Thursday, May 24, 2007

Tobacco Awareness Project















So, this week was insanely hectic with everything else not related to school and I will attempt to do a brief run of what's happening at UCSF right now. This weekend, UCSF Alumni Bob Day hosted his annual barbecue at his house in Corte Madera that he has been hosting for ASP over the past 32 years. About 20 of us pharmacy students drove across the Golden Gate Bridge to be pleasantly surprised with the welcoming weather in Marin county. We were given a tour of his gorgeous home and took a hike along the lush mountains in the nearby Redwood forest, making the average backyard in the city look like a patch of dry grass. Smelling the grill on our way back, we were treated to an old-fashioned American barbecue dinner: hamburgers, hot links, mashed potatoes, chicken salad, fruit salad, homemade cookies, and fruit tarts. It was the perfect salvation from a nonstop trail of midterms.



I met with Dr. Robin Corelli and Dr. Kroon to plan out our roles as Tobacco Awareness Project Coordinators. The project has shifted from its original emphasis on prevention toward quitting. The first order of business was to attend these counseling sessions where we shadow pharmacists assessing and assisting patients to quit smoking. Then we conduct demonstrations or lectures about medication use. This counseling experience will come in handy in our third years when we start screening every patient in the hospital for tobacco use. We will also have an opportunity to help write the tobacco cessation chapter in the therapeutics book. Having our names in a publication in our second year will be quite an achievement. Also, there are a ton of health fairs where industry representatives will be providing lung function machines, computer-based imaging of smokers with continual smoking over a period of time, cessation consultations, and medication use demonstrations. These fairs include the mobile unit known as the GSK Motivational Center, sponsored by GlaxoSmithKline, to promote their OTC nicotine replacement products; the other includes the Nascar Solano County Fair.



Currently, there are two main types of drugs: nicotine replacement therapies and nicotinic partial agonists. A motley of formulations are associated with low patient adherence because are using their meds incorrectly. For example, the Nicotrol nicotinic inhaler is not like an albuterol inhaler. Patients have to create the inflow with their lungs by sucking on the inhaler in a stuccato manner over 20 minutes. Another example is the nicorrette gum. Unlike regular trident, you only chew the gum until a tingling sensation is felt, then park the piece along the cheek until the sensation dissapears and continue to repeat the process. The frequency of chewing the gum must be decreased over a ten-twelve week period to allow the body to slowly decrease its reliance on nicotine.



I visited my resdent Robert also. I realized that Robert is extremely happy during my visit. When I asked him why, he said that it was because the doctor decided to release him in about a month. He plans to get another apartment in the city and resume his life. I worry about what is going to happen to him when he is outside of an environment that protect him from drugs and other bad influences. He does seem older and wiser than his former self when he was living on the streets. Even though he is off heroine, he still cannot kick his smoking habit. He can at least spend his last years perhaps with his grown daughters or in peace in the city he loves so much.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

UCSF Community service auction


I wanted to devote some blog space to talking about the UCSF School of pharmacy spring auction that we are hosting. So basically, we go out into Sunset, Union Square, and Haight to inquire if local businesses and restaurants would be interested in donating to our Spring Auction that will be held May 31st at 3:30pm in the MU conference center.

I have been working pretty hard on obtaining donations for our Spring community service auction. Look at what I have accomplished in such a short amount of time. Hopefully we get a good turn out and raise a lot of money.

Descriptions of Auction items that I personally was able to get:


Company: Carmelina's Taqueria
Donation: 2 $25 gift certificates
How obtain: I will pick it up when it's available, manager keeps telling me her printer is broken, so she has to make punch card certificates instead
Location: UCSF

Company: Ghirardelli
Donation: $25 gift basket
How obtain: Mailed 5/14/07 to Stephanie Zi
Website reference if needed:
https://exchange.ucsf.edu/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.ghirardelli.com/
Store location:
https://exchange.ucsf.edu/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://maps.google.com/?hl=en%26q=44%2BStockton%2BSt.,San%2BFrancisco,CA,94108

Company: Lush
Donation: 2 $50 Gift baskets
How obtain: I will pick it up when it's ready on the 5/21/07 (want me to hold it until the 31st?)
Website reference if needed:
https://exchange.ucsf.edu/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://usa.lush.com/cgi-bin/lushdb/freshonline/new?expand=freshonline
Store location:
https://exchange.ucsf.edu/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.yelp.com/biz/ZaEMkTo6tCv65ehwb9zp9A
Advertisement:
Manager does not have an ad, so Nathan can refer to the website?

Company: Benefit Cosmetics
Donation: $1000 After Hours Benefit Boutique Party
How obtain: will mail to Stephanie Zi tomarrow or day after (their office is in SF so you should recieve it by the beginning of next week
Further details:
I confirmed with Angelica over the phone that they're definitely going to do this party. We don't deal with the PR office about arranging it, the "winner" is supposed to contact the boutique and arrange the party. Stephanie will recieve the details about the boutique contact. The gift certificate has all the details of the party, and the PR rep was in a hurry, so I don't have any further details about the event. I know so far that it includes a choice of lip or eyebrow waxing; appetizers and champagne are served.

Website reference if needed:
https://exchange.ucsf.edu/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.benefitcosmetics.com/gp/home.html
We can either auction 15 invitations, 7 invitations for you and a friend, or auction the whole thing. I think 15 invitations will optimize profit. Here are 2 boutique locations in SF for your reference. https://exchange.ucsf.edu/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.chestnutshop.com/pages/benefit.html
https://exchange.ucsf.edu/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.fillmoreshop.com/pages/benefit.html

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Ciao manhattan

It doesn't matter if it is noon, late afternoon, dinner time, or 1 in the morning. You will most likelye find one or two groups of pharmacy students in S1320 (the anatomy lab). Removing organs, dissecting out veins, ganglia, and identifying every notch or lobe in the abdomen and thorax as if we were actually anatomists. All in a day's work in preparation for our midterm coming up on monday. For some, it has developed into no less than an obsession. I think this attitude has been spearheaded by one of our most popular instructors, Dhillon, assumes this sort of drill sergant teaching style. He just bulldozes loads of information into our head, much more than necessary to pass our tests, so that we can have a more well rounded understanding of why an organ is located where it is. It was intellectually tiring sitting through his review session and lectures, but it holds true to that med school tradition of scholarship and testing your endurance. I'm glad he's making the extra effort to challenge us.

