Through
5/1
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The self-proclaimed “Super Jew” flexing his muscles here is Leonard Kipper ’09, who recently was raising money for the Conservative Jewish Community by selling T-shirts on Locust Walk. Photo credit: Mark Stehle
Archive ・ Penn Current
In a film career spanning three decades, Jeff Daniels has played a tortured artist/diner owner ("Pleasantville") and a Civil War hero ("Gettysburg"), a fumbling small-town doctor ("Arachnophobia") and a self-absorbed professor ("Terms of Endearment"), an embittered novelist ("The Squid & The Whale") and a SWAT team leader ("Speed"). In all, he's appeared in more than 50 movies and TV shows—which makes us wonder when, exactly, he's found the time to be a songwriter.
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The Current Staff Photo credit: Mark Stehle WHO HE IS: Registered polysomnographic technologist, Pennsylvania Hospital YEARS AT PENN: 7 1/2 WHAT HE DOES: Keiser’s responsibilities range from conducting sleep tests on patients—some of which are done during the day, some at night—to fitting patients for masks to ordering supplies for the department.
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For the last five years, Harvey Friedman has racked up thousands of frequent flyer miles traveling to Botswana. Penn’s chief of infectious diseases runs a comprehensive HIV program there that provides clinical care and trains local providers. With 38 percent of Botswana’s adults infected with HIV, the African nation is one of the hardest hit in the world. Penn currently has seven fulltime faculty in the republic helping provide care in public hospitals in Gaborone and Francistown.
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George Xu’s lab was the first to isolate and grow a new variety of multipotent stem cells from hair follicles. Now the challenge is to find a way to grow them faster and in greater number. Photo credit: Candace diCarlo
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TEACHING / Students learn while they play
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Fall fitness
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In the mid-1980s, physician Fred Kaplan met a little girl with fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP). Watching the disease progress in the girl “was like watching a molecular terrorist attack her body,” he says. In this and other FOP patients, soft tissues and muscles metamorphize into bone, essentially forming a second skeleton and rendering movement impossible.
Archive ・ Penn Current
By The Current Staff It’s no secret that food for hospital patients leaves a lot to be desired. But, what’s the food like for those who visit and staff Penn’s hospitals?
Archive ・ Penn Current
Fall is a busy time. Kids are back in school and schedules suddenly seem a lot more crowded. Work, too, kicks back into high gear after a summer lull. So, how can you stay calm and not stress out? How can parents keep kids healthy as they are exposed to germs at school? And why am I still sneezing? Isn’t allergy season over? We put all of these questions and more to physician Kevin M. Fosnocht, an assistant professor of clinical medicine at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center. Here’s what he had to say: