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D’Onofrio named head of emergency
medicine
Fund honors a mentor, boosts young
scientists
Center renamed in honor of “father”
of Head Start
NOTES
Notes

Gail D’Onofrio

Carolyn Slayman

Edward Tatum
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D’Onofrio
named head of emergency medicine
Gail D’Onofrio, M.S., M.D., associate professor of surgery
(emergency medicine), has been named section chief of emergency medicine
at the medical school and chief of adult emergency services at Yale-New
Haven Hospital. She had led both services in an interim position since
2004.

D’Onofrio practiced nursing for many years before getting her medical
degree in 1987. She chose emergency medicine, she said, for the excitement
of making a radical difference in patients’ lives, literally in
seconds. She calls her practice one of “controlled chaos”
and acknowledges that it takes a particular personality to cope. In addition
to her clinical work, she has done research on using the emergency department
to move alcohol and drug abusers into treatment. She recently received
a $3.6 million grant from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism to test a counseling intervention with harmful and hazardous
drinkers. Half of all major traumas are alcohol- or drug-related, so addressing
substance abuse can prevent visits to the emergency department.

In her dual roles she manages emergency departments on-site and at a satellite
clinic in Guilford, Conn., and conducts research, teaches medical students
and is responsible for emergency physicians in residency. She is also
medical director of Women’s Heart Advantage, a New Haven-based program
aimed at educating patients and clinicians about the risks of cardiovascular
disease in women. And she heads Project ASSERT, a program in which health
promotion advocates screen emergency department patients for drug and
alcohol abuse.

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Fund honors a mentor, boosts young
scientists
When Applera Corp. of Norwalk, Conn., asked members of its board of directors
last spring to suggest recipients for gifts from the company, Carolyn
W. Slayman, Ph.D., the medical school’s deputy dean for academic
and scientific affairs and a member of Applera’s board, suggested
a grant that would also promote her ideals in biomedical education.

Slayman earmarked $300,000 to endow a fund that will support Yale’s
Combined Program in the Biological and Biomedical Sciences (BBS) and honor
the memory of her mentor and thesis advisor, Edward L. Tatum, Ph.D. She
met Tatum at Rockefeller University in New York City, where she earned
her doctorate under his supervision in 1963, a few years after he won
the Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for pioneering work on genetic
regulation of metabolism in the cell. “For a very famous man—he
was at the height of his career—he nonetheless took extraordinary
measures to work closely with every student and every postdoc in his lab
group,” recalled Slayman, Sterling Professor of Genetics and professor
of cellular and molecular physiology.

Tatum, who died in 1975, did part of the research that led to the Nobel
while he was on the Yale faculty. Tatum and his graduate student Joshua
Lederberg, Ph.D. ’47, who shared the prize, along with Harvard geneticist
George Wells Beadle, Ph.D., discerned how bacteria exchange and recombine
genetic material, findings that paved the way for gene sequencing and
genetic engineering.

Ever the scientist, Slayman said she hopes the Applera gift will be “autocatalytic”—a
term from chemistry for the mechanism by which the products of a reaction
provide fuel for further reactions—and will inspire others to support
the BBS program. Applera’s contribution already shows signs of self-replication:
it stands to benefit from a university policy that matches endowment gifts
to the School of Medicine, which will double its impact.

Applera is the parent company of Applied Biosystems, which develops and
markets scientific equipment, and Celera, which played a major role in
sequencing the human genome.


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Edward Zigler
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Center
renamed in honor of “father” of Head Start
At a celebration in July, the Yale Bush Center in Child Development and
Social Policy was renamed in honor of Edward F. Zigler, Ph.D.,
Sterling Professor Emeritus of Psychology, considered the “father”
of the Head Start program. Zigler was also the founder of the center,
now called the Edward Zigler Center in Child Development and Social Policy.

The center is one of the nation’s oldest centers for child and
family policy research. It has been part of the Department of Psychology
and the Child Study Center, where it serves a critical role in training
and scholarly research.

Walter S. Gilliam, Ph.D., assistant professor at the Yale Child Study
Center, who has been affiliated with the Zigler Center since 1995 and
is known for his studies of state-funded prekindergarten systems, has
been named director of the center. Matia Finn-Stevenson, Ph.D., will remain
as associate director, and Sandra J. Bishop-Josef, Ph.D., will continue
as assistant director. Zigler will serve as director emeritus.

Zigler is regarded as the nation’s leading researcher of programs
and policies for children and families, having planned or implemented
such national programs as Head Start, Early Head Start and the innovative
School of the 21st Century. Founded by Zigler in 1978 with funding from
the Bush Foundation of Minnesota, the center works to improve the lives
of America’s children and families by bringing the results of empirical
research on child development into the policy arena.