In stark contrast, pharmacogenetics and biopharmaceutics have been not quite as interesting as I expected. Su Guo guides us relatively slowly through a review of basic genetics and is just now skimming the surface of population genetics. The terms (recessive, dominant, allele, genotype, etc) that we must learn are dryly linked in lecture to obscure genetic diseases like sickle cell anemia or G6DP deficiency. Biopharmaceutics is so random because it feels more like an elective than a real core class. We have heard lectures on quite futuristic forms of drug delivery but are not quite applicable to our practice at the moment. It feels like the Pharmaceutical chemistry department is using this class to promote moving their technology into the clinics.

I also did quite a few other random activities this weekend.

I went downtown to union square to ask businesses to donate gift certificates to the APhA-ASP community service auction. The event is put on by the Associated Students of Pharmacy to raise money for our health fairs. In the past, people have been donating services like being designated driver for a night or dinner at someone's house. Apparently, we have been short on donations either due to students putting off asking the businesses or businesses refusing to donate to another charity. Pretty much all the large chains told me to contact their public relations departments since the instore managers do not have authority to do so. This was what a COMPUSA manager told me, but I found on their website that the sales managers are allowed if not encouraged by corporate to participate in local non-profit organizations. Lush cosmetics, a company I really like, did agree up front since they run their operations as if it were local.

When I let myself procrastinate lately, I find myself watching these visually stunning edited clips of Edie sedgwick. Even without the thick black mascara, she's got a way with the camera. I can't wait to see Factory Girl when it comes out in June; it's an almost unreal juxtaposition of the 60's most prevalent pop culture icons: Edie, Dylan, Warhol... I hear Sienna Miller is remarkable in it, but I am not sure why she played her so bubbly in the trailer because Edie seems like one of the most disturbed and despondent figures to be featured on film. And even though Christian Haydenson is awful, he's not bad to look at either. Below is her in Ciao, Manhattan, featuring her precociously deep voiceover in the original video montage.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVRmt0J6JNg&mode=related&search=

www.factorygirlmovie.net/

Monday, April 30, 2007

Spring: Birthdays,Galas, and maybe some studying

We finished our first CP113 midterm on friday and are going to begin a two week series of midterms for all our other classes. Time to start cracking open the books...

A good number of pharmacy 1's headed downtown to attend the Red Hot Black and White Gala on saturday night. I personally did not attend, since I was working at Walgreens. But from the pics on facebook, it looked like the high school prom all over again except without parental chauffers.

Instead, I spent all friday baking a strawberry vanilla cake for my high school friend's 23rd birthday. I can't believe that we are almost crossing that mid 20's crossmark. It seems that this year especially is passing by really fast. We made bellinis, 1 to 5 peach puree to sparkling wine and watched that Emilio Estevez movie "Bobby."

The movie featured a star studded ensemble including Demi Moore, Ashton Kutcher, Heather Graham, Lindsay Lohan, Elijah Wood, Anthony Hopkins, and Helen Hunt. I thought it was a little slow for me since there was a lot of extraneous content, like LSD trips and merely mediocre acting failing to meet all the hyped expectations from such a prestigious cast. The scenes that previous conversations were leading up to, like the Americans revering RFK, Virginia Fallon's stage performance, and Stone's character confronting William H. Macy about the affair, contained more or less trite dialogue and inexperienced direction. Estavas essentially handicapped "Bobby" into a made for TV movie than the real piece of cinema that it could have been.

My innovative pharmacy practice experiences elective CP152.07 is turning out to be the highlights of my week, besides my other favorite class Intro to Drug Metabolism and pharmacokinetics. The pharmacy practice experiences exposed us to a range of different fields that we can specialized in. Last week, a vetanary pharmacist showed us the fruity or meat flavored chews and gels that he compounds on a daily basis. Apparently, pet owners are more than willing to pay a pricey amount for compounded medicines out of pocket as long as they do not have to deal with chasing and forcing the pet to take the medication. Essentially, it is like working in a retail compounding pharmacy except that you typically do not deal with insurance. This week, a transplant pharmacist gave a presentation on her inpatient experience treating transplant patients. Given the increasing demand for pharmacists to make recommendations, serve as a drug information resource, give lectures to rotating students, and prepare specialized therapy regiments for patients, the field can only grow as a potential area for pharmacists. Transplant patients are typically on 15 different meds: immunosuppresants, insulin for prophylaxis of diabetes, antimicrobials, antihypertensives, and lipid lowering agents. Pharmacists need to modify drug regiments with physicians to avoid toxic levels of unmetabolized drug when the body is attempting to eliminate all these meds at the same time. Renal and liver transplant is much more developed field than Lung and heart transplants. Therefore, there is a need for case study publications and expanding research for Lung and Heart transplants.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

First UCSF Leg Day ever!



APhA-ASP held its first ever whole day event to increase UCSF student political involvement by exposing them to legislative issues pertaining to their profession. We called it Leg Day. Dr. Lorie Rice, who taught Law and ethics last quarter, was able to get Assemblyman and 2008 State Senate Candidate Mark Leno to speak on Universal Health care. A group of class leaders from the pharmacy school was able to explain to Leno about what pharmacists can do for the community: medication therapy management, taking medications correctly, avoiding adverse drug reactions, clinical pharmacy, and be involved in clinical research especially through the research projects in the Health policy and management/ Pharmaceutical sciences pathway.


During his talk, Leno rightly stated that as the baby boomer population ages and live longer, they will develop more diseases and increase health insurance costs for everyone. He argued that the costs of health care are astronomical and the privatized insurance system is only becoming more complicated to understand and often standing in the way of physicians trying to give their patients the proper care that they need. By throwing out the privatized insurance system and rebuilding a socialized health care system, the government could administer health care more economically and efficiently. The debate is still ongoing about whether single payer vs. employee based health care is the way to go.


He also addressed how families in low income neighborhoods are surrounded by liquor and convenience stores. How is it that we cannot give many of these communities access to healthy foods despite our nation's wealth and status as an industrialized superpower? Well, the fast food and snack industry have been expanding their low-cost products into every street corner and successively hooked Americans at a young age to foods concentrated with sugar and fat. Leno boldly linked the inaccessibility to unprocessed natural foods rich in antioxidants, high in fiber, and slowly absorbed complex sugars to the obesity and diabetes epidemic in this nation. In the pre-meeting that we had with Leno, he quoted a staggering 1 in 5 ratio of the population have diabetes, which will jump alarmingly to 1 in 3 by 2020.


