson\u27s AI Library Guide is Available on the Library Website The OPWPC Canvas Page Offers Helpful Tools Scott Memorial Library Archive Renovations are Almost Done! Wiley Open Access Fees Waived for Jefferson Author
Correspondence related to article "Statins for primary prevention: what is the regulator's role?" by Jefferson et al. 2020
PDFs of emails between the author team (Jefferson, Demasi, and Doshi) and EU national competent authorities, as described in their article Jefferson et al. "Statins for primary prevention: what is the regulator’s role?" https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjebm-2019-11132
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