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A new site for sore eyes
Contract still unresolved
Conflict of interest
$18 million for proteomics research
A winning spirit
Et cetera
The thesis goes digital
Two Yale experts on bioethics panel

Guy Jirawuthiworavong, a third-year ophthalmology
resident, examined the eyes of Michael Stallings at the Hill Health Center
on a Wednesday in April. A grant from the Community Foundation for Greater
New Haven has allowed the center and the medical school to bring eye care
to the neighborhood.

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A new site for sore
eyes
After 10 years, doctors and patients welcome the return of an eye clinic
to the Hill Health Center.
When Candace Ford went for her exam at the new eye clinic in the Hill
Health Center, doctors said they couldn’t test her while she was
wearing her contact lenses; they wanted to see her glasses. So Ford ran
home to get what she needed and was back in the examining chair within
minutes.

This kind of convenience for Hill neighborhood residents, many of whom
don’t own cars, is one of the many reasons health center administrators
and doctors in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science wanted
to open an eye center in the neighborhood.

The health center used to offer ophthalmology services, but about 10 years
ago the program died, forcing many Hill residents to travel to the medical
school for their eye care. “We had a tremendous number of no-shows
from the Hill, so we realized the distance patients had to travel was
a barrier to access,” said Susan H. Forster, M.D., HS ’81,
an assistant professor in the department. She and others decided the solution
was to locate an eye clinic in the same place where patients go for the
rest of their medical care.

Organizers applied for and received a $50,000 grant from the Community
Foundation for Greater New Haven, which enabled them to set up the clinic
and outfit it with state-of-the-art equipment. Hill Health Center Chief
Operating Officer Gary Spinner says the eye clinic is a much-needed addition
to the center. “We serve a large population with diabetes who need
ongoing eye care to detect and treat the complications that can affect
their eyes,” he said.

Four chief residents take turns staffing the clinic, which is open one
day a week. Patients are billed for their treatment, but there is a sliding-fee
scale for those who don’t have medical insurance. “We all
felt it would benefit a medically underserved population as well as the
medical residents who rotate through here,” Spinner said. “They
learn a lot about providing health care beyond the technical end of it.”

Although the clinic has been open only since January, Forster said it
already served about 20 patients a day and was booked through June. The
clinic provides vision tests and screening for such conditions as glaucoma,
amblyopia (lazy eye) and retinopathy, which is linked to diabetes. Patients
who need surgery or a diagnostic procedure are referred to Yale. Forster
said the clinic’s close ties with the ophthalmology department allow
patients to benefit from the expertise of Yale specialists, who have ongoing
consultations about patient care with the on-site residents.

While convenience was a major selling point for Ford when she decided
to go to the eye center, she also appreciated the quiet, relaxed atmosphere.
“They had the radio playing R&B, it was clean and there was
only one person ahead of me,” she said, “so I was in and out
real quick.”

Guy Jirawuthiworavong, M.D., a third-year ophthalmology resident who works
in the clinic, also enjoys the intimate atmosphere. “It’s
been a really great experience,” he said. “Community clinics
by nature are smaller and homier. I like the family setting.”

He said the majority of his patients have a family history of glaucoma
and want to get their eyes checked, or they need an annual screening for
diabetes. This is just the news Forster wanted to hear. She said many
people overlook preventive eye care until it’s too late. “Our
goal with this center is to catch things early.”

Jennifer Kaylin

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Graduate students at the medical school picketed outside the Sterling
Hall of Medicine during a weeklong strike in March by workers from Locals
34 and 35. In a vote in April graduate students rejected a bid by GESO
to represent them.

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Contract still unresolved,
union strikers spend five days out in the cold
During a week of subfreezing temperatures, a heavy rain and a blizzard,
thousands of Yale employees, including hundreds at the medical school,
took to the streets in March to strike over contract negotiations that
had stalled over wages, job security and pension benefits. The strike
had clerical and technical workers from Local 34 and service and maintenance
employees from Local 35 sharing picket lines with hundreds of graduate
students from GESO, the Graduate Employees & Students Organization,
which is seeking union recognition from the university. The unions also
support the right of hospital workers to unionize.

Over the course of the weeklong strike, the unions held rallies at Woolsey
Hall, Phelps Gate and the medical school, led by supporters including
the Rev. Jesse Jackson, New Haven Mayor John DeStefano Jr., U.S. Rep.
Rosa DeLauro, local clergy and local and national union leaders. Disruptions
at the medical school appeared to be minimal—58 percent of Local
34 workers remained on the job.

Each side blamed the other for the impasse. Union leaders said the university
had refused to budge on its offers. The university accused the unions
of linking contract negotiations with GESO’s organizing efforts
and with a drive by the Service Employees International Union to organize
service and other nonprofessional employees at Yale-New Haven Hospital.
The university opposes unionization of graduate students and says the
hospital is a separate entity from the university and that workers there
must decide whether to unionize.

In April Local 34 rejected the university’s 10-year contract proposal,
and in early May graduate students rejected GESO as their bargaining agent.

—John Curtis

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Does industry funding
equal conflict of interest? Often it does, Yale authors claim
As biomedical researchers increase their dependence on industry support
for research, Yale investigators say this relationship has led to “pervasive
and problematic” conflicts of interest. Between 1980 and 2000, while
the federal government’s share of funding fell, industry support
rose from 32 percent to 62 percent.

The Yale team found that business-sponsored studies are far likelier to
yield results favorable to the industry than those funded by sources without
a vested interest, such as the federal government. They also found that
industry studies are designed to favor such results, that negative outcomes
meet with delays in publication or aren’t published and that many
researchers and institutions have financial ties to their sponsors.

