Lifelong Learning Institute Fall Welcome Week Oct. 4-7

Join the Nova Southeastern University Lifelong Learning Institute (LLI) for Fall Welcome Week at the LLI, October 4-7, on Zoom for a live, interactive, social-learning environment.

There will be daily lectures from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 to 2 p.m. Registration is required. To register, email lli@nova.edu (subject line: LLI Fall Welcome Week).

The Lifelong Learning Institute provides a vibrant educational environment for mature adults in South Florida. Programs promote intellectual stimulation, physical well-being, and social growth that enriches the lives of its members and the community.

Get more details on the lectures and speaker bios!

CIO Views Magazine Features NSU Dean Elaine Wallace

CIO Views is a business magazine that mainly focuses on emerging CIOs, their journey, views on current economic states and all other relevant subjects that refer to the business world. Below is a copy CIO Views profile of Elaine Wallace, dean of the NSU Florida’s Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine.

Dr. Elaine Wallace: An Educational Stalwart of the Noble Profession.

The Most Extraordinary Women Shattering the Glass Ceiling in Education

Dr. Elaine Wallace, DO, MS, MS, MS, MS, always wanted to be a doctor, it was her childhood dream. No one in her family had been a doctor or had even graduated college. For her, the medical profession is not a career choice but a calling – a God-given mission. Currently, she is the dean of Nova Southeastern University’s (NSU) Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine (KPCOM). She firmly believes that success is doing what you are called to do, with service and grace. “Success is leaving this world a better place than it was before you arrived.”

Elaine M. Wallace

Teaching Beckons

Elaine always had thoughts of what her career would look like. She held onto the desire to become a pediatrician for decades until her first rotation in Pediatrics in her third year of medical school. Here she discovered that she hated Pediatrics. It bothered her to see the children so sick. She also realized that this mission – of doctoring – was not hers to determine, but rather to follow. So, she began to pay attention to the opportunities that presented to her. When she was in private practice, her medical school reached out to her to teach. When the opportunity was right, she accepted the job. When the chairmanship of Neuromusculoskeletal Medicine was offered to her, she accepted the job. When she was offered the deans’ position, she did the same. She has been recruited for every job that she has held. She thinks that it is because she has tried to do every job fully and to the best of her abilities. She believes that hard, dedicated work is often noticed and rewarded.

Lessons From Sports

Elaine acknowledges that one of the greatest preparations that she had for her job was organized sports. She was both the captain and the goalie of her field hockey team. She has played on the team for the state of New Jersey. Being the captain taught her to run a team, optimize the strength of the group, spot weaknesses, and navigate personalities. But being a goalie taught her how to be a dean – you stand in that space all by yourself, with onslaughts from every direction, with the definitive knowledge, that if you go down, the team goes down. Being a goalie prepared her to protect her team and taught her that she was the last line of defense. Those insights from an unexpected arena were the lessons that have shaped her success as a dean.

An Excellent Student

In the 1970s there were few women in medicine. Elaine was fortunate to be admitted to the Kansas City College of Osteopathic Medicine, the only medical school that she applied to, and was one of 10 women in a class of 165 students. There were only two women doctors in the medical school. To say that she was not wanted there is an understatement. The things that were said, the drawings that were placed on the board, the ‘pranks’ that were played on the women students were enough to cause one woman to transfer out and another to drop out. In such a system of organized and systemic discrimination, she learned that one must make choices. Complaints, the demonstration of weakness, subjugation, or seeking out women doctors were not viable options. It was then that she decided that her only recourse in such a situation was to be excellent, the best would stand for itself.

She resolved to change the system from within – making her way into the doctors’ lounges and the classroom. She made a promise that if she ever rose to power in her future career, she would assure that all were treated fairly – all genders alike, all races alike. She states, “It is the challenges that test us, that make us set a course and that determine who we are in the future.”

Changing Landscape of Education

When Elaine started her pre-medical career in college, her parents spent $75.00, a large sum, for the purchase of a calculator. Until then, she utilized a slide rule for calculations. Last year, she approved the purchase of a platform that allows teaching on two campuses ‘in person’ education, with the transmission of a holographic image of the lecturer. “How far has education come?!”, she exclaims while describing the changes that have happened over the years in the education system.

