Jane Gibson Archives | 麻豆原创 News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Tue, 17 Jun 2025 20:35:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Jane Gibson Archives | 麻豆原创 News 32 32 麻豆原创鈥檚 32 Best Photos of 2023 /news/ucfs-32-best-photos-of-2023/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 14:00:58 +0000 /news/?p=138406 From inside labs to campus events, explore a collection of some of the best images of the year.

]]>
Here鈥檚 a look at some of the most unforgettable photos of the year.

(Jan. 15 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Forward Anzhan茅 Hutton attempts a jump shot to score in the Addition Financial Arena. 麻豆原创 defeated Wichita State 59-56.

(Jan. 19 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Kareem Ahmed, associate professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, is the principal investigator of a new Naval Research Laboratory-funded project to create a morphing hypersonic engine for ultra-fast travel.

(Jan. 26 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

The 麻豆原创/Universal Creative Lab, which launched Spring 2023, brings immersive design learning experiences to students to cultivate the next generation of themed entertainment innovators. The class opened to graduate students in 麻豆原创鈥檚 , which is directed by Professor Peter Weishar.

(Feb. 7 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Pushing the frontier of space research, Associate Professor of Physics Adrienne Dove is co-leading NASA鈥檚 $35 million science mission to the moon鈥檚 Gruithuisen Domes, which is expected to launch in 2026.

(Feb. 18 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

A participant in the 15th annual 麻豆原创 Iron Knight Challenge drags weights across a field in a race to complete eight physical fitness tasks along a military-style obstacle course.

(Feb. 22 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Forward Taylor Hendricks is 麻豆原创 men鈥檚 basketball鈥檚 third NBA Draft selection in program history. Hendricks was selected by the Utah Jazz with the No. 9 overall pick of the first round of the 2023 NBA Draft.

(March 15 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Jane Gibson, from聽the College of Medicine, was selected as one of four聽2023 Pegasus Professors, the university鈥檚 highest faculty honor. Professors Stephen Fiore, Jennifer Kent-Walsh and Marianna Pensky were also selected.

(March 30 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Rapper and singer Doechii performed at 麻豆原创est Concert Knight presented by Campus Activities Board at the Addition Financial Arena.

(April 6 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

During 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts 鈥 a multi-day showcase of creativity 鈥 student cellists and other 麻豆原创 musicians performed orchestral classics at the Dr. Phillips Center for Performing Arts.

(April 6 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Backstage during a 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts production at the Dr. Phillips Center for Performing Arts in downtown Orlando.

(April 7 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Ballet dancers captivated the stage during TECH-nique: A Dance Concert at 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts, which focused on the intersection of arts and technology this year.

(April 13 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Knights posed for photos in the Student Union during 麻豆原创 Day of Giving 2023; an impactful celebration that ended with Knight Nation raising over $6.8 million 鈥 the most in university history 鈥 to support our local community, fund life-changing scholarships, power championship athletics, build 21st century learning facilities, fuel innovative research and enhance the university鈥檚 global reputation.

(May 5 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

A graduate from Spring 2023 commencement celebrates with loved ones.

(May 16 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

麻豆原创 students spend a day outdoors in downtown Orlando, which ranks as the No. 1 Best College City in Florida, according to WalletHub.

(June 13 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Principal Investigator and Associate Professor of聽Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering聽Helen Huang works with student Jordan Grubb to understand how the brain and body work together 鈥 valuable research to assist those with impaired movement.

(July 6 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

The Charging Knight statue 鈥 representative of 麻豆原创鈥檚 excellence in academics, its partnerships with the community and its athletics program 鈥 sits near the main entrance of FBC Mortgage Stadium.

(July 25 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

College of Optics and Photonics Associate Professor Kyu Young Han works with doctoral student Katelyn Canedo聽鈥16 in the , which focuses on optical nanoscopy. Han is an expert in designing new optical tools for biological applications, including ones that could aid in the understanding of human protein linked to diseases.

(July 25 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Student researchers gain hands-on experience with lasers in a lab in the College of Optics and Photonics.

(Aug. 21 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17)

Two students take a selfie with Knightro during the Welcome Back Popsicle Social event hosted by the Office of the President at the Reflecting Pond on the first day of the fall semester.

(Sept. 16 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Political science student Sebastian Jimenez dives into a book outside of the John C. Hitt Library 鈥 carrying on the late president emeritus鈥 core belief that education transforms lives.

(Sept. 30 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17)

Jersey Shore star and DJ, Pauly D, gets the crowd pumped during his pregame set at Bounce House Live at IOA Plaza before 麻豆原创 football鈥檚 first Big 12 home game.

(Sept. 30 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17)

Fans filled FBC Mortgage Stadium for the first Big 12 home football game against Baylor.

(Oct. 4 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

The School of Modeling, Simulation and Training secured an advanced dog-like robot named TapeMeasure 鈥 allowing them to bring students, faculty and new technology together for聽innovative research聽and teaching.

(Oct. 25 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

麻豆原创 Creative School for Children held a foam splash event to provide its own Spirit Splash-like experience for preschoolers during Homecoming Week.

(Oct. 27 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17)

Knightro surfed over a crowd of students at Spirit Splash during Homecoming Week.

(Oct. 27 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Knights charged into the Reflecting Pond to catch coveted homecoming rubber ducks at Spirit Splash.

(Oct. 27 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

During Spirit Splash, the dance team amped up the crowd before Knights rushed into the Reflecting Pond.

(Oct. 28 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17)

Knightro hyped up the crowd from the sidelines at the homecoming football game against West Virginia.