“Industry sponsorship has the potential to distort the scientific
process in a very disturbing way,” said Cary P. Gross, M.D., an
assistant professor of medicine and the study’s lead author. “I
am in no way against industry sponsorship,” he said, noting that
he has taken part in such studies. “But our results show that we
need very close oversight.”

The team’s review of 37 studies on the extent and impact of conflicts
of interest appeared in January in JAMA: The Journal of the American
Medical Association. They found that studies sponsored by industry
were 3.6 times more likely to have conclusions favorable to industry than
studies without that support.

Industry studies also tended to compare an industry’s drug to a
placebo instead of a drug already on the market, said Justin E. Bekelman,
a fourth-year medical student and a study co-author. “Placebo-controlled
trials are likelier to end with positive results,” he explained.
Another study found that when the industry’s drug was compared to
a medicine already on the market, patients were given inappropriate doses
of each drug in a way that supported the newcomer.

When results didn’t favor the industry-sponsored therapy, publication
was delayed or reports were not published at all. Sometimes studies were
stonewalled while the industry sought patents; at other times, some researchers
were denied access to the data.

“It’s very important that all trial results, whether positive
or negative, be published,” said Bekelman.

The study also found that a quarter of investigators have industry affiliations,
and that two-thirds of academic institutions (including Yale) hold equity
in startup firms founded upon research at those institutions. Gross said
that universities must erect a “very firm fire wall” to avoid
conflicts of interest.

Bekelman said a “balance of power” is needed. Academia and
medical journals have begun to insist on more financial disclosure and
access to data. But more needs to be done, Bekelman said, because without
complete and unambiguous disclosure, the research “will not serve
the needs of patients or our health system well over the long term.”

John Dillon

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NIH awards Yale $18
million to develop new technologies for proteomics research
The university has received an $18.2 million award from the National
Institutes of Health to establish one of 10 national centers to develop
proteomic technologies for the diagnosis, understanding and improved treatment
of heart, lung and blood disorders.

The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) Proteomics Center
will bring together 21 Yale faculty from 12 departments and will build
on the expertise of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Biopolymer/Keck
Laboratory at Yale University, one of the largest biotechnology laboratories
of its kind in academia. The Proteomics Center is headed by Kenneth R.
Williams, Ph.D., director of the HHMI/Keck Laboratory and professor (adjunct)
of research in molecular biophysics and biochemistry. The center will
focus on two technologies: proteome profiling and synthetic peptide-based
reagents to block specific protein-protein interactions. The latter effort
will be directed by the co-investigator on the NHLBI contract that established
the center, William C. Sessa, Ph.D., director of the Yale Vascular Cell
Signaling and Therapeutics Program and professor of pharmacology.

“By developing two complementary technologies in parallel, we hope
to use protein profiling to identify key proteins involved in diseases
of the heart, lung and blood and then develop novel reagents capable of
specifically blocking the activities of those proteins,” Williams
said. “The overall goal is to increase our understanding of the
disease process, which should lead to more effective treatment.”
Additional information and continuing updates on progress of research
carried out in the Yale/NHLBI Proteomics Center may be found at http://info.med.yale.edu/
nhlbi-proteomics/.

—John Curtis

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A winning spirit
When 12-year-old Millie Suggs rode her wheelchair in a Family Fun race
at Disney World in January, two second-year medical students offered moral
and medical support. Deborah Kaplan, who met Millie six years ago through
her sister, a teacher, ran in a marathon while Michele Flagge accompanied
Suggs during the 5-kilometer race. Suggs, who suffered a spinal cord injury
in a car accident when she was 2, won a prize as the only wheelchair racer.
Thanks to her friendship with Suggs, Kaplan wants to be a pediatric physiatrist
when she graduates. “Millie has taught me so much about the human
spirit,” she said.

—Jennifer Kaylin

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Et Cetera
The thesis goes digital
With a vision of electrons prevailing over paper, Charles J. Greenberg,
M.L.S., M.Ed., head of reference services at the Cushing/ Whitney Medical
Library, has launched the Yale Medicine Thesis Digital Library (YMTDL),
an online collection of the theses required of all Yale medical students.

The YMTDL debuted in February at http://ymtdl.med.yale.edu. The Internet,
Greenberg said, has become the “number-one way” of accessing
medical research, as foot traffic falls at the library.

Greenberg’s biggest challenge has been to convince students that
publishing online won’t harm their chances of publication later
in a scholarly journal. Students may delay online publication for up to
three years, but abstracts are automatically included on the website.

Last year 12 students agreed to provide their theses; this year Greenberg
hopes to get 40. Eventually, he expects that all theses will be available
online.

John Dillon



Two yale experts on bioethics panel
As medical and ethical concerns move from the laboratory to the front
page, the Bush Administration has named 11 people, including two experts
with ties to Yale, to serve on a new advisory committee on federal protections
for human research subjects. The panel is charged with reviewing regulations
aimed at safeguarding volunteers in medical and behavioral studies.

“There’s more of a consumer interest and input into bioethics
than in the past,” said Celia B. Fisher, Ph.D., director of the
Center for Ethics Education at Fordham University and a visiting bioethicist
in residence at Yale. Fisher is especially interested in examining protections
for special populations, such as pregnant women, prisoners and children.
How federal guidelines should be applied to embryos is expected to be
one of the more controversial issues the panel considers.

Mary Lake Polan, Ph.D. ’70, M.D. ’75, HS ’77, chair
of the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics at Stanford University
School of Medicine, was also named to serve on the panel.

Jennifer Kaylin


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