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Sandra L. Alfano, Pharm.D., an associate research
scientist in the department of medicine, has been appointed chair of one
of the medical school’s two institutional review boards for research
involving human subjects. As chair of Human Investigation Committee I,
Alfano is responsible for overseeing several hundred research protocol
applications a year.
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Roland E. Baron, D.D.S., Ph.D., professor of orthopaedics
and rehabilitation and of cell biology, received the D. Harold Copp Award
from the International Bone and Mineral Society in June, for “outstanding
achievements in basic research in the fields of bone and mineral metabolism
that have led to significant changes in understanding of physiology or
disease.”  |
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Henry Binder |
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Henry J. Binder, M.D., professor of medicine (gastroenterology)
and of cellular and molecular physiology, received the 2005 Distinguished
Achievement Award from the American Gastroenterological Association in
May. The award honors his research into the pathophysiology and treatment
of diarrheal diseases.
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Joyce A. Cramer, B.S., associate research scientist
in psychiatry, was elected in May to the board of directors of the International
Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research, an organization dedicated
to translating research into practices that lead to efficient and equitable
allocation of scarce health care resources.
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Stanley J. Dudrick, M.D., professor of surgery
(gastroenterology), received the 2005 Jacobson Innovation Award from the
American College of Surgeons in June. He was honored for his contributions
to science, medicine and education through his research and achievements
in nutritional support for surgical patients. In 1967 Dudrick demonstrated
that infants could receive nutrition intravenously and still grow and
develop.
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Alison Galvani |
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Alison P. Galvani, Ph.D., assistant professor
of epidemiology (microbial diseases), received a Young Investigators’
Prize in June from the American Society of Naturalists for her work in
evolutionary ecology.
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Theodore Holford |
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Theodore R. Holford, Ph.D. ’72, the Susan
Dwight Bliss Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health and head of the
division of biostatistics, was elected a fellow of the American Statistical
Association.
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Akiko Iwasaki |
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Akiko Iwasaki, Ph.D., assistant professor of immunobiology,
is one of 11 recipients of the 2005 Burroughs Wellcome Fund Investigator
in Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease Award, which will allow her to study
the role of mucosal lining cells in the initiation of immune responses
against viral infections.
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Becca R. Levy, Ph.D., associate professor of epidemiology
(chronic disease), has been named a fellow in the Behavioral and Social
Sciences section of the Gerontological Society of America. Fellows are
recognized by their peers for outstanding contributions to the field of
gerontology.
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Judith H. Lichtman, Ph.D., M.P.H. ’88, assistant
professor of epidemiology (chronic disease), received the Women with Heart
Research Award in June from the American Heart Association for her work
on her research grant “Prospective Registry for the Predisposing
Factors, Care and Outcomes of Myocardial Infarction in Young Women.”
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Glenn Micalizio |
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Glenn C. Micalizio, Ph.D., assistant professor
of chemistry, has been named a 2005 Beckman Young Investigator. The Young
Investigator Awards are given annually by the Arnold and Mabel Beckman
Foundation to support promising young faculty members in the early stages
of their careers in the chemical and life sciences.
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Linda M. Niccolai, Ph.D., assistant professor
of epidemiology (microbial diseases), received a three-year, $240,000
grant from the Patrick and Catherine Weldon Donaghue Medical Research
Foundation to examine sources of repeat chlamydia infections in young
women. Niccolai’s multidisciplinary study, which will continue through
2007, will provide a more complete understanding of the factors that influence
the trajectory from initial diagnosis to repeat infection.
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Lynne Regan |
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Lynne J. Regan, Ph.D., professor of molecular
biophysics and biochemistry and of chemistry, has won a fellowship from
the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation for her studies of novel
anticancer reagents. |
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Sandra Resnick |
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Sandra G. Resnick, Ph.D., assistant professor
of psychiatry, received the 2005 U.S. Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association
Carol T. Mowbray Early Career Research Award, one of five presented by
the association for outstanding contributions to the field of psychosocial
rehabilitation. Resnick is the associate director of the Northeast Program
Evaluation Center of the Veterans Health Administration.
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Steven M. Strittmatter, M.D., Ph.D., the Vincent
Coates Professor of Neurology and professor of neurobiology, is one of
six scientists to receive the Senator Jacob Javits Award in the Neurosciences
from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Strittmatter’s
award will allow him to further study signaling pathways and loss of function
studies in animal models of disease.
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Edward M. Uchio, M.D., assistant professor of
surgery (urology), received the 2005 Dennis W. Jahnigen Career Development
Scholars Award. The two-year career development awards allow junior faculty
to begin a career in the geriatric aspects of their discipline.
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Raymond Yesner |
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Raymond Yesner, M.D., professor emeritus and senior
research scientist in pathology, received the Gold Medal from the United
States and Canadian Academy of Pathology in May, one of the most prestigious
awards in the field of pathology.
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