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  • Health Disparities In Arthritis And Musculoskeletal And Skin Diseases
    • - Sponsored and organized by NIAMS; co-sponsored by the NIH Office of Research on Minority Health, the Office of Research on Women's Health, the Office of Disease Preventation, the NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Reasearch, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Arthritis Foundation, the American College of Rheumatology, the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and the Academy of Dermatology. Assistant Secretary for Health and Surgeon General David Satcher, M.D., will make opening remarks. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences
    The goals of this conference are to review current knowledge about health disparities in these areas and promote new research opportunities and approaches to eliminating disparities in the incidence and course of these diseases in ethnic groups at increased risk.

    Presentations will highlight current knowledge about genetic, environmental, social, and behavioral factors; identify intervention strategies, and define challenges and emerging opportunities for research in these areas.

    Health Disparities In Arthritis And Musculoskeletal And Skin Diseases

  • Health Disparities In Arthritis And Musculoskeletal And Skin Diseases
    • - Sponsored and organized by NIAMS; co-sponsored by the NIH Office of Research on Minority Health, the Office of Research on Women's Health, the Office of Disease Preventation, the NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Reasearch, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Arthritis Foundation, the American College of Rheumatology, the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and the Academy of Dermatology. Assistant Secretary for Health and Surgeon General David Satcher, M.D., will make opening remarks. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences
    The goals of this conference are to review current knowledge about health disparities in these areas and promote new research opportunities and approaches to eliminating disparities in the incidence and course of these diseases in ethnic groups at increased risk.

    Presentations will highlight current knowledge about genetic, environmental, social, and behavioral factors; identify intervention strategies, and define challenges and emerging opportunities for research in these areas.

    Health Disparities In Arthritis And Musculoskeletal And Skin Diseases

  • 3rd Gene Transfer Clinical Research Safety Symposium
    • - Gene Transfer Clinical Research Safety Symposium (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences

    3rd Gene Transfer Clinical Research Safety Symposium

  • Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee (RAC) (Day 1)
    • - (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Advisory Boards
    8:30 AM Call to Order and Opening Remarks
    8:40 AM Minutes of the September 25-26, 2000 Meeting
    8:45 AM Review of “Timing Action”
    9:30 AM Review of (RCR) Guidelines
    10:45 AM Retroviral Vector Targeting
    12:30 PM Human Gene Transfer Protocol #0010-417
    1:30 PM Human Gene Transfer Protocol #0010-423
    2:45 PM Data Management
    3:05 PM Biodistribution of Gene Therapy
    3:15 PM Risk of Germ Line Transduction
    4:30 PM Development of the Gene Transfer
    5:00 PM Scope and Applicability of the Guidelines

    Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee (RAC) (Day 1)

  • Organizing Your Paperwork - from Clutter to Control
    • - NIH Work and Family Life Center (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    More information available at the official web site.

    Organizing Your Paperwork - from Clutter to Control

  • On the Role of Mitochondrial Channels and bcl-2 Family Proteins in Apoptosis
    • - Kinnally, Kathleen.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Mitochondria

    On the Role of Mitochondrial Channels and bcl-2 Family Proteins in Apoptosis

  • Functional Interactions Among RAD52 Group Proteins in Recombination and Repair
    • - Sung, Patrick.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.). DNA Repair Interest Group (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : DNA Repair

    Functional Interactions Among RAD52 Group Proteins in Recombination and Repair

  • The NIH Director's Astute Clinician Lecture
    • - Hosted by the Clinical Research Interest Group
      Sponsored by the Clinical Center (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    Maria New, M.D.
    Professor and Chairman, Department of Pediatrics, New York Presbyterian Hospital - Weill Medical College of Cornell University
    The patients who taught me and led to my discoveries in congenital adrenal hyperplasia.

    The NIH Director's Astute Clinician Lecture

  • Tolerating Damaged DNA
    • - Dr. Richard Wood, University of Pittsburgh, PA (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : DNA Repair
    The DNA Repair Interest Group is concerned with all forms of DNA damage and repair. As a major defense against environmental damage to cells DNA repair is present in all organisms examined including bacteria, yeast, drosophila, fish, amphibians, rodents and humans. The members of the DNA Repair Interest Group perform research in areas including DNA repair enzymology and fine structure, mutagenesis, gene and cell cycle regulation, protein structure, and human disease.

    For more information, visit the
    DNA Repair Interest Group

    Tolerating Damaged DNA

  • Smallpox: What Every Clinician Should Know
    • - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special
    Smallpox disease was eradicated from earth in 1977. Because of concerns that smallpox virus could be used as an agent of bioterrorism, providers should be familiar with the disease and the vaccine to prevent it. This live satellite broadcast will present information on virology, epidemiology, clinical features and diagnosis of smallpox, and the characteristics and use of smallpox vaccine.

