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.
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
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/
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/
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