(Nov. 7 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Assistant Professor of Theme Park and Attraction Management Carissa Baker (middle) works with students to understand theme park storytelling. Baker is a 2023 Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching awardee.

(Nov. 11 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Track and field sprinters Latasha Smith (left) and I鈥橝sia Wilson (right) pose with their collection of championship rings at a tailgate event before 麻豆原创 football鈥檚 Space Game.

(Nov. 11 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)

Football in tow, tight end Alec Holler moves up the field during 麻豆原创鈥檚 annual Space Game. The Knights defeated Oklahoma State, 45-3, marking their seventh consecutive win since the Space Game debuted in 2017.

]]>
麻豆原创 women’s basketball_Wichita_2023 (Jan. 15 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) Kareem-Ahmed (Jan. 19 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) Peter-Weishar Adrienne-Dove (Feb. 7 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 2023 Iron Knight Challenge (Feb. 18 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) Taylor-Hendricks_men’s basketball (Feb. 22 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) COM_Jane-Gibson (March 15 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) Doechii_麻豆原创est23 (March 30 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts 2023 (April 6 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts 2023 A student working backstage at 麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts 2023 (Photo by Kadeem Stewart '17) ballet dancers_麻豆原创 Celebrates the Arts 2023 (April 7 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 麻豆原创 Day of Giving 2023 (April 13 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 麻豆原创 Spring 2023 commencement (May 5 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) student life_downtown Orlando (May 16 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) BRaIN Lab_Helen-Huang (June 13 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) Charging Knight Statue (July 6 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) Han Lab_Kyu Young Han (July 25 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) laser research_CREOL (July 25 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) Popsicle Social 2023 (Aug. 21 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17) Sebastian Jimenez_John C. Hitt Library Lyndsay Taliaferro EA x 麻豆原创 Downtown Tailgate with City of Orlando Kidz Zone in Creative Village - Sept 16 DJ Pauly D_麻豆原创 vs Baylor (Sept. 30 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17) 2023 Homecoming Football Game_麻豆原创 vs Baylor (Sept. 30 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17) Robot Dog, TapeMeasure, SMST (Oct. 4 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) CSC Spirit Splash 2023 (Oct. 25 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) Spirit Splash 2023 (Oct. 27 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17) Spirit Splash_2023 (Oct. 27 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 麻豆原创 Cheer Team_Spirit Splash 2023 (Oct. 27 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 2023 Homecoming Football Game_麻豆原创 vs WVU_Knightro (Oct. 28 | Photo by Paige Wilson 鈥17) Carissa Baker_Rosen College (Nov. 7 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 2023 Football Space Game_麻豆原创 vs OSU (Nov. 11 | Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17) 2023 Space Game_麻豆原创 vs OSU (Nov. 11| Photo by Kadeem Stewart 鈥17)
Meet 麻豆原创鈥檚 4 Pegasus Professors for 2023 /news/meet-ucfs-four-pegasus-professors-for-2023/ Thu, 30 Mar 2023 18:00:38 +0000 /news/?p=134511 Stephen Fiore, Jane Gibson, Jennifer Kent-Walsh and Marianna Pensky are the newest recipients of the university鈥檚 highest faculty honor.

]]>
Four 麻豆原创 professors have been named this year鈥檚 Pegasus Professors, 麻豆原创鈥檚 highest faculty designation.

Pegasus Professors are selected by the president and provost and are recognized for excellence in the teaching, research and service. This year鈥檚 honorees include innovative researchers who have not only made a difference at 麻豆原创, but nationally and internationally.

Stephen Fiore鈥檚 classrooms and cognitive science gatherings have birthed hundreds of ideas for dissertations, publications, research projects and even apps, in settings he calls 鈥渁nti-disciplinarian.鈥

Jane Gibson is a medical geneticist and molecular pathologist who uses genomic technology to improve patient diagnostics and treatment, and shares a career of knowledge with the next generation of medical professionals.

Jennifer Kent-Walsh built a center from the ground up at 麻豆原创 to help people of all ages who live with barriers caused by communication disorders.

Marianna Pensky opened new doors 28 years ago as the first woman faculty in 麻豆原创鈥檚 Department of Mathematics, and has influenced the field through research and mentorship.

The four professors will be recognized Wednesday during the Founders’ Day Faculty Honors Celebration from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Student Union Pegasus Ballroom.

Stephen-Fiore

Stephen Fiore

Professor, cognitive sciences
Director, ,
,

Few people know: He spent so much time working in restaurants during college that he once considered a career in the restaurant business.

Stephen Fiore arrives 30 minutes early to move the furniture for the classes he leads. A handwritten note sometimes greets him. 鈥淧lease put the chairs where you found them when you鈥檙e finished.鈥

Fiore is half-tempted to ask, 鈥淲hy?鈥

The circular format he employs has proven to open the gates to some of the most constructive conversations about some of the strangest questions you can imagine. Do dogs think about the future? What does a tick experience when landing on a person鈥檚 flesh?

If the topics sound odd, that鈥檚 perfect.

鈥淭he best ideas across every discipline start with a little mind wandering,鈥 Fiore says. 鈥淭hen we move from wandering to actual ideas. The best discussions lead to the most important phase: how to do something with the idea.鈥

His students have done plenty with their off-the-wall questions over the years. They鈥檝e pursued research projects, published papers and written dissertations. Two students recently joined Fiore鈥檚 Cognitive Science Lab, helping work on grants studying social cognition in human-robot interaction and how AI affects teamwork.

The common denominator is the questions that no one would dare ask out loud anywhere other than Fiore鈥檚 group settings. He calls his classes 鈥済atherings.鈥 He says they are 鈥渁nti-disciplinary.鈥 He never lectures.