If the source of the problem is in fact access since we as Americans are embracing fast food culture as part of our busy lives, then we need to increase access of fresh, healthy foods especially to children so they adopt healthy eating habits early. Leno's plan to combat juvenile obesity/diabetes is his healthy fruits initiative. The bill would provide the training and equipment that would allow storeowners to store and sell fresh fruits and vegetables. in low-income neighborhoods to maintain refrigerated systems to store and sell issues relating to politics and health care. Afterwards, he invited us to visit his office any time.


The city hall health fair was pretty awesome. A lot of us P1's took the muni to city hall and donned our white coats. I got to counsel a few city employees on sources of calcium for osteoporosis. It was pretty slow but we got a large class turnout.

I had to rush back in order to prep for the Leg Dinner. Kieran Flaherty, a former Leno staff member, along with some pharmacy faculty members gathered to facilitate discussions on some key legislative issues. Basically, 25 pharmacy students helped to draft their stances in breakout sessions on medical marijuana, Universal health care, and Medicare Part D. We all generally supported Universal health care, medication therapy managment, and thought that greater research was needed to substantiate a bill to legalize medical marijuana and industrial hemp. We decided to hand them over to Lori Rice, who would forward them to Leno so he can better represent UCSF in the assembly.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Relief


I think I worked harder this week than during finals week last quarter. I never realized how much work went into planning these school events: contacting all the participants, arranging set-up, arranging food, coordinating who does what, learning how to utilize the resources in the university, and all the while trying to have a good time. I am referring to the Tabula Art Show 2007. Calculating the top scores is actually quite difficult and making sure you instruct someone else to announce it correctly is a lot harder than it sounds when you're stressed out.


It was like working with one person then another, and constantly being able to shift your focus. Time just flies by even though you are not prepared for what came next. I was learning how to effectively adhere photos onto non-art walls one minute, then another minute, I am assembling a wooden easel because we used up all the ones that the MU loaned us. I think the worst moment was when I got the cork stuck in the wine bottle opener! Obviously, I don't drink that much...Thanks to Chris Cullander who gave me some tips about how to do it correctly.


My focus has been completely off school this past week and I hope I can make it up since it is still early in the quarter. The day after the art show, I had to coordinate the Patient Counseling Competition banquet. I sat next to the Dean of the Pharmacy school, Mary Anne Koda-kimble. She's always really modest in person. You can't tell that she is the one who sits on the board of the United States Pharmacopeia. She said that she was impressed with our class and that the students get smarter and nerdier every year. I am a nerd, so I couldn't really disagree with her.


I had to cram for the pharm calc quiz today by staying up last night until 3am. I don't know why I had to stay up so late just for a quiz. If this was any other week, my brain might have been in at least a semi-solid form to actually process information more efficiently.


I don't think I can do this again next year.


I might co-coordinate but I was taking on way too much. Especially since I had the patient counseling competition banquet the day after the Art Show. But I will have to say it was awesome seeing the finished show with all the pieces coming together. It was a success and I look forward to seeing it grow.


I visited my resident Robert for the first time since last quarter. I strolled into LLH this afternoon about 2:30pm and found him playing his video games in the lobby. I feel like he wears the same thing every day, but I'm not complaining cuz this way it is easier to find him in a crowd. He needed to ask me my name again this time, but he was able to remember it throughout the hour when I was speaking with him.


He repeated his life story to me again and reiterated his love for motorbikes. Heroine. Cocaine. His old apartment at 5th and Irving. This time he spoke about when he flew in an 3 seater airplane once. I'm not sure what he has not done throughout his life.


I brought him grapes I originally bought for the art show but we didn't need. He dug into the in-season ripe fruit quite happily; he seemed to appreciate the offer. And the whole exchange reminded me of the kind of simple, kind gestures people made in the past. It could have been triggered by the context of the constant references he made at the time to God, mary, and Jesus Christ.

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Back to basics


The past week and a half seemed to have flown by without me realizing that I was on spring break. I spent 6 out of the past 7 days working at walgreens. When my manager asked me to pull the night shift at a 24 hr store and get paid overtime, I really had to refuse. In between lunch breaks, I would race over to the art store and prepare all the the events that I am throwing this april.
I also got all these supplies for the art show coming up on the 11th. Not only did I pre-order 50 matboards to be shipped to my apartment from their warehouse in illinois, but I bought 5 canvases for myself discounted for bulk orders. I am rather enthusiastic about starting this new painting of venice, but at the same time, I do not have enough time to devote to a new painting since I am tied up with this art show. I really should be settling down and devoting more attention to my classes instead of delving so deeply into my extracurriculars. I don't think I will ever learn. I am definitely going to have to go on a trader joes run to load up on traditional gallery style refreshments.

I got these translucent invitation paper and printed invites for the patient counseling competition banquet on the 12th. I still have not confirmed the final guest count and menu with the restaurant that I am organizing the banquet at. It seems like people just RSVP at the last minute.


This seems like a common trend to deal with people who procrastinate whenever you take on these leadership roles. Another good example is waiting on some of the contestants in the Tabula art show for their artist statements. It seems to be a good skill to know how to handle situations like this.


This makes me think of my UCSF pharmacy school interview when a professor asked me what would I do (since she knew I edited for a paper in college) if writers would not submit their articles to me on time. I think my response was that I would find out about their situations and develop a plan with them to get the job done. In other words, you have to be accomodating to other people's circumstances because they change all the time. And if you don't learn this skill sooner or later, then you will not be able to work in teams. With the greater sophistication of products and services offered by American companies, having the patience and communication skills to collaborate seems almost essential.




Thursday, March 22, 2007

Spring Fling


We were all just itching to be finished with finals yesterday after a week of 4-5hrs of sleep a night and apologizing for dissappearing from our internships to fit in late night cramming sessions. I went with a group of my classmates to catchup while indulging in Irving's very own pepper steak submarine sandwiches, fries, and then finishing it off with Holy Gelato spumoni italian ice cream. We were able to finally catch some sun that I have missed ever since leaving La Jolla while attending UCSD.


I am looking forward to enjoying Spring and summer in San Francisco, which has weather comparable to the soft rays and cool breeze in France. I am only referencing the climate in Paris or particular south of Paris near Versailles, since I just saw that Marie Antoinette movie directed by Sofia Coppola. Besides appreciating the painstakingly crafted costume design (a well deserved Oscar won this year), I also became nostalgic about how gorgeous it was the last time I went to Europe.


Our class has been flooding facebook with wall posts and ongoing conversations and groups in order to still stay connected on top of all the other responsibilities. We even set up a group for the 2011 incoming class to try to welcome the new students.


I've been really busy organizing the Tabula Art Show that is coming up on April 11th. I guess my motivation just comes from a disatisfaction with the fact that there is so much good work produced by UCSF students but no venue for them to put it on display or where the sunset community can come and view them. Apparently, there has always been an annual Faculty and Staff Art show but have never had the capacity to display student art work. So when our editor suggested that we may be able to organize it ourselves, I kind of took the reins and got funding from the office of student life to set it up. There is this Performing Arts Fund for UCSF student events that is essentially an untapped resource since most of the events held here are related more to health promotion.


I am actually really excited about this because I can really make this a classy event with prizes, refreshments, and a mixer for faculty and students. If I can put a little more effort into it, then I can even create a fundraiser by selling art prints and donating proceeds to a charity. I even thought of having students do poetry readings as part of a contest with gift certificate prizes of course. I am having trouble getting enough poets and artists though :( but there are plenty of photographers happy to share their work. They are all so enthusiastic with their own unique vision that I think we can really pull something off. And it would be a good way for the new editor of Tabula for 2007 to recruit new submissions. I could go on and on...


Life is good now and I guess I am just enjoying the simple things before I really have to grow up...

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Mosaic Variety Show

I actually really enjoyed the clinical correlate given by Dr. Keyser about hemostasis. A real patient came and described an episode of heparin induced thrombocytopenia. Basically, we were supposed to retain that heparin is infused into patients to reduce blood clotting. This ties into how the pharmacodynamic effect of these drugs work by inhibiting clotting factors along the coagulation cascade. For some reason, the drug had the reverse effect on this particular patient. Anyways, there is much to learn if I ever want to work in an anticoagulation clinic.

Last weekend, Monica Iskandar threw the AIDS Mosaic Variety show to finish off the AIDS action week series of lunchtime lectures. We even had our biochem professor perform in one of the hip hop numbers. Check it out below on youtube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ix3CUd5EVZs

Today, we had one of the authors of our Pharmacy Law book (Bill Marcus) come and give a review for our CP115 final. A tip for any of you who need to buy this book next year, the book is available at a signifigant discount from the california pharmacist magazine; it is sold by CPhA. So check out the pharmacist organizations for better prices for new textbooks than the bookstore.

Dr. Marcus actually did a pretty good job reviewing the main points that we should take with us. The legal ratio of pharmacy interns to techs to licensed pharmacists working at the same time, the special exceptions for a CII as opposed to CIII-V drugs when filling a prescription, all the DEA forms necessary in the transfer, dispensing of controlled substances, and information that a pharmacist can correct but not enter on a prescription, legal importation of drugs, etc. So much material that I am dreading to have to memorize for the boards 3 years from now. And apparently, there will be new serial RX forms that can be issued for patients to fill CII drugs at a later date legally. Currently, it is illegal to refill a CII drug like ritalin or oxycodone.

Time to stop procrastinating and start studying.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

School Elections



We have had a flux of lunchtime informative lectures held by clinical pharmacists, all organized by CSHP. Pharmacists specializing in infectious disease even gave a lunchtime lecture this week. Since it is also AIDS action week, sessions were also held by pharmacists working in an AIDS clinics, sexologists holding discussion panels about HIV prevention, or other experts in HIV awareness.





Also, we held elections for CSHP and APhA for new cabinet members since all the second years will not be able to continue their positions. It was a pretty tight race between all the candidates since many of them have been involved in all the health fairs, attended the conferences, and are actively participating in the Medicare Part D, internship accredidation, and legislative day projects.

This is the last of my collection of visits to Laguna Honda Hospital.






I wandered all over Claredon Hall looking for Robert. Not in the day room, the lunch room, the lobby, nor in his bed. Just as I was about to give up, I spotted a 6 foot old Irish man with stooped shoulders and wearing a tan jacket and a SF giants beanie pulled over his head. It was easy to find a man with his gait walking slowly with his feet turned out. He was among a few friends all standing outside the ramp leading to the hospital entrance. I approached him not knowing whether this time he would remember me or not.

“Hi Robert.”

“Robert. Dobert Schlobert. Mobert,” he mumbled back at me in a half sarcastic, half comedically indifferent tone.

I took it with a smile. I inquired how he was doing, but he seemed more interested in finding a cigarette than chatting with me. There was a strange mix of warm air flowing out of the hospital pushing back to winter chill. The residents must have deemed this their smoking spot since they could smoke outside and still manage to stay warm.

He clenched his fists as if the motion would suppress the gnawing itch of his mind for nicotine. Attempting to divert his attention, I tried to see if remembered my name. Even though he could not recall it at the moment, after I repeated it to him, he did at least remember my face from the previous week when I visited. Progress at the very least.

He continued to talk to me about his “hot shit” 1000 cubic centimeter piston bike. Gas with at the left handle, brake the front wheel with the right hand, and brake the back wheel by stepping on the right pedal.

That made me remember how my friend recently lost his bike after just parking it in the lot one day in San Diego. Then I asked him what happened to his bike in the end. Apparently, he sold it after he broke up with his ex-wife. He recalled how they broke up in New Orleans and he fled the city to go back to Chicago after that.

There’s not a city like Chicago. There was not supposed to be a large metropolitan in the midst of all that wind.

This was in contradiction to the story that he told me previously about breaking up with his ex-wife in Colorado. Even after the fourth or fifth time around, I still find myself having trouble piecing his life together.

He needed to head to the dining room for lunch, so I escorted him down the hall. Like every visit before, he commented about how much he liked the hospital and all the nurses whom served him. No pharmacists mentioned by him. At least not yet.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Return to Laguna Honda Hospital

I realized that I have not been giving my account of the last few times that I have visited Laguna Honda Hospital. So here goes.