Redefining Educational Eligibility

Throughout a long and wonderful career, Elaine has had the great pleasure of doing creative things and offering great services. To her surprise, one of her greatest accomplishments has just occurred recently, in an unexpected arena. When taking over as the dean of KPCOM, her charge was not only to direct the DO medical school program but also to oversee several master’s programs. Against this backdrop, the University President, George Hanbury, called for the development of new bachelor’s programs that vertically integrated education. This led to the development of four new bachelor’s programs within the past five years. Moreover, these programs are dual admit programs, meaning that a student who attains a high GPA and MCAT score secures an interview at the DO medical school program or KPCOM’s Master’s program. These dual admit programs are in the process of changing who becomes a doctor at KPCOM. They are also currently working with the Colleges of Psychology, Education, and Undergraduate Studies, to put into place two more dual admit programs, one in Neuroscience or Psychology, and one in Humanities. Elaine believes that the varied backgrounds and interests of students will be a force of change in how doctors in south Florida perceive and treat patients in the future. This has been one of her greatest achievements in her career.

Elaine assures integrity by being an example. She hires people with not only smarts but also good hearts and lets them do their jobs. They are a team, but they also care for one another. They work on the mantra, “We rise or we fall together, and we prefer to rise.”

Leadership Lessons

Throughout her career Elaine has learned many valuable lessons which helped her in the many leadership roles that she has held, she shares the most important lessons through these two proverbs –

“Be humble, for you are made of earth. Be noble, for you are made of stars”. -Serbian proverb

“At the end of the game, pawns and kings go back into the same box”. -Italian proverb

Proud Moment in the Education Industry

Elaine’s proudest moment in the education industry occurred in Guatemala. She has been involved in medical outreach programs throughout the entirety of her career since she believes it is the role of physicians to serve those in need. As is the case in most missions that Elaine attends, the mission is often set up in a community center or a church, not in the typical clinics as one would envision. The initial part of any mission is the sweeping of the floor, the chasing of the goats from the room, the coverage of windows with plastic bags to prevent onlookers, and the construction of doctors’ tables from old benches or two by fours and cement bricks. This particular mission was set up in a dirty, dusty community center in Guatemala. Elaine was running the manipulative medicine station, in charge of caring for people with musculoskeletal issues. She received at her station a young girl of age eight, Lupe, and her mother. It was obvious Lupe had issues; she had a large indentation in her forehead and another atop her cranium. Lupe’s mother related the story that at the age of three, while playing, Lupe was accidentally pushed down and hit her head on a cement step outside of the house. Since that day, Lupe had excruciating headaches that prevented her from schooling and socializing. She had to be confined to her house. Lupe’s mother had consulted the local nurse and the doctor in the surrounding community. She had even saved money to take Lupe to Guatemala City to see an orthopedic specialist. When none of those practitioners were able to help, Lupe’s mom sought out the help of the local priest and the regional shaman – all to no avail. Lupe had spent the last 5 years of her life in terrible pain and so did her mother. That day Elaine and her students spent two hours working on Lupe’s cranium. With determination and care, they were able to pop out the depression of the superior cranium and to minimize the indentation of the forehead. Lupe left exhausted and still in pain. The team left to visit other towns. After a week of missions around Guatemala, the team returned to the area of Lupe’s family and before they departed for the US, Elaine was compelled to see if she could find Lupe and see how she was doing. She set out into the jungle that day, in search of Lupe’s village. After a few hours, she came upon a tiny village. She walked down the long row of huts and as she approached the sixth hut, a little boy’s head popped out of the structure and then immediately popped back in. She then heard a commotion mounting from inside of the hut and within a minute, the boy reappeared, surrounded by three diminutive Guatemalan women and Lupe. This was Lupe’s family. They were crying and rushing towards Elaine and she was not sure if this was the reaction of something wrong or something right. But what happened next was the most humbling thing that Elaine ever experienced; the women all grasped her hands and began to kiss them crying, thanking her, blessing her. Lupe was markedly improved. In fact, she was well enough to join the community school for the first time. Now, years later,  Elaine likes to think of Lupe, likely in her early twenties, having a family of her own. And in the evenings, Lupe likely reads to her own children – imparting them with knowledge and dreams and the stories of an American doctor. This is Elaine’s proudest moment as a doctor; knowing that she has changed the cycle for one little girl, who has likely changed the cycle for her little girls and for generations to come. This is why Elaine loves being an educator.