鈥淢y role is to create the right environment for conversation,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd then I shut up and listen.鈥

The computer scientist learns perspectives from the anthropologist. The sociology graduate listens to the biology graduate. Together, they dig deeper than they could ever dig within their own colleges or own heads.

Does the ocean have a memory? The question could, and has, led to ideas to study beach erosion. How about ants 鈥 does the shape of their nests alter social behavior? This one has spawned theories about architecture.

鈥淲hen we鈥檙e specialists in a field, we might not see the big picture, what I call 鈥榙isciplinary myopia,鈥欌 Fiore says. 鈥淥r we might look down on ideas from other fields, what I call 鈥榙isciplinary disdain.鈥 I try to help others avoid these see me practicing what I preach.鈥

Fiore鈥檚 methods are so intriguing that he鈥檚 been invited to give more than 120 presentations around the world and co-authored more than 200 peer-reviewed papers. He鈥檚 played a role in securing more than $30 million in grants. One question, however, causes him to stumble when it comes up: 鈥淗ow did he get here?鈥

鈥淭hat鈥檚 not so easy to answer,鈥 he says.

To summarize, Fiore attended junior college out of high school 鈥渇or the heck of it.鈥 He realized he enjoyed learning and studied at the University of Maryland before moving to the beach with two degrees and a craving for fun.

鈥淚 experienced the retirement life at 21 years old,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd got tired of it pretty quickly. It was time to find a real job.鈥

Fiore happened to pick up a brochure describing a seminar on the brain. A little more research led him to a field called 鈥渃ognitive psychology.鈥 He quit his job and went back to school to study how people think, remember, and solve problems. He also volunteered in labs where he worked with researchers from all fields of expertise.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 where I learned how productive we can be when we work across disciplines,鈥 Fiore says, 鈥渂ecause no one is afraid to ask the 鈥榦ut there鈥 questions.鈥

Like, what new knowledge can be created from the collisions of ideas from people with vastly different perspectives?

鈥淵ou know the saying, 鈥楳any hands lighten the load?鈥 It works with minds, too. We need to invite more of it.鈥
Jane Gibson

Jane Gibson

Professor, pathology
Chair,
Associate dean for Faculty Affairs
Director, Molecular Diagnostics

Few people know: She was a candidate for the astronaut program in the 1990s before realizing claustrophobia 鈥減robably wouldn鈥檛 bode well in a spaceship.鈥

As one of the foremost researchers and clinicians in medical genomics and genetics, Gibson knows the literal definition of 鈥済roundbreaking.鈥 In fact, 15 years ago she could have taken her expertise anywhere in the country. She鈥檇 already set up the genetics program for Orlando Health and directed another for Ameripath (before it became Quest Diagnostics). But in 2008 she chose to take all her expertise 聽to an empty field in Lake Nona.

鈥淭here was nothing but dirt, bulldozers and cows,鈥 Gibson says of the site that would become 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Medicine. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 even have running water. But that鈥檚 what excited us: we had a blank slate to create something extraordinary.鈥

Gibson鈥檚 mother always encouraged her to 鈥渟hoot for the stars,鈥 to look beyond what is and see what could be. Instead of seeing a field of cows and the shell of a building, Gibson and half a dozen other doctors envisioned the home of a world-class medical center. There would be a hospital, labs and freedom to extend the boundaries of medical science. Most important, there would be students with equally big dreams.

鈥淚t comes down to this: We want to expose them to the latest discoveries and technologies of a precision medicine and genomics era and then send them into the world to make lives better,鈥 Gibson says.

She doesn鈥檛 simply talk about discoveries in genomics and precision medicine. She makes them. Her dad did the same thing as a plant geneticist. Gibson would watch him crossbreed vegetables to find more resilient varieties in his greenhouses. Early in her career, Gibson attended a conference in Colorado and happened to sit around a campfire with Mary-Claire King, who said she鈥檇 been researching how breast cancer and ovarian cancer ran in families. Her groundbreaking research is now legendary: A mutation of the gene called BRCA1, which causes hereditary breast cancer and is now tested along with other genes as a standard of patient care

鈥淭he genetic cause of cancer was mostly unproven at the time,鈥 Gibson says. 鈥淏ut right after that, the field just exploded. Now we use the genomic testing every day in patient care. I鈥檓 blessed to have been on the leading edge of it.鈥

It all fits her decision to choose a pasture over an established institution 15 years ago. 鈥淭o whom much is given, much is expected,鈥 she says, quoting a verse that directs her life. Gibson and her colleagues consider the College of Medicine a gift to the Orlando community. From it, more than 1,000 graduates have gone out to advance research and to care for patients who need something more tangible than a ray of hope: they need smart practitioners.

A week before learning she had been selected as a 2023 Pegasus Professor, Gibson went to a doctor鈥檚 appointment 鈥 this time as a patient. In the office, she saw a reminder of why she chose this path: a former student, now a doctor, making lives better in our community.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what we envisioned when we entered uncharted waters,鈥 Gibson says, 鈥渁nd it still inspires me every day.鈥

Jennifer Kent-Walsh

Jennifer Kent-Walsh

Professor, communication sciences and disorders
Founder and director,

Associate dean of Research,

Few people know: She was a Highland dancer and traveled across Canada and to Scotland to compete and perform in festivals representing her Scottish heritage.

Before she dove into speech-language pathology as her calling and before she developed the FAAST Assistive Technology Center at 麻豆原创 from scratch, Jennifer Kent-Walsh learned to pay attention. She grew up in communities on Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, where people expected an honest answer when asked, 鈥淗ow are you?鈥 And they鈥檇 listen.