    Smallpox: What Every Clinician Should Know

  • DNA Mechanics and Gene Regulation
    • - Wilma K. Olson, Ph.D. Center for Molecular Biophysics & Biophysical Chemistry, Rutgers (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    The NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lecture Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.

    DNA Mechanics and Gene Regulation

  • A Case of Resistant Hypertension
    • - Kaplan, Norman M.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Clinical Center Grand Rounds

    A Case of Resistant Hypertension

  • Inability to Give Consent - Session 6
    • - Don Rosenstein, M.D. NIH and Alan Fleischman, M.D. New York Academy of Medicine (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Bioethics
    Ethical and Regulatory Aspects of Human Subjects Research

    Department of Clinical Bioethics, Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center

    Inability to Give Consent - Session 6

  • History of Biomedical Research Interest Group Lecture
    • - Dr. Donald Fredrickson (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special
    This seminar is sponsored by the Biomedical Research History Interest Group (BRHIG). For more information about the BRHIG, please see visit
    http://www.nih.gov/sigs/brhig

    History of Biomedical Research Interest Group Lecture

  • Stress Management 2: The Negative Impact of Stress
    • - Craig Kalman, M.S. and Eva Chen, M.S.W. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    Keeping Yourself Together: A Three Part Stress Management Series presented by the Employee Assistance Program.

    This session will describe the negative impact of stress on our daily lives. You will learn how unattended stress can affect you at work, at home, and even in your sleep.

    The NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC), in conjunction with the Employee Assistance Program, is pleased to announce the third annual "Faces and Phases of Life" seminar series. This successful series brings expert speakers to campus to address a broad range of quality of work and quality of life issues.

    For more information, visit the
    NIH Work and Family Life Center Faces & Phase of Life Seminar Series

    Stress Management 2: The Negative Impact of Stress

  • BECON 2001 Reparative Medicine: Growing Tissues and Organs (Day 1)
    • - Sponsored by the NIH Bioengineering Consortium (BECON) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences
    The topics to be covered will encompass the use of components of the body, such as genes, proteins, and cells, to either foster tissue regeneration and remodeling in vivo for the purpose of repairing, replacing, maintaining, or enhancing organ function, or to engineer functional tissues in vitro for implantation in vivo as a biological substitute for damaged or diseased tissues and organs.

    The NIH BECON symposium seeks to achieve a better understanding of this exciting field, communicate new developments, and explore future research possibilities to ensure that the NIH is poised to facilitate biomedical research incorporating reparative medicine concepts and tools.

    For more information, visit the
    BECON 2001 Symposium Website

    BECON 2001 Reparative Medicine: Growing Tissues and Organs (Day 1)

  • NCI Women Scientists Community Quarterly Gathering
    • - Guerra, Mary Ann.
      National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special

    NCI Women Scientists Community Quarterly Gathering

  • Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor and the Structural Basis of Fast Synaptic Transmission
    • - Nigel Unwin, Ph.D., FRS, Head, Division of Neurobiology MRC Laboratory for Molecular Biology, Cambridge. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    The NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lectures Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.

    Nigel Unwin, Ph.D., FRS

    Hosted by the Structural Biology Interest Group

    Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor and the Structural Basis of Fast Synaptic Transmission

  • History of DNA Repair: Mending Human Genes
    • - Dr. James Cleaver, University of California, San Francisco (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : DNA Repair
    The DNA Repair Interest Group is concerned with all forms of DNA damage and repair. As a major defense against environmental damage to cells DNA repair is present in all organisms examined including bacteria, yeast, drosophila, fish, amphibians, rodents and humans. The members of the DNA Repair Interest Group perform research in areas including DNA repair enzymology and fine structure, mutagenesis, gene and cell cycle regulation, protein structure, and human disease.

    The DNA Repair Interest Group is open to all interested scientists at NIH or at other institutions. Meetings consist of lectures by NIH researchers or invited speakers.

    History of DNA Repair: Mending Human Genes

  • The Evolution of Drug Resistance in Viral and Bacterial Populations within the Treated Patient and Spread Within the Community
    • - Roy Anderson, FRS, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College School of Medicine, University of London. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    Special Tuesday Fogarty International Lecture

    The NIH Director's Lctures Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.

    Roy Anderson, FRS.

    Hosted by The Fogarty International Center

    The Evolution of Drug Resistance in Viral and Bacterial Populations within the Treated Patient and Spread Within the Community