Events
National Constitution Center
"Confronting the Tragedies of Serious Mental Illness" an evening with Norman Ornstein
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2018-10-04 18:00:00
2018-10-04 20:00:00
America/New_York
"Confronting the Tragedies of Serious Mental Illness" an evening with Norman Ornstein
In 2015, Norman Ornstein lost his son Matthew after a 10-year struggle with serious mental illness. Dr. Ornstein-- a nationally acclaimed political scientist, writer, and commentator-- will describe the challenges he faced and lessons he learned while trying to help Matthew receive adequate treatment within our fragmented mental health care system.
Please join us for a reception at 6pm followed by Dr. Ornstein's lecture at 7pm.
National Constitution Center
Penn Medical Ethics
National Press Club 529 14th Street Northwest Washington, DC 20045
Moving Forward with Bundled Payments
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2018-10-09 08:30:00
2018-10-09 10:30:00
America/New_York
Moving Forward with Bundled Payments
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will launch the Bundled Payments for Care Improvement Advanced (BPCI-Advanced) Model in October. Insight from stakeholders will help shape the future of bundled payments in the nation’s quest for higher-quality and lower-cost care.
Please join Amol Navathe, MD, PhD, and Ezekiel Emanuel, MD, PhD, of the University of Pennsylvania, as they host an exploration of the current evidence and best practices around bundled payments. This free event will start at 8:30 a.m. in the National Press Club’s Murrow-White-Lisagor meeting rooms. The two-hour program will feature keynote speeches and a moderated panel discussion featuring the top thought leaders, policymakers, payers, and providers in the world of alternative payment models and payment transformation (see below for additional details on invited speakers).
*As seating is limited, registration is highly encouraged for this free event!*
National Press Club 529 14th Street Northwest Washington, DC 20045
Penn Medical Ethics
1402 Blockley Hall
Penn Bioethics Seminar | Douglas H Smith, MD
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2018-10-23 12:00:00
2018-10-23 13:00:00
America/New_York
Penn Bioethics Seminar | Douglas H Smith, MD
Balancing Clinical Research with National Security Concerns: Investigation of Mysterious Neurological Symptoms
Douglas H Smith, MD is the Director of the Center for Brain Injury and Repair and Professor of Neurosurgery at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. Penn’s multidisciplined CBIR includes over twenty-five principal investigators and their laboratory staff collectively studying mechanisms, diagnosis and potential treatments of traumatic brain injury. Over the last 18 years, Dr. Smith has devoted his full-time efforts to neurotrauma research following completion of fellowships in both molecular biology and neurotrauma at the University of Connecticut. He has been an active member of the National Neurotrauma Society and currently serves as an officer. In addition, Dr. Smith is director of a multi-center NIH program grant on mild traumatic brain injury and he oversees an NIH training grant for brain injury research. His laboratory’s research interests include investigating the biomechanical effects of traumatic brain injury, imaging techniques to diagnose diffuse axonal injury, and the link between diffuse axonal injury and Alzheimer’s disease. Dr Smith’s laboratory has also engineered nervous tissue constructs that have been shown to repair spinal cord and nerve damage. These collective efforts have resulted in over 170 published reports.
1402 Blockley Hall
Penn Medical Ethics
Arch 108
Penn Bioethics Seminar | Ulf Schmidt
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2018-10-30 12:00:00
2018-10-30 13:00:00
America/New_York
Penn Bioethics Seminar | Ulf Schmidt
Seven Days that Changed the World: The Salisbury Nerve Agent Attack and its Aftermath
Ulf Schmidt is Professor of Modern History, Director of the Centre for the History of Medicine, Ethics and Medical Humanities at the University of Kent, and principle investigator of the Porton Down Project on the history of chemical warfare research during the Cold War. Professor Schmidt is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He was previously Wellcome Trust Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, and Senior Associate Member of St Antony’s College, Oxford University. In 2004 Professor Schmidt was appointed by HM Coroner for Wiltshire and Swindon as one of the principle expert witnesses on informed consent in the Inquest looking into the death of Leading Aircraftman Ronald Maddison, a British serviceman, who died after being exposed to the nerve agent Sarin in 1953.
Arch 108
Penn Medical Ethics