鈥淧eople looked out for one another,鈥 Kent-Walsh says.

Her father was a minister, and her mother was a teacher and vice principal. Not surprisingly, Kent-Walsh started her career in classrooms, teaching in England and Canada. Something kept grabbing her attention.

鈥淭he students,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ome had communication disorders that created barriers to the power of education. In math, for example, the numbers weren鈥檛 necessarily the problem. It was often the words and understanding the language that caused students challenges.鈥

Her interest shifted to speech-language pathology for her graduate education. During a clinical placement, she met a young woman who completely lost the ability to speak due to complications during a routine surgery. Kent-Walsh saw it as another example of the profound impact communication disorders can have on patients and their families.

鈥淲hen a person is unable to effectively communicate, it affects everything in life. I realized that I wanted to be involved in research so I could help find meaningful solutions to provide every person with effective ways of communicating, whether or not they have functional speech.鈥

Turns out, Kent-Walsh would build a place to do just that at 麻豆原创, where she was offered the opportunity to create an advanced research and educational center focused on assistive technology.

鈥淭he university had an openness to innovating and developing new curriculum and clinical experiences for students. For me, it was exciting and intimidating at the same time,鈥 she says.

With encouragement from the department chair, Jane Lieberman, Kent-Walsh wrote the first research and service-delivery grants to get things started. She pulled together clinical faculty, academic faculty, students and community stakeholders, and together they began to work with clients and families to help break communication barriers experienced by adults and children with significant speech impairments. Along with her primary research collaborator at the University of New Mexico, Cathy Binger, the 麻豆原创 team paired language therapy with augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) technologies to support clients, their loved ones, and service providers. Since then, Kent-Walsh and her team have secured millions of dollars in funding from local, state and federal sources to advance their research and service-delivery missions.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been intentional about leveraging the power of AAC technologies by employing both direct language interventions with clients and indirect interventions with the other significant people in their lives from day one,鈥 Kent-Walsh says. 鈥淧arents of the children who participate in our research often tell us their kids are speaking more and they鈥檙e excited to use technology as one of many modes of communication 鈥 whether it鈥檚 a high-tech device like an iPad with a speech output application, picture symbols in a communication book, or gestures.鈥

Twenty years ago, Kent-Walsh had to convince others, one by one, to give these ideas a chance. Today, professionals from around the world access the published findings and contact her team of collaborators to learn how to apply them and to report the positive outcomes they have seen from implementing the AAC interventions developed at 麻豆原创. Thousands of undergraduate and graduate students have taken what they鈥檝e learned into their own work. Some of them have returned to 麻豆原创 after practicing clinically to join Kent-Walsh and her team to advance research.

鈥淲e鈥檙e light-years ahead of where we were, not because of me, but because so many people have invested themselves in this mission to ensure every person is able to communicate effectively. 鈥 And there is still much more work to be done to ensure every person enjoys the right to communicate and to achieve their full potential,鈥 she says.

Marianna Pensky

Marianna Pensky

Professor, mathematics
,

Few people know: She鈥檚 only had one job interview in her life 鈥 at 麻豆原创.

In 1995, Marianna Pensky, a single mother from Russia with two sons, interviewed at a university in Orlando she鈥檇 never heard of. Pensky was a good match for the Department of Mathematics since they needed redeveloping of the probability and statistics sequence for the newly approved mathematics Ph.D. program, and she was an expert. The job was hers if she wanted it. At the urging of her sons, Pensky accepted it.

鈥淚 had only four days to sign the offer commit to immigrating and be completely on my own with children. I was scared to death,鈥 Pensky says. 鈥淏ut everything worked very well.鈥

Pensky鈥檚 hiring is a milestone in 麻豆原创 history, as she鈥檚 the first woman faculty in the mathematics department.

鈥淚t is a huge mistake that many girls think that they have to choose between career and family, or that they cannot succeed in sciences,鈥 she says. 鈥淏oys are not any better at sciences than girls.鈥

Pensky says the culture at 麻豆原创 helped her to explore and experiment with her research. She鈥檚 authored more than 100 publications, including a major work on reliability theory and journal articles about statistical inverse problems, Bayesian statistics, statistical genetics, wavelets and signal analysis. She鈥檚 also received uninterrupted U.S. National Science Foundation funding for more than 20 years.

Her work has paved the way for more women to join the math and statistics faculty. They serve as role models for female students to pursue careers in science and teaching.

Pensky has also influenced dozens of graduate students as an advisor and by serving on Ph.D. committees. She鈥檚 developed a variety of special topic graduate courses that covered novel areas of statistics. And through these course materials she鈥檚 impacted the research of computer science, engineering, physics and statistics students.

麻豆原创鈥檚 mathematics department carries significance to Pensky鈥檚 personal life, too. It was there she met her husband. Their daughter arrived the same week as Pensky鈥檚 tenure letter. Now, she is a grandmother, and her family keeps growing.

When asked what makes her most proud of the Pegasus honor, Pensky stumbles over the word 鈥減roud.鈥 She鈥檇 rather use 鈥渉appy鈥 because she values the feeling over pride and achievements.

 

]]>
Stephen-Fiore Jane Gibson Jennifer Kent-Walsh Marianna Pensky
Training Tomorrow’s Health Leaders /news/training-tomorrows-health-leaders/ Fri, 03 Mar 2023 16:11:39 +0000 /news/?p=134131 Now leading the endocrinology program that trained him, Mustafa Kinaan aims to grow the next generation of compassionate physicians who create long-term relationships with their patients.