Teaching and Managing

Elaine knows that her success is the success of all of the people who surround her and work with her day-to-day.

Her days are busy with meetings – with the academic administrative team, the administrative team, Health Professions Division Deans, NSU deans and vice presidents, FOMA, political groups, faculty and students.

During meetings, she makes it a point to discuss all issues and make all decisions by consensus. She knows that this is unusual, but it makes them a team, makes it harder for decisions to go wrong and gives a much broader perspective to decisions. She is responsible for 5 Bachelor’s programs, 6 Master’s programs, a post-baccalaureate program, and two doctoral programs and the largest medical school in the state of Florida, situated on two campuses. She continues to teach in Osteopathic Principles and Practice, Human Sexuality, and Clinical Medicine. She is board certified in Neuromusculoskeletal Medicine, Family Medicine, and Sports Medicine. She also runs ‘Chair and Director Didactics’, a program in its 13th year in which all chair and program directors learn about professionalism and personal development and she also facilitates ‘administrator journal club’. She continues to serve as the Residency Director in the Sports Medicine Fellowship at NSU, a program that she has developed and implemented.

Elaine has three small children – twin boys of nine years and a daughter of 13 years. They keep her in balance. They constantly remind her of the fact that life is both at work and home. She devotes her evenings to spend time with them. Nothing makes her happier than traveling with her children and her partner and showing them different parts of the world; nothing makes her happier than raising global citizens. It gives her great hope for the future.

A Student, Always!

Even though Elaine is a Dean at KPCOM, she is enrolled in an Educational Specialist degree. She will complete that next year. She draws her motivation from Michelangelo’s last words, “I am still learning”. She states that “The work is not done until I am done.”

She strives to pay attention and follow the passion that she sees demonstrated within her colleagues. “This will be the light that leads us to the greatest success.”

 

Talented Trio Receives Dean’s Awards of Excellence

On July 29, during her virtual dean’s address to the Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine’s faculty and staff members, Elaine M. Wallace, D.O., M.S.s, presented her annual Dean’s Awards of Excellence to three colleagues who showcased exceptional qualities in the staff, director/manager, and faculty categories. The Faculty Member of the Year honor went to Farzanna Haffizulla, M.D., FACP, FAMWA, chair of the Department of Internal Medicine. The Director/Manager of the Year accolade went to Odessa Pemberton, M.B.A., employee services consultant II. The Staff Member of the Year honor went to Angela DiPalermo, B.S., instructional technology specialist I.

Professor Chosen as Federal Advisory Committee Member

Naushira Pandya, M.D., CMD, FACP

Nova Southeastern University faculty member Naushira Pandya, M.D., CMD, FACP, has been selected as a member of the federal Advisory Committee on Interdisciplinary, Community-based Linkages (ACICBL), which advises the United States Secretary for Health and Human Services (HHS)  on policy and program development.

Pandya is Professor and the chair of the Department of Geriatrics at Nova Southeastern University Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine, Project Director of the NSU South Florida Workforce Enhancement Program, and Geriatrics Fellowship Program Director at Aventura Hospital and Medical Center

Pandya underwent clearance from the Office of the White House Liaison and HHS to be appointed to this committee.  The ACICBL focuses on such areas as allied health, geriatrics, rural health, social work, and podiatric medicine.

“I am pleased that your knowledge, experience, and skills, have been recognized by the highest authority in this country to advise the U.S. Secretary for this vital Federal department,” said NSU President and CEO George L. Hanbury II. “I am sure that undergoing the rigor of background investigations by the White House to be appointed to this committee was not only grueling on your part, but its successful completion of such rigorous examination, support, enhance, and gave unquestionable credibility in you, your knowledge, your accomplishments, and your expertise. Congratulations! You are part of the faculty and staff of NSU that make me proud to say I’m its president.”

Remembering 1989 Osteopathic Alumnus Gary Cohen, D.O.

Dr. Gary Cohen

On the morning of June 24, the world watched in horror as a portion of the 12-story Champlain Towers South building in Surfside, Florida, collapsed, claiming the lives of more than 100 people, including class of 1989 Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine alumnus Gary Cohen, D.O., whose body was recovered from the rubble and identified two weeks later.