I saw my resident again on Friday. He was sitting in the lobby in Claredon Hall playing black jack or whatever game was on the computer in front of him. He was busy jabbing the screen or rather drawing his finger horizontally across to select his hand of cards. The screen would spit out some points for him and he would start the whole process over again. The same San Francisco Giants beanie covered his forehead and the same Harley Davidson jacket covered his shoulders. When I approached him, he introduced himself as if I was a fresh face and I immediately confirmed my suspicions that he had dimentia. He was friendly nonetheless and retold his story with a few more details to fill in the gaps from last time.

This time he talked more candidly about his family, the beginning, and end of it all. Painting an image of powdered mountain ranges, hot fireplaces, and rooftop icicles of Colorado springs, he spoke about where he raised his 2 daughters, Barbara and Denise. Chloe wanted him to stop associating with his racing buddies whom she considered a distraction from his role as a father and his dedication to developing a career. He never really made a decision one way or another.

It is funny how easily a rope falls apart after the knot at the end comes loose.

It was not until they graduated from high school, did he split up with his wife Chloe. He moved to San Francisco, Sunset specifically, only 2 blocks away from my current apartment. Then came the heroine. Cocaine. The old drown your sorrows in whatever substance you can get your hands on. He mostly veered away from talking about his ex-wife very much. But he was more than willing to offer information about his daughter Barbara whom lives in Riverside currently. The smart one, he pointed out, who took community college classes after high school then took a job as a claims officer in a real estate insurance company. I imagined a Nancy Drew holding a larger than life magnifying glass up to typewritten font on documents nearly bleeding with accounts of fraud or extortion.

As I pulled myself back into the moment, I listened to updates on Denise. She started waitressing after high school and apparently moved to New Orleans where she waitresses at an upscale restaurant. He kept affirming how different they were when you juxtaposed them, a common thought wheezing past the daily thoughts of parents. Barbara was silent as a mouse but not in a way that made you uncomfortable, just that she used far less words to convey what she wanted to say. Denise, on the other hand, was always very witty and talked up a storm whenever she had the chance. He was glad that they came to visit him just last week and spent every day visiting him that week. I told him that was excellent. He nodded in agreement. I assumed that they were able to work past his recent fallout with alcohol.

Monday, February 19, 2007

California Pharmacist Association(CPhA) Outlook Conference



About 50 UCSF Pharmacy students spent a good portion of their weekend in Palm Springs to attend the CPhA Outlook Conference. The UCSF alumni breakfast bright and early saturday morning was an excellent way for us to see how far UCSF network really stretches in hospital, community, and academic settings. Dr. Bob day who held the first continuing education seminar ever when they were not required for renewal of the pharmacy license.
I even was able to briefly meet my sponsor for the meeting, Chet Yee. We shook hands with him before we had to run off to go to the all school caucus, which was a session to introduce to pharmacy students new policies and ammendments up for the house meeting the next day. They could discuss possible changes to the wording or assert a unified stance on the policy.
For example, there was a rather radical policy to change marijuana from a schedule I to schedule II drug. From CP115, we learned that the only difference between those classifications is that a schedule I drug is not been shown to be safe and effective while a scheduled II drug is safe and effective. In other words, the policy is showing to the legislature that pharmacists in california recognize the abusive potential of marijuana but generally support the legal dispensing of marijuana for medical purposes.
For us pharmacy students, reading pharmacy law can be rather dry but applying it to a situation like this really puts everything we learn in class into perspective. It was rather exciting for APhA members to attend the main event which was the House of Delegates. The select few who were delegates voted on policies ranging from prescription legibility to supporting awareness programs for tylenol associated hepatotoxicity. We were able to watch the speeches and vote on the speaker-elect of the house, a close run between Dr. Gupter and Dr. Scheidmein (I apologize if I wrote that incorrectly). One of our ammendments did get passed concerning that Rx's should be clear and legible regardless of format. The attended continuing education classes alongside practicing pharmacists about new drugs, antibiotics, and Medicare Part D.
Not to mention parties, reception, buffets, brunches galore alongside an exhibition hall of freebies from pharmaceutical companies and chain pharmacies looking for interns. I even saw some pharmacy students whom were my classmates in undergrad. I wish I had more time to catch up but it was great to see them again. We all were competing for the trophy in the School Quiz bowl, which ucsf lost to UOP. There was speculation that UOP might have been using PDA's to look up answers to the questions, but I think since their entire curriculum is solely concentrated on OTC's and community pharmacy laws, of course they would be very well prepared. Plus, UCSF had about 5 times the number of attendees as other schools, so it was just harder to coordinate answers between everyone.

Thursday, February 08, 2007
















Red was all the rage last friday night! Students, faculty members, all pitched in prizes, bought raffle tickets, or just enjoyed the show. The big event that was held friday by the pharmacy school was the UCSF Red Dress fashion show benefiting the American Heart Association. Dr. Cocohoba, who is on the UCSF Faculty and practices at the UCSF Aids Clinic, was modeling a traditional southeast asian dress for the show. Dr. Joe Gugliemo, chair of the department of Clinical Pharmacy, also participated as a model. Jen Yang, first year pharmacy student, was loaned a dress from designer Jessica McClintock.

After finishing 3 midterms in the past week, we could unwind a little before the next midterm Biochem midterm on monday. Last night, several 1st year pharmacy students attended a panel to answer questions from interviewees and those interested in attending pharmacy school at UC Berkeley. Even though the commute was long and it was pouring throughout the bay area, we managed to attend a dinner in Wheeler Hall with about 50 students. After some spring rolls, we talked about the different pathways at UCSF, small close knit community here in like the 2 buildings where we have our classes, some undergrad classes like pchem, or physiology that may help, getting recommendations from professors who we did research with, and clerical positions in pharmacies to improve their application. Some students were asking about whether they should attend UCSD. The main problem with UCSD that we had was the fact that UCSD was denied accreditation this year and no one knows when they can grant a Pharm.D. degree. So the 1st graduating class is in limbo and they currently can only work as a graduate intern. This caps their income since they cannot get the 80-100 grand salary that registered pharmacists can recieve. Along the walk back to our car, we grabbed boba with a few undergrads who still had questions, and then headed home.

UCSF has ties to berkeley through the Pills program which hosts mock interviews, essay editing, and social events where undergrads can get some help during the rough interview process. We are seeing a lot of john smith style black and white suits marching across campus since it is quickly approaching prime time for interviewing for the incoming class of 2011. Wow, I cannot believe that I was in their shoes only a year ago. I have really delved into the health professions, seen so much, gotten to know new and old groups of people. It has been quite a ride so far and a quite a distance from the sunny shores of the La Jolla beaches back in june.

Our class fundraiser at Club Rouge raised almost 1400 dollars, which is a large amount for a single fundraising event. A small portion of it was spent this morning in the form of doughnuts and juice. I think the rest of this money will be used to fund our graduation party, gifts, banquet, photos, caps/gowns, and class gift. We have to pay for all these ourselves. It is astronomical that it will cost about 36 grand for this event. I was a little confused why our class president and the cabinet brought this to our attention in the first quarter of our first year. I suppose it is better to start planning sooner than later. UCSF only pays for the reception and graduation ceremony itself.

In CP112, we are starting on pain topical and systemic pain medications and probably continue this section through next week. I think this is a major field for us to familiar ourselves with since so many pain medications are OTC, so it is up to us to make good recommendations and prevent people from overdosing on them. Only 4mg/day would cause serious toxicity in an adult.

On a side note, orlistat, has just become over the counter recently. Orlistat reversibly inhibits gastric/pancreatic lipases and cholesterol esterase to decrease fat absorption. Therefore, orlistat is indicated to treat obesity and high cholesterol. We already finished lipid metabolism and synthesis in biochemistry; now we are finishing heme metabolism. Sharon Youmans, who taught CP111, held a clinical correlate to review a case of a 9 month old baby with anemia. She tied the symptoms of jaundice (yellow skin/sclera) and bilirubin accumulating from red blood cell breakdown.

Friday, February 02, 2007

Midterm Crunch!












Basophil (left) and eosinophil (right)

We are in the midst of midterms! Our weekends are going to be filled with studying for advanced organic chemistry on monday, clinical pharmacy on wednesday, and then turning in a draft for our ethics paper on thursday.

Today, we just finished our histology midterm in ANAT115. It is fair to say that we have been spending the past few days memorizing pictures of tissues and cells from lecture slides. For someone like me who has never taken anatomy, only anatomy lab, I did actually learn something about how to differentiate between an eosinophil and a basophil. I did not know the different types of connective tissue in the body before either. For example, type IV collagen predominates in the meshlike structure known as the basal lamina which underlies all epithelial cells. I think I forced myself to know the molecular structures in hyaline cartilage such as type II collagen fibers bound to other fibers by perpendicular strands of proteoglycans and parallel strands of hyaluronic acid. And if you zoom in on a collagen fiber, you can differentiate how filaments are bound together by chondroitin sulfate.

The reason why this applies to pharmacy is that I notice customers asking about glucosamine, hyaluronic acid, and shark cartilige (chondroitin sulfate) supplements. Since these are over the counter, it is important for pharmacists to know why manufacturers are claiming that these supplements strengthen cartilige. The reasoning is that if you take in dietary components of cartilige, you will be able to regenerate your cartilige. This claim is not particularly substantiated by anatomists since the human body cannot regenerate cartilige once it is damaged because there are no blood vessels that innervate cartilige. A blood supply is necessary to bring nutrients and mesenchymal cells that can differentiate into chondroblasts which can synthesize cartilige.

Bone, on the other hand, is richly innervated with blood vessels, which is the reason why bone can regenerate after a fracture while cartilige cannot. That is why pharmacists advocate taking calcium supplements especially while your body is healing from a bone breakage. Daily calcium intake is mainly for preventing osteoporosis since cells such as osteoclasts actively dissolve bone to maintain a rigid blood calcium level.

My main complaint about the class is that it is not as interactive as a lab class where we can look at samples on microscope slides.

A growing number of students are becoming increasingly unsatisfied about the assessment lectures that we have had in CP112 because they are not directly applicable to most of our internship experiences in the retail, compounding, or hospital outpatient pharmacy settings.

In my opinion, the problem is that Dr. Ron Finley specializes in geriatrics and even though he is a pharmacist, he can only give us advice about how to diagnose alzheimer's or hypertension (blood pressure monitoring). He does not know much about general prescription and over the counter drugs like what we are actually being tested on: opthalmics, pressurized metered dose inhalers and other asthma/COPD Rx drugs, and upper respiratory infections. So we have all these guest lecturers come to teach these areas. The disparity lies between the objectives laid out by the guest lecturers and what he expects us to get out of the class. He neither confirms nor denies the details (the age at which is appropriate for kids to use eye drops). He ultimately writes the tests, so we are which will come from our giant OTC book. It seems that we will have to memorize like the adult and pediatric dosages for 20 drugs covered throughout the quarter in addition to the 60 drugs that we are expected to know the therapeutic class, brand/generic name, indications, and schedule. Hopefully, I have adapted to this kind of class, which has a different schedule every week depending on whether they have arranged workshops, lecturers, conferences, field trips, etc.

But I hope there is a method to this madness.

There is an exciting event going on tonight which is the Red dress fashion show and raffle in the Milberry Union Gym to benefit the American Heart Association. A lot of Pharmacy 1's are donning designer dresses and walking down the catwalk holding informative statistics about Heart disease. More on this in the synapse to come...

Friday, January 26, 2007

A Mix of Sunshine and Rain


Like the weather about deciding whether this was a week of gloom or sun, I also was equally as ambivalent about whether this was one of the better or worst weeks of the quarter. We had a guest lecturer in biochem who outlined the mechanisms of lipid metabolism and cholesterol synthesis. Since the last time I have taken biochem, it seems there has been progress towards understanding how cholesterol negatively feedbacks on the rate limiting step in cholesterol synthesis and a certain type of lipoprotein receptors. He seemed to have a wicked sense of humor: the whole room was laughing when he enthusiatically talked about how cool this unusual sequential cyclization step of squalene toward cholesterol involved atmospheric oxygen and an epoxide. We could have been delirious from sleep deprivation as well.

The downpoint was Clinical Pharmacy when we had to endure physical assessment, psychiatric assessment, and patient adherence lectures. And these series of lectures are just too vague to really apply seriously. (Example: What do you think the condition of a woman with a large belly is? Pregnant). Currently, pharmacists are not be able to diagnose so we are all wondering why he is teaching us these semi-common sense methods of assessing people's condition. I mean Ron Finley seems like an alright guy, but we need a very structured style of lecture to know specific material we need to study and retain for our future careers.