]]>
An inaugural 麻豆原创 resident 鈥 who served veterans as a chief resident and whose career goal is to cure diabetes 鈥 is the new leader of the endocrinology fellowship in greater Orlando.

Mustafa Kinaan has shown his dedication to the Central Florida community throughout his graduate medical education (GME) journey.

In 2014, he was one of 麻豆原创鈥檚 first 17 residents when the medical school began its first internal residency program in partnership with HCA Healthcare and the Orlando VA Medical Center. After graduating from the program, he became chief resident, overseeing residents at the VA. A year later, he entered 麻豆原创-HCA鈥檚 endocrinology fellowship, caring for patients at the VA and HCA Florida Osceola Hospital. In 2020, he joined Premier Endocrinology in Kissimmee and St. Cloud, saying he was staying in greater Orlando to 鈥渃are for the new family I love.鈥

Now, he is leading the endocrinology program that trained him 鈥 creating more physicians who treat conditions including diabetes, thyroid and pituitary gland disease.

鈥淒r. Kinaan is the first GME trainee to go from resident in one of our programs, to fellow, to core faculty member and now to become a program director leading our endocrinology fellowship,鈥 says Stephen Cico, the medical school鈥檚 assistant dean for graduate medical education. 鈥淩ecruiting the best, training the best and retaining our residents and fellows has been a goal of the 麻豆原创-HCA GME Consortium since its inception in 2016.聽 Dr. Kinaan is a skilled educator, compassionate physician and engaged faculty member 鈥 he is exactly the kind of physician we want representing our consortium in leadership positions.鈥

Kinaan graduated from Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar and did clerkship rotations and conducted research on the impact of diabetes on heart disease at Cornell University in New York. He says his experience helping to build new residency and fellowship programs at 麻豆原创 has given him an unprecedented experience.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e not just learning, you鈥檙e building the program. It was a rich environment for me. At 麻豆原创, I was given all the tools I need to help shape the future.鈥 鈥 Mustafa Kinaan, endocrinologist

The fellowship program currently trains four physicians per year, with fellows caring for patients in out-patient and hospital settings. While he leads the program, Kinaan continues to care for patients at Premier Endocrinology and also serves as an attending physician and faculty member at HCA Florida Osceola Hospital.

Abdo Asmar has led the Greater Orlando Internal Medicine Residency program since it began, and says he saw the young physician鈥檚 promise early in his training.

鈥淚 cannot tell you how honored and proud I am that Mustafa is our program director,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is what we want to do with our GME programs 鈥 grow the next generation of outstanding physicians who are also extraordinary teachers. This is how we improve healthcare.鈥

Throughout his 麻豆原创 career, Kinaan has received awards for teaching, and this year received the College of Medicine鈥檚 faculty award for outstanding GME clinical teaching and mentorship. He also helped create a new research infrastructure to better support scholarship by residents and fellows. Asmar says his mentee was an innovative and engaging teacher even as a resident 鈥 known for his compelling case review reports. 鈥淗e is a learner-focused educator,鈥 he says. 鈥淗e knows how to share information based on a learner鈥檚 needs.鈥

As he moves forward training tomorrow鈥檚 endocrinologists, Kinaan says he is committed to building a fellowship that is recognized locally, regionally and nationally.

鈥淥ur goal is to create extraordinary physicians who have the expertise and the compassion to create long-term relationships with their patients,鈥 he says. 鈥淥ur patients have chronic illnesses, and many have suffered for years because of their conditions. We want our physicians to be passionate about endocrinology and the opportunity to be part of the patient鈥檚 support system for years to come.鈥

Doctors cannot care for patients independently immediately after they graduate from medical school. They must first go through residency training 鈥 three to seven years depending on the specialty. After residency, many go into fellowships for even more specialized training.

The 麻豆原创-HCA Healthcare GME consortium is one of the fastest growing in Florida, now training nearly 560 physicians in Tallahassee, Gainesville, Ocala, Pensacola and the greater Orlando area 鈥 with more planned. Residency programs are a key to solving the state鈥檚 physician shortage as the majority of physicians begin practicing where they do their residency training. 麻豆原创-HCA has 36 accredited programs in specialties including surgery, psychiatry, internal, family and emergency medicine, geriatrics, and neurology.

]]>
3 麻豆原创 Colleges Receive $4.5M for Infectious Disease, Travel Health Research Initiative /news/3-ucf-colleges-receive-4-5m-for-infectious-disease-travel-health-research/ Wed, 20 Jul 2022 16:38:10 +0000 /news/?p=129609 The goal is to help businesses recover from vulnerabilities and prepare for the potential of another pandemic.

]]>
麻豆原创鈥檚 , and have received $4.5 million dollars in funding for a research initiative aimed at mitigating the damage caused to hospitality, travel, and small businesses by health crises, like the COVID-19 pandemic.

The funding for the collaborative research project comes from the 麻豆原创 Strategic Investment Program, supporting 麻豆原创 President Alexander N. Cartwright鈥檚 vision that 麻豆原创 will become a 鈥淯niversity for the Future鈥 as a top public institution and the world鈥檚 leading public metropolitan research university

The Infectious Disease and Travel Health Initiative has three major areas of focus:

  • To provide an advance warning system through its data collection methods.
  • To bring travelers and those who serve them closer to science, bridging the gap between basic science and behavioral science.
  • To create a resource for small to medium-sized businesses in tourist areas to help them manage future health crisis situations that may arise.

The primary investigator on the initiative, Professor Robertico Croes, focuses his research on tourism economics, human development, poverty, and tourism management with a special interest in small and developing economies.

