UNMC Invites Grand Island Area to Free Broadcast Educational Series; Conquering Cancer: Breakthroughs in Research, Treatment

The University of Nebraska Medical Center will offer a free Mini-Medical

School series titled, Conquering Cancer: Breakthroughs in Research and

Treatment. A variety of topics will be discussed every Wednesday, from

April 21 through May 12, from 6:30 to 9 p.m. The series, which will be

held at College Park in Grand Island, Highways 34 and 281, and will broadcast

from the UNMC College of Nursing in Omaha.

The series is free to the public, including free parking and class guides.

Certificates of participation will be presented on the last night of the

series, May 12.  Eleven physicians, cancer researchers, geneticists

and other health care providers will discuss a variety of topics.

Participants will learn about UNMCs current and future role in cancer

research and treatment and how it benefits people. They will also learn

about behind-the-scenes work being done by UNMC world-famous cancer researchers,

including the innovative treatments that have been developed. Presenters

will talk about discoveries by UNMC researchers that are providing new

knowledge about cancer and how to prevent it.

Local groups assisting with the project are College Park partners, St.

Francis Medical Center, the Central Nebraska Oncology Nursing Society,

Hall County/Grand Island Public Health Department, Veterans Affairs Greater

Nebraska Health Care System, Cooperative Extension, Central Community College

Nursing program and the Tobacco Awareness and Education Project. The organizations

will staff display booths during the series.

“Mini-Medical School is a chance to show why research is important,

how it is being done and hear from our physicians and scientists who are

making a difference in the fight against cancer,” said Harold M. Maurer,

M.D., UNMC chancellor. Over the four weeks, the public can learn more about

the ever-changing field of cancer research and how we are turning research

findings into life-saving and life-extending treatments for our patients.

One out of every three Americans will get cancer in their lifetime,

according to the American Cancer Society. Three decades ago only 33 percent

of people with cancer survived. Today, more than 50 percent survive. Today

there are more than 8 million cancer survivors in the United States.

Dates and topics of the UNMC Mini-Medical School series are as follows:

Wednesday, April 21


The Future of Cancer Research and Treatment, James O. Armitage, M.D.,

UNMC chairman of the Department of Internal Medicine


New Developments in Cancer Treatments, Margaret A. Tempero, M.D., interim

director, UNMC Eppley Cancer Center


What is Cancer and How Do You Get It, Barry I. Gold, Ph.D., interim

director, Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied Diseases.

Wednesday, April 28


The Critical Role of Laboratory Research, Judith K. Christman, Ph.D.,

chairwoman, UNMC Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology


Translating Research Into New Therapies, Tony A. Hollingsworth, Ph.D.,

associate professor, UNMC Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied

Diseases


New Cancer Drugs, Gary C. Yee, Pharm.D., chairman, UNMC Department

of Pharmacy Practice

Wednesday, May 5


Overview of Genetics in Cancer and Developing Future Treatments, Warren

G. Sanger, Ph.D., director, cytogenetics, UNMC Munroe-Meyer Institute for

Genetics and Rehabilitation


Radiologic Innovations in Cancer Detection, David D. Stark, M.D., chairman,

UNMC Department of Radiology;


Prevention: How to Reduce Your Risk of Cancer, Jan R. Atwood, Ph.D.,

associate director, Cancer Prevention and Control, UNMC Eppley Cancer Center.

Wednesday, May 12


Risk and Screenings for Colon Cancer, Hemant Roy, M.D., associate professor

of internal medicine and Risk and Early Detection of Breast Cancer, Stefano

Tarantolo, M.D.

To register for the program, call Harold Reutter, (308) 385-5015. Seating

is limited. Registration is requested.


Of the $34.3 million in competitive, external research grants and contracts

awarded to UNMC in 1997-98, cancer-related research accounted for about

one-half of that amount. The UNMC Eppley Cancer Center was created in 1993

by the University of Nebraska Board of Regents in a move that united cancer

researchers throughout the UNMC campus into a larger single entity.

It marked a major first step toward Eppley’s quest to eventually become

a comprehensive cancer center, the most prestigious designation awarded

by the NCI. The UNMC Eppley Cancer Center is a NCI designated cancer center

— a distinction held by only 55 centers in the country.

UNMC is the only public academic health science center in the state.

Through its commitment to research, education and patient care, UNMC has

established itself as one of the country’s leading centers for cancer research

and treatment and solid organ transplantation. UNMC’s educational programs

are responsible for training more health professionals practicing in Nebraska

than any other institution.