In contrast to Finley, we were lucky enough to participate in a Pulmonary inhalation workshop held by the renown Robin Corelli. I thought it was a great idea for each of us to have the opportunity to counsel faculty members and be critiqued about our performances. I honestly that I can speak for my classmates that we all can counsel patients on the differences between using the albuterol pressurized metered dose inhalers from Advair diskus from handihalers.

In APha, we met with Lori Rice and shuffled ideas for ledge day, to educate pharmacy students about current developments in pharmacy law. Rice is quite brilliant with knowing how to create a vision and taking steps to drive it forward. She took our brainstorm of topics like direct to consumer marketing or universal health care. She may even be able to get Gavin Newson to come and speak to UCSF, which would really let students participate in the policy process. Hopefully, he has an interest in getting our support since we are all old enough to vote. Hopefully we can show him and the city that we are not too busy filling prescriptions to speak up about our views about whether we should be selecting which drugs will be blockbusters or which will be recalled simply by making recommendations, conflict of interest between promoting a retail store generics vs. the brand name, and what should be done to formalize a reuse program to take care of the unexpired unused drugs in the city. A lot of ideas in the works.

A number of us attended a lecture held about emergency contraception and how to legally dispense it in California. Since the beginning of 2007, we can dispense Plan B OTC to anyone over 18 years. For minors, we have to be trained and pass a test online to prove it. We would have to register our pharmcy on the Pharmacy Access Partnership website so that women could find which pharmacies sell it. But the trick is that our supervising pharmacist must also be EC trained if we want to do the counseling. Since this med is somewhat controversial, the curriculum does not include certification and we must go through our student organizations to arrange training outside of class.

Beyond anxiety over transitioning to becoming pharmacists, I am visiting my friend in the hospital after his surgery virtually every day until 8 or 9pm at Mount Zion. I saw such an improvement in his condition when he was switched from morphine to toradol. But the impact on your body after this kind of major surgery is the equivalent of having the pick up truck slammed into your abdomen. I just imagine having my organs readjusting in position and how the strain on the nerves attached to your internal organs can be mindblowingly painful. Painkillers could not deaden every single one of those nerves, at the most like 30-40% of them. And I even talked to my parents afterwards about how difficult it was for me to see my friend so helpless at a grown age and struggling sustain even the shallowest breath. I am not sure if I could be around people in this condition every day in my life, which would be my life if I wanted to be a clinical pharmacist.

Friday, January 19, 2007

Week 3 of Winter Quarter














Peugeot 404

It was nice to have MLK off but it really meant condensing all the events and business and studying that we had to do in a limited amount of time. Some of my classmates are doing introductory pharmacy practice experiences, like following around our past Clinical Pharmacy professor, Kathy Dennehi, while taking medical histories/ screening for immunization eligibility. It is apparently a pilot program that was jumpstarted so that UCSF Pharmacy School could claim that at least 5% of its curriculum is dedicated to IPPE's. They can use this to leverage with the Board of Pharmacy to get reaccredited. I think that it is a great idea to have something in the pharm.D. program to introduce students to applying these skills that they teach you in school about patient assessment and counseling. From my experience in retail, you will eventually learn some patient counseling, but IPPE's can give you a much easier time during rotations and not have to climb such a rough transition from textbooks and lecture notes to real life therapeutics and patient interaction.

We took our first midterm today and it was not too bad. I actually had a harder version of biochemistry in undergrad and this class was more emphasized on getting you to understand the clinical correlate of biochemistry instead of learning every annoying enzyme for those who want to become lab scientists. Our professor is really great; her name is Tracy Fulton. One class that I really enjoyed was the clinical correlate taught by our Dean, Mary Anne Koda Kimble in conjunction with Tracy Fulton. She had a mock interview with a diabetes patient while we learned about insulin and glucagon control of metabolism. One interesting point was on sulfonylureas, which increase insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells by blocking membrane bound potassium leak channels. She even went on to explain how diabetes patients often get foot ulcers, from poor circulation and poorly functioning clotting factors.
APhA had its first legislative committee meeting which assigned us first year members our own projects towards promoting the profession.

My second visit as a volunteer to Laguna Honda Hospital was much longer than the first and incredibly worthwhile. I walked in to the main hall feeling like a thousand eyes upon me, knowing that I was out of place in a room of elderly patients with dimentia. I was silent as he played Bingo for about half an hour because I was afraid if he could speak coherently, percieve and be capable of interacting with me, or even have a shred of short term memory. To my surprise, he asked me very clearly what my name was and proceeded to enter a perfectly normal conversation. He was able to respond and converse with me more capablely than many of my contemporaries.

So apparently, Robert was first admitted into LHH when he overdosed on alcohol. Ever since he's been residing there. In the past, he recieved his first dirtbike at the age of 11 and rode on racetracks and jumps while attending a baptist church. Throughout his life, he has traveled the entire country. Born in Chicago, he was raised on a farm in Arkansas by Swedish and Irish parents. He became a professional motorcycle racer and came in 3rd nationally in 1968. Behind the public image, many bikers spent their play money to shoot up on heroine and coke, and he was not exception. Then he moved to Riverside as a car mechanic for peugeot. Check out their website. It's a beautiful european car. After splitting with his ex-wife, he hitchhiked to New Orleans. I'm not sure about what he did in New Orleans but eventually he made his way to San Francisco. He tells me that his Swedish father, a retired stockbroker, is still alive somewhere in America.

So hearing him recall his life as a hyperkinetic zigzagging path, transcending state lines, dotted with 151 proof rum, irish carbombs, and car girls. It was a perfect description of an existence that epitomized the American ideal. Living with the freedom to be susceptible to sin, ut have enough of a safety net to recover, roam but always have ties with loved ones in the past, and connect with the land but not to be tied down to it. And I think it is such an important concept to travel in order to understand America but not objectify it. His middle class values reminded me of my own father. I haven't heard anyone say the word America so many times with such gravity and with such respect that only the wise can grace upon it. It was not a conversation of problem solving or thesis writing, but it was the most intellectually stimulating conversation that I have had in a while, much moreso than with classmates whom have master's and all sorts of degrees and scholarships under their belts.