Cohen, who was a respected physician at the Tuscaloosa VA Medical Center in Alabama, was in an 11th-floor condo in the Champlain Towers South building when the collapse occurred. He had come to South Florida to visit his terminally ill father and was staying with his brother Brad Cohen, M.D., who also perished.

Alumnus Receives National Distinguished Service Award

Dr. Jeffrey S. Grove

Jeffrey S. Grove, D.O., FACOFP dist., a 1990 Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine alumnus, received the American Osteopathic Association’s (AOA’s) Distinguished Service Award during its 101st House of Delegates Annual Meeting on July 15 in Chicago, Illinois.

The award, which is the highest honor the AOA bestows, is presented annually to deserving physicians or lay individuals for outstanding contributions to the understanding and advancement of osteopathic medicine through research, education, financial aid, or other areas that enable the profession to make a greater contribution to public health.

Osteopathic Faculty, Staff Members Receive Golden Apples

Several of the Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine faculty and staff members were honored with Golden Apple awards in May from the students in recognition of the dedication they exhibited in their respective programs.

Golden Apple Award (Osteopathic Medicine-Class of 2021)

Caitlin Arbos, M.S.

Golden Apple Award (Osteopathic Medicine-Class of 2023)

Yasmin Qureshi, D.P.T., Ed.D., M.P.T., M.S.

Golden Apple Award (Osteopathic Medicine-Class of 2024)

Hoang Nguyen, M.D., Ph.D.

Golden Apple Award (Master of Public Health)

Lucas Hollar, Ph.D.

Golden Apple Award (Biomedical Informatics)

Robin J. Jacobs, Ph.D., M.S.W., M.S., M.P.H.

Golden Apple Award (Nutrition)

Stephanie Petrosky, M.H.A., RDN, LDN, FAND

Golden Apple Award (Certificate in Health Professions Preparation)

Bindu Mayi, Ph.D., M.Sc.

 

Memorial Tree Honors Biochemistry Professor

Class of 2023 board officers Aneil Tawakalzada, Harsh Patel, Heather Silverstein, Aakangsha Jain, Ruth Antony, Alexandra Gabro, and Ted Frederic pose in front of the memorial oak tree.

In April, students from NSU’s Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine (KPCOM) honored the memory of longtime NSU biochemistry professor Ronald E. Block, Ph.D., M.S., who passed away on March 26, by purchasing and planting an oak tree in front of the Terry Building. The tree planting was livestreamed on social media so KPCOM students could view the event in a COVID-safe manner.

“Dr. Block was a compassionate, brilliant individual who dedicated his life to the KPCOM students,” said second-year student and class of 2023 president Aneil Tawakalzada. “We are grateful for the opportunity to honor his legacy in this meaningful way.”

In addition to the tree-planting ceremony, the students hosted a separate Zoom event all KPCOM students and faculty members could participate in. The event included one minute of silence to honor Block and also provided opportunities for the students and faculty members to share their personal experiences about the popular professor.

“It was an incredible feeling to have our KPCOM community come together to give back to someone who influenced and inspired us all,” said second-year student Harsh Patel, who was instrumental in leading the tree-planting initiative.

 

COM Outlook Wins Two Excellence in Communications Awards

In April, NSU’s Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine’s COM Outlook magazine received significant recognition in the Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine (AACOM) Excellence in Communications (EIC) Awards Program. The magazine earned the first-place prize in the best serial publication (best magazine) category, while the COVID-19 article “Big Apple Anguish” featured in the summer-fall 2020 issue earned third-place honors in the Best Feature Story category.

“Since the beginning of 2020, COM Outlook has received an amazing five regional and national awards for its sustained excellence,” said Scott Colton, B.A., APR, director of medical communications and special projects for NSU’s Office of Printing and Publications. “It takes a team effort to create each issue of COM Outlook, so it’s incredibly gratifying to see the magazine earn such significant industry recognition.”

AACOM’s EIC Awards Program is designed to recognize the important role communications plays in advancing osteopathic medical education and the profession. It also seeks to inspire higher levels of performance among its members.

PHOTO: Summer-Fall 2020 COM Outlook Cover

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