Croes says the Infectious Disease and Travel Health initiative is critical given travelling鈥檚 economic impact on the world and its ability to alleviate poverty and elevate human development.

鈥淲e began this project in the early days of the pandemic,鈥 Croes says. 鈥淗ealth crises like this are not an anomaly, they are becoming more and more frequent. Sometimes they are isolated to one area of the globe, but as we saw with COVID, they can devastate entire segments of the economy and small businesses often can鈥檛 recover as they don鈥檛 have the resources that large corporations have in order to mitigate a crisis.鈥

Griffith Parks, a collaborator on the initiative and professor and director of the at 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Medicine, says he is enthusiastic about the project.

鈥淲e are thrilled to have the support from the university on this important and unique initiative,鈥 Parks says. 鈥淲e aspire to build an initiative that will draw in faculty and students from other colleges, not just the three currently involved, such as nursing and health professions, who have an interest in population health, travel and tourism and in infectious diseases. Most importantly, a goal of the initiative is to have a strong impact on our Central Florida communities by creating connections that will help to improve and support the health of our tourism workforce and industries.鈥

Pandemics can have devastating consequences for regions where tourism and travel are the economic lifeblood. According to Visit Florida it鈥檚 estimated the local economy in Central Florida took a $40 billion hit from lower rates of travel during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Taj Azarian, an assistant professor at the Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences who investigates the emergence and spread of bacterial infectious diseases is collaborating on the project.

鈥淔lorida is a major tourist destination, as well as an international corridor to the United States. Further, its recent history has been marked by several notable public health events, as such, Florida is an ideal location to focus translational infectious disease research.鈥 Said Azarian. 鈥淗ere, or initiative will serve to strengthen business continuity, improve health and safety of travelers, and establish a sentinel network for early detection of emerging threats.鈥

Rosen College Associate Dean and Professor Alan Fyall, a collaborator on the initiative, says the work could have a global impact.

鈥淭he pandemic has woken the world up to the fragility and vulnerability of the global tourism industry,鈥 Fyall says. 鈥淭he time is thus ripe to bring together an internationally recognized and highly experienced interdisciplinary team to develop new science-based solutions and strategies to build future economic and social strength for Central Florida and beyond.鈥

The initiative鈥檚 collaborators also includesReseResea Kenneth Alexander, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Nemours Children鈥檚 Hospital, Florida, who says this is crucial work for future generations.

鈥淚t is important that Nemours Children鈥檚 Hospital joins in this initiative with 麻豆原创 for two reasons,鈥 Alexander says. 鈥淔irst, many of our tourist guests here in Florida are children. Second, many in our tourism labor force are raising families. Therefore, the health of children is central to the success of our tourism industry.鈥

The Infectious Disease and Travel Health Initiative research project received funding in the Academic Excellence Category of the 麻豆原创 Strategic Investment Program. The funding will help in hiring research faculty who can secure additional funding for the project; establishing new courses and a Travel & Health track of study within the Master of Public Health degree program; and developing partnerships within the hospitality, healthcare, and science industries. Current 麻豆原创 faculty from several disciplines are engaged with the initiative.

鈥淭he interdisciplinary nature of the project and the involvement of engineering and nanoscience will have a tremendous impact on combatting future infectious disease and travel health,鈥 says Sudipta Seal, chair of the in the College of Engineering and Computer Science and co-principal investigator on the grant.

Seal鈥檚 statement was echoed by project collaborator Jane Gibson, a professor of pathology at 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Medicine.

鈥淲e are excited to harness the collective expertise at 麻豆原创 to support the health and well-being of our tourist industry colleagues, visitors and community,鈥 Gibson says.

The Infectious Disease and Travel Health Initiative is ongoing with work on the initiative starting this summer.

]]>
Does it Matter Which COVID-19 Vaccine I Get? /news/does-it-matter-which-covid-19-vaccine-i-get/ Tue, 13 Apr 2021 15:47:32 +0000 /news/?p=118440 Each of the vaccines currently approved for distribution in the United States prevents severe disease and death from COVID-19. Learn a little bit more about what makes the vaccines different from each other.

]]>
Three COVID-19 vaccines are currently approved by for distribution in the United States: Pfizer, Moderna and Janssen/Johnson & Johnson.

As distribution begins to open up across the state of Florida, it may lead many of us to wonder: Does it matter which vaccine I get?

The short answer is no. They all prevent severe disease and death by teaching our immune systems how to recognize and fight the virus that causes COVID-19.

The short answer is no. They all prevent severe disease and death by teaching our immune systems how to recognize and fight the virus that causes COVID-19.聽Furthermore, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stresses that COVID-19 vaccination is an important tool to help us get back to normal.

鈥淚n order for us to regain normalcy we need to achieve what is called 鈥榟erd immunity鈥 鈥 says Jane Gibson, chair of clinical sciences and professor of pathology at 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Medicine. 鈥淗erd immunity means that the chances of the disease spreading among individuals is lowered because the majority of the population 鈥 in this case estimated to be approximately 70-80% 鈥 will have antibodies. You can achieve herd immunity naturally, which may involve more rounds of infection surges and many more deaths, or we can achieve it through vaccination, which is why getting any one of these three vaccines is critical.鈥

How does the Janseen/Johnson & Johnson vaccine differ from the Pfzier and Moderna vaccines?

The CDC explains typically, most vaccines 鈥 like the Janseen/Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine 鈥 use weakened or inactivated versions or components of the disease-causing pathogen to stimulate the body鈥檚 immune response to create antibodies. In contrast, mRNA vaccines 鈥 like Pfzier and Moderna鈥檚 COVID-19 vaccines 鈥 take advantage of the process that cells use to make proteins in order to trigger an immune response and build immunity to the virus that causes COVID-19. Although this technology is new, mRNA vaccines have been studied for more than a decade. Like all vaccines, COVID-19 mRNA vaccines have been rigorously tested for safety before being authorized for use in the United States.

How are each of the vaccines administered?

Pfzier: 2 shots, 21 days apart

Moderna: 2 shots, 28 days apart

Janssen / Johnson & Johnson: 1 shot

Why the difference in number of shots or number of days in between? The dosages and schedule are derived from the clinical trial process.

鈥淭hose studies informed the dosing regimens which were used in the initial clinical trials and may differ among vaccines based on their efficacy in animals and performance in laboratory studies to determine if the vaccine produced neutralizing antibodies,鈥 Gibson says. “Future clinical trials with these vaccines may offer additional modifications to dosing recommendations based on larger pool of data researchers are tracking as the vaccines are more widely distributed.鈥

Is one vaccine more effective than another?

Pfizer: 95% efficacy in preventing COVID-19 in those without prior infection.

Moderna: 94.1% effective at preventing symptomatic infection in people with no evidence of previous COVID-19 infection.

Janssen/Johnson & Johnson: 72% overall efficacy聽and 86% efficacy against severe disease in the U.S.

Of note, mRNA trials were held and the efficacies of Pfizer and Moderna鈥檚 vaccines were reported before more contagious variants of the virus began to spread.

鈥淎lthough there have been no head-to-head trials to compare the vaccines to each other, the reported efficacies of each of the COVID vaccines determined during clinical trials appear to be better than recent flu vaccines,鈥 Gibson says. 鈥淔or example, as cited in the 2021 CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the current聽influenza vaccine聽has been 45% effective overall against聽2019-20 seasonal聽influenza聽A and B viruses.鈥

When am I considered fully vaccinated?

According to the CDC, people are considered fully vaccinated:

  • 2 weeks after their second dose in a 2-dose series, like the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines
  • 2 weeks after a single-dose vaccine, like Janssen/Johnson & Johnson鈥檚 vaccine

If it has been less than two weeks since your shot, or if you still need to get your second dose, you are NOT fully protected. Furthermore, experts are still monitoring whether getting a COVID-19 vaccine will prevent you from spreading the virus that causes COVID-19 to other people, even if you don鈥檛 get sick yourself.

It鈥檚 important for everyone to continue using all the tools available to help stop this pandemic, so that means wearing a face covering, physical distancing, washing hands frequently and avoiding large crowds should still be a part of your daily life right now.

Once you are fully vaccinated, the CDC recently OK鈥檇:

  • Gathering indoors with fully vaccinated people without wearing a mask.
  • Gathering indoors with unvaccinated people from one other household (for example, visiting with relatives who all live together) without masks, unless any of those people or anyone they live with has an聽increased risk for severe illness from COVID-19.
  • If you鈥檝e been around someone who has COVID-19, you do not need to stay away from others or get tested unless you have symptoms.

Where can I get vaccinated?

College educators and staff of all ages are eligible to receive the vaccine at the Orange County Convention Center and other sites within the county. 麻豆原创 encourages all eligible faculty and staff to take advantage of sites offering vaccines.

The Orange County Convention Center is a drive-thru site that requires appointments. For more information on making appointments and to see other locations where educators are eligible to receive the vaccine, including a federally run walk-up site at Valencia College鈥檚 West Campus, go to Orange County鈥檚 Vaccine Information page.

Providers in other counties also are offering the vaccine to residents who qualify, and members of the 麻豆原创 community may elect to receive their vaccinations through one of those offerings if they are eligible.

More information about why vaccines are important and what to expect at your appointment is being shared here. Those with questions can email covid19vaccine@ucf.edu.

]]>
What Makes the COVID-19 Vaccine Safe? /news/what-makes-the-covid-19-vaccine-safe/ Fri, 05 Mar 2021 15:50:59 +0000 /news/?p=118264 Two 麻豆原创 professors explain the process of how the vaccine came to be and why they trust the science behind it.

]]>
The COVID-19 vaccine is a new type of vaccine called an mRNA vaccine and has stirred a lot of conversation about its effectiveness and safety.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 鈥渢o trigger an immune response, many vaccines put a weakened or inactivated germ into our bodies. Not mRNA vaccines. Instead, they teach our cells how to make a protein 鈥 or even just a piece of a protein 鈥 that triggers an immune response inside our bodies. That immune response, which produces antibodies, is what protects us from getting infected if the real virus enters our bodies.鈥

Vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna are being administered in the U.S. right now, and Johnson & Johnson聽is expected to join them. Darin Edwards 鈥97 鈥10MS 鈥11PhD applied his degrees in biology, molecular biology and biomedical sciences to lead the research and development of Moderna鈥檚 mRNA-1273 vaccine.

Although the state of for the COVID-19 vaccine are limited to certain age and profession demographics, that may be changing soon after President Joe Biden announced March 2 that he expects that the United States will have enough COVID-19 vaccines for every adult by the end of May.

With widespread accessibility to the vaccine on the horizon, two medical professors with expertise in infectious diseases and pathology break down the science behind the vaccine and answer common questions about its safety, effectiveness and who should be getting it.

Professor of Clinical Sciences Kenneth Alexander is certified by the American Board of Pediatrics/Infectious Diseases and earned his medical degree in 1989 from the University of Washington. In addition to his role at 麻豆原创, he is chief of pediatric infectious diseases at Nemours Children鈥檚 Hospital.