His gaze started to drift and his attention dissipated as he felt a craving for a cigarrette. He bummed one off of another resident and we stepped outside so he could smoke it. He began to repeat his entire story to me as if I had never heard it before. Then I suddenly got the sense that he was not as aware of me as I was of him; the feeling you get when the person you are trying to interact with does not remember you hurts. I was subconsciously assessing his disorder in order to cover up my own emotions. He had dimentia.

Monday, January 15, 2007

First Visit in Laguna Honda Hospital Project


I returned to Laguna Honda hospital for the second time to begin my Clinical Pharmacy 112 volunteer project, but this time I met with the volunteer coordinator about my resident and visitations. I was introduced to Araceli, my coordinator, who seemed welcoming and competent. She warned me about my resident, whom she said may give me a hard time. Initially, she said that the residents, including mine, would be quarantined for the rest of the week until the nurses disinfected the ward and contained the norovirus epidemic. She explained that the virus was responsible for a type of stomach flu that included symptoms such as diarrhea.

This detail shocked me somewhat because it brought forth in my mind how easy nosocomial infections spread in hospital environments in the immunization reading to reality. This was an unfortunate circumstance of day care centers, residential homes, or any living spaces where people lived in close quarters. It is easy to breeze past this detail when you are cramming for a test, but it is much more difficult and fearful to have to live with it for the rest of your life in a hospital. Two elderly gentlemen were sitting outside in the cold and gazed at us while we walked by.

Next to them, we felt young.
To us, their sun-tanned skin and white hair made them seem old.
We are continuously being educated in one of the world’s top health sciences institutions.
They have been out of school for decades.
Many of us are working and serving patients as interns in pharmacies, encountering a flux of new faces every day.
They were the ones whom are served.
Our presence disrupted their routine lives confined to this one building.
We were moving. They were still.

My thoughts were disrupted once Araceli questioned why we were volunteering at LHH. At that moment, I felt that my answer to her question would shape her perception and the perceptions of the people she talked to about the profession of pharmacy. I told her that historically pharmacists were not trained to be sensitive, develop relationships with patients and UCSF is trying to lead a new generation of clinical pharmacists whom are capable and willing to give better quality patient counseling by learning how to care about them. This was an effort to develop our introductory pharmacy practice experience before our advanced rotations during our third year. She returned a smile and a gaze of understanding about the importance of having pharmacists volunteering in hospitals, more so than the degree to which I substantiated my claim. It was odd for me to so fervently defend the institution that I have spent the entire quarter severely criticizing.

My resident, R.L., happened to be in the lobby and Araceli introduced me to him. He was too focused on his video card game to respond immediately, but when he managed to step away from it to shake my hand. He wore a beanie and a thin flannel over a t-shirt. He had sharp eyebrows and gave me a quick smile before returning to his game. I sat next to him for the remainder of the hour just learning how this game worked. He selected his hand so fast, I kept inquiring to figure out how he determined which would give the most points. He tried to tell me that it was like second nature after playing it so many times. He was much more pleasant than his description stated: “sarcastic, likes to mock others, may be difficult. Likes Ferraris and fast cars.” This paper description seemed so far from my own interests, and I was unsure about how I would approach relating to him. But this first meeting made me not want to just give up but instead try to find something else that we could bond over.

When we were leaving, I told him that I would be back to visit perhaps on a Sunday when I am not working.

Monday, January 08, 2007

First Pharmacy Class of 2010 Tahoe Ski Trip

I drove into SF tuesday night after working all day and started class on wednesday at 8am the next day. We were all somewhat hesitant in participating in the Laguna Honda Project, which involves volunteering to visit a resident every other week in the hospital. Dr. Finley assigned each of us to a resident and mine in particular was described as sarcastic and enjoyed mocking people. We were kind of scared about the innappropriate behavior of some of these residents. For example, some residents liked to run away while others were described to behave innappropriately sexually. We will meet them next week and continue visiting them and documenting our experiences for the better or for the worse.
Human metabolism (BC112) or biochemistry is taught by the popular and renowned Tracy Fulton. We heard from the P2 class that she is a really good professor because she cuts out the minute details and regurgitative memorization. She instead supposedly focuses on the important overall concepts.

Advanced organic chemistry (PC113) for the most part does not particularly seem to venture beyond the reaches of our undergrad experiences. The syllabus for the most part is just condensing a year of organic chemistry into a quarter. So, the proper title should have been "Organic Chemistry Review." It is slow so far and she has barely brushed the surface of stereochemistry, optical rotation, and recognition of basic functional groups. A good number of classmates with a masters in organic chemistry were able to waive out of the class.

I allowed myself one last escape before I really had to break into those textbooks...and was it worth it? Yes!
















25 of the more sporty or crazy first year pharmacy students bundled up in our winter jackets and rented 2 suv's to transport the remaining students and their baggage. We drove almost 4 hours to Lake Tahoe. The drive was more like a crawl since it seemed we were not the only ones who realized fresh powder offered the promise of a good slope the next morning. Grabbing In and Out along the way and stopping by an authentic burger joint in Auburn made the trip more enjoyable.


It was my first time in ages since I have ever been to Tahoe and my first time snowboarding. The 2 story UCSF cabin with 2 car garage and driveway was really nice It was equipped with linens, dishes, cookware, games, cleaning supplies, and of course a hot shower after being in the snow the whole day. It was like living in a dorm all over again, except with board games. It really looked like a winter wonderland complete with treacherous mountain ranges and towering pine trees. We took a midnight walk under the full moon that night which was comparable to being surreal. We visited the P2s next door to join in on the festivities. The next morning we managed to get everyone out the door by 8am that morning to Alpine Meadows. Some of us took major tumbles and few attempted the diamond peak ski lift. Whether we were skiing or snowboarding, I think we can all concur that it was a hell of a workout. I wish we had another day, but by 4pm, we had to return to the cabin.


A few of us went with the P2's to Reno to go clubbing and gambling. The more conservative majority spent Saturday night watching Chronicles of Narnia, playing blackjack, and telling fortunes. Before we went to bed, we spontaneously started telling ghost stories in the dark. One particular story scared us straight, which involved her true experience with seeing a ghost. Having heard that after research universities have shaped my core understanding through empirical evidence and the material world was jolting. We had a hell of a time though and really had an opportunity to bond with each other outside of such a stressful school or urban environment. We even had two guests who were significant others of members of the first year class, who fit in quite nicely.