Showing posts with label UMass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UMass. Show all posts

Friday, February 5, 2010

Stand With Haiti: A Benefit Concert for Partners in Health

As a UMass Amherst alumni (where I got my MPH), I'd like to share this information about an upcoming benefit concert produced by the UMass Fine Arts Center:

Stand With Haiti: A Benefit Concert for Partners In Health
Thursday, February 11, 2010 • 7:00 pm
Fine Arts Center Concert Hall
UMass Amherst Campus
Handicap access available
Admission: General Admission: $20; students and youth 17 and under: $10.
Tickets available at 545-2511 or 800-999-UMAS, or online at umasstix.com.

Click here for more information about this event.

Don't forget: if you're a student on the UMass Amherst campus: Campus-wide Wear Blue/Red Day to Show Support for Haiti
Friday, February 12 

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Dust, Allergies, and Asthma


I suffer from mild summer allergies. My poor wife suffers from severe fall allergies and my kids have eczema. Fortunately, we don't have any food allergies or asthma. Have you considered the connection between dust control and asthma? Dust can worsen asthma, so it's important to consider ways to reduce your exposure to dust if you suffer from allergies or asthma.

Particulates in the air, (also known as particulate matter or PM) are what cause seasonal allergies. If we could just filter the air and make it absolutely clean, then we'd have no problems with seasonal allergies. I don't think the drug makers would be too happy with that. Particulate matter smaller than 10 micrometers (also known as PM10), can enter the lungs and cause health problems. I learned about various Dust Abatement strategies when I was taking an Environmental Health course for my master of public health (MPH) from the University of Massachusetts Amherst School of Public Health. Recently the EPA has issued guidelines for dust control, dust abatement and PM10 regulations. These changes make it a top priority for many local and state governing bodies to take control of dust pollution.

If you have asthma, do you employ a strategy for active Dust Control? Some people use an air filter. Others may try to minimize dust in the home by removing carpet and replacing the floors with tile, hardwood, or synthetic wood. You can also try using mattress and pillow covers, although the clinical evidence for such things are not very compelling. The most important thing is to avoid exposure to potential allergens. This includes dust. Image source: About.com

Sunday, March 1, 2009

MBA Costs at U Mass Amherst Isenberg


As a member of the University of Massachusetts Amherst alumni association, I'd like to let people know about the Isenberg School of Business at UMass Amherst. They offer an flexible part-time MBA that is 100% online and is also endorsed by the American College of Physician Executives (ACPE). The Isenberg Part-Time MBA Program ranked 5th in the Northeast and 29th in the Nation by BusinessWeek. It is accredited by the AACSB and students even have the option of taking live courses on select UMass campus locations.

This is a 37-credit program that can be done over 4 years, but most students complete this program in 2 - 2.5 years while working full-time. If you've a physician and you've been thinking about pursuing an online MBA, this is one you should seriously consider. Each class will cost roughly $2,000 so that puts the entire program at roughly $25,000. At some universities, you'll easily pay over twice that amount to get an MBA.

So what are you waiting for? You can even take 1-2 classes as a non-degree student and then transfer those credits towards your MBA degree.

Friday, May 23, 2008

MPH from U Mass Amherst

I just completed the MPH program at the University of Massachusetts Amherst School of Public Health and Health Sciences!

Saturday, April 19, 2008

MDS - Mobile Dexterous Social



I must be on a robots kick right now. I love robots and I especially love the fact that so much is happening at my favorite schools (MIT and UMass Amherst).

MDS doesn't stand for Myelodysplastic Syndrome if you're with the MIT Personal Robots Group. Instead, it stands for: Mobile Dexterous Social

Meet Nexi

Nexi has a face that is capable of displaying various emotions. This was made possible through collaborative efforts with Xitome Design. Doesn't the chassis remind you of a Segway? The chassis was developed by the Laboratory for Perceptual Robotics - University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Perhaps one of the most fascinating aspects of Nexi involves the social learning component. How do robots learn to interact with people? If Nexi can mimic human expression, that can elevate the level of communication with people. After all, we're naturally expressive beings and emotions play a key part of our lives.