Professor of Pathology Jane Gibson is chair of the department of clinical sciences. She is board certified by the American Board of Medical Genetics and Genomics and earned her Ph.D. pathology/laboratory medicine from the University of Florida College of Medicine.

If you enjoy this video, you can find more 鈥淲hat Makes鈥︹ content聽鈥 including topics on space, love bugs, hurricanes and more 鈥 on 麻豆原创鈥檚 YouTube channel.

]]>
If You鈥檙e A COVID-19 Survivor, Consider Donating Your Blood Plasma /news/if-youre-a-covid-19-survivor-consider-donating-your-blood-plasma/ Thu, 22 Oct 2020 13:00:43 +0000 /news/?p=114794 Jane Gibson, a College of Medicine expert in molecular pathology and genetics, shares some guidelines for donating plasma and how聽previously infected patients can help current ones.

]]>
If you caught the COVID-19 virus and are now well, your illness and your strength can help others. In this week鈥檚 health tip, we turn to Jane Gibson, an expert in molecular pathology and genetics at the 麻豆原创 College of Medicine, on how convalescent plasma 鈥 blood plasma collected from people who have recovered from the coronavirus 鈥 can help boost the immunity of those currently infected.

After you recover from COVID-19, your body contains antibodies to the disease that remain in the plasma of your blood. And the FDA has approved convalescent plasma 鈥 the process of transfusing a recovered person鈥檚 plasma into a person critically ill with the coronavirus 鈥 as an experimental treatment. These added antibodies can boost the critically ill patient鈥檚 immunity and reduce their body鈥檚 infection load, reducing their risk of death. Convalescent plasma can also be used to manufacture hyperimmune globulin, a biological product that can also be used to treat patients with COVID-19.

So as a COVID-19 survivor, how do you donate plasma? OneBlood, our state鈥檚 not-for-profit blood center, has information and FAQs . There are several things you need to remember:

  • You must free of symptoms for at least 14 days before donating. Please do not donate plasma if you have a fever or other flu-like symptoms.
  • Have a copy of your test results confirming you had COVID-19 or a letter from a testing facility notifying you of your positive result and the date your test was taken.
  • Follow the OneBlood donation process to see whether you are eligible to donate plasma. This process and educational materials on blood donation are outlined on their website .
  • Schedule your donation time and location. Do not just show up to a location to donate plasma. Because of COVID-19, you must make an appointment.

Donating your plasma does not compromise your own immunity and you are required to wait 28 days between donations to be sure you maintain adequate antibodies so you don鈥檛 harm your immune system. In addition to , you can get more information on convalescent plasma at the , the FDA. Also, please check with your doctor before you decide to donate.

]]>
What is Antibody Testing? /news/what-is-antibody-testing/ Thu, 28 May 2020 13:39:44 +0000 /news/?p=109842 Jane Gibson, an expert in molecular diagnostics at the 麻豆原创 College of Medicine聽provides some insight on COVID-19 antibody testing, which is now available on 麻豆原创’s main campus.

]]>
Antibodies and antibody testing are in the news frequently 鈥 麻豆原创 and Aventus Labs are starting drive-through COVID-19 antibody testing on campus this week. What are antibodies, what do they do and what role do they play in diseases like the unique coronavirus causing this pandemic?

For answers, we鈥檙e turning to Jane Gibson, an expert in molecular diagnostics at the 麻豆原创 College of Medicine and chair of the . She authors this week鈥檚 health tip:

Antibodies are proteins your immune system creates any time your body is under attack from bacteria that cause diseases like tuberculosis or a virus like COVID-19. Antibodies are what your body sends out as a first line of defense against these invaders.

A positive COVID-19 antibody test tells us you have been exposed to the virus and that your body reacted to that exposure. The challenge we face in medicine right now is that no one knows if those antibodies give you immunity from the virus 鈥 and if they do, for how long.

A positive antibody test can show if you were one of those asymptomatic carriers.

We have decades of experience with viruses like the seasonal flu. We know that if you get it, you are probably immune for about 12 to 18 months. That鈥檚 why your physician recommends you get a flu shot every year. But COVID-19 is so new and unique that we have many unanswered questions about how it impacts the body. We are working to develop accurate, more advanced tests that will tell us your level of immunity.

But for now, currently available antibody tests only tell us that you鈥檝e been exposed to the virus. That information is helpful because people can have the disease and not feel ill. So a positive antibody test can show if you were one of those asymptomatic carriers. We also know that COVID-19 affects people in many different ways. Some become seriously ill, requiring a formal diagnosis and treatment, perhaps hospitalization. Others have only mild symptoms they attribute to a cold or minor respiratory ailment. Many of us had respiratory infections 鈥 fever, coughing, congestion 鈥 in December and January and wonder if it was COVID-19. An antibody test can help answer those questions, and you should make the decision to be tested after discussing with your healthcare provider.

Widespread antibody testing also can help us better understand the impact of COVID-19 on our community and provide a more accurate measurement of how many actual cases we鈥檝e had.

Widespread antibody testing also can help us better understand the impact of COVID-19 on our community and provide a more accurate measurement of how many actual cases we鈥檝e had. It can help us better understand how many people were asymptomatic or had only minor symptoms. A positive test can give you information on whether you should ask about donating plasma for treatments. But a positive antibody test shouldn鈥檛 give you false confidence. It doesn鈥檛 say you can鈥檛 get COVID-19 again. It isn鈥檛 a 鈥済et out of jail free card鈥 to stop taking safety precautions like social distancing, wearing a mask in public and frequent hand washing.

As scientists and physicians, we are working hard to better understand COVID-19. Antibody testing can help us do that. But such testing does not provide all the answers.

]]>