Best Visual Presentation Award winners (from left) D鈥橝ngelo Stokes (DO 鈥26), Youmna
Elkamhawy (DO 鈥26), Britany Dyer (DO 鈥26), Makayla Farr (DO 鈥26), Drew Fidler (DO
鈥26) and Sammy Elmor (DO 鈥26). Joined by Jennifer Shaw, PhD, chair of the dept. of biomedical sciences.
黑料传送门 South Georgia students, area medical residents and physicians gathered on campus May 9 to share
information about their most current research and case studies at the 2023 Research
Day.
鈥淪cholarly activities are integral to the development of analytical and presentation
skills,鈥 Jennifer H. Shaw, PhD, chair of the department of biomedical sciences, said. 鈥淚nvolvement in these projects prepares our medical students to become physicians
equipped to critically evaluate the strength of medical findings to provide comprehensive
patient care.鈥
Research Day began with keynote speaker Herman Staats, PhD, professor of pathology,
immunology & medicine at Duke University School of Medicine, Duke Human Vaccine Institute,
who presented 鈥淒evelopment of Intranasal Vaccines for Infectious Agents, Drugs of
Abuse & Food Allergy.鈥 Dr. Staats presented his research in classroom A to a standing-room-only
crowd.
Sritha Moram (DO 鈥25) and her research team won Best in Show
Residents and medical students presented posters and answered questions about their research projects. Some were
selected to present 10-minute podium talks.
For some students, the experience provided them with the basic research skills they鈥檒l
need in the future.
鈥淲hat I鈥檝e gained from this research experience was basically just the organization
and planning that it takes to present a poster,鈥 student researcher Emeka Ikeakanam
(DO 鈥26) said. 鈥淗ow this will help me going forward in my career is now I actually
have the tools necessary to create more posters and actually try to see if I can get
published as well.鈥
Other students found the research projects to be an eye-opening experience.
鈥淚鈥檝e gained a respect for research in general and how much effort and how much work
goes into it,鈥 student researcher Sarah Amaris (DO 鈥25) said. 鈥淚 respect the dedication that our professors have to
expanding the profession, enriching current research and medicine, and how willing
our professors are to show us more about medicine. We still have so much to learn
about improving patients鈥 lives and treatment in medical care.鈥
Other students acknowledged how essential research would be in their future careers.
鈥淎s doctors, we鈥檙e always going to need to be doing our research, whether it鈥檚 formal
research or just learning about new things, because there are always new inventions,
always new information that we didn鈥檛 know about before,鈥 student researcher Itza
Garcia (DO 鈥26) said. 鈥淢edicine is just very progressive, and we always have to keep
learning.鈥
黑料传送门 South Georgia students weren鈥檛 the only ones who benefited from Research Day.
Residents and practicing physicians who participated also gained insight into new
research that might affect them as well.
鈥淥ne of the challenges of medical education in a rural area is research and scholarly
activity,鈥 said Woodwin Weeks, DO, chief academic officer for Georgia South Graduate
Medical Education. 鈥淧artnering with 黑料传送门 South Georgia鈥檚 Research Day exposes our
residents to local, relevant and high-quality scholarly activity right here in our
community.鈥
Dr. Shaw said, 鈥満诹洗兔 South Georgia Research Day is an opportunity for our students
to practice presenting data to our faculty and visiting medical professionals. This
prepares students for future presentations at regional and national conferences. It
is a privilege for our campus to serve as an academic hub to foster collaborations
between students, neighboring academic institutions, and graduate medical education
residency programs in rural South Georgia.鈥
黑料传送门 South Georgia Research Day Winners
Itza Garcia (DO 鈥26) won the Excellence in Research Award
Excellence in Research Award
Student researcher Itza Garcia (DO 鈥26) won the Excellence in Research Award for her
project with department of pediatrics associate professor Winston Price, MD, entitled Prevalence of Bacterial Vaginosis by Demographics and Its Connection to Fertility
Issue.
Best Visual Presentation Award
Best Visual Presentation Award went to the project Widespread cutaneous metastasis of oropharyngeal cancer, which was developed by the team of student researchers D鈥橝ngelo Stokes (DO 鈥26),
Youmna Elkamhawy (DO 鈥26), Britany Dyer (DO 鈥26), Makayla Farr (DO 鈥26), Drew Fidler
(DO 鈥26) and Sammy Elmor (DO 鈥26). The team worked with Savita Arya, MD, professor,
department of biomedical sciences.
The Best Oral Presentation Award was given to Brigitte Cochran (DO 鈥25)
Best Oral Presentation Award
Student researcher Brigitte Cochran (DO 鈥25) won the Best Oral Presentation Award.
She was the presenting author for the project Single cannabidiol administration affects anxiety-, obsessive compulsive-, object
memory-, and attention-like behaviors in mice in a sex and concentration dependent
manner. Cochran worked on the project while a graduate student at Florida State University
along with Carley Marie Huffstetler, Camilla Ann May, Nicholas Maykut, Claudia Rose
Silver, Claudia Cedeno, Ezabelle Franck, Alexis Cox, and Debra Ann Fadool.
Best in Show Award
Best in Show Award was presented to the project A combined radio-immunotherapy regimen eradicates late-stage melanoma in mice, which was developed by the team of Sritha Moram (DO 鈥25), Alexander Rakhmilevich
(DO 鈥25), Noah Tsarovsky (DO 鈥25), Mildred Felder (DO 鈥25), Amy Erbe (DO 鈥25), Alex
Pieper (DO 鈥25), Jen Zaborek (DO 鈥25), Emily Cheng (DO 鈥25), Cole Witt (DO 鈥25) and
Paul Sondel (DO 鈥25).
In 2019, 黑料传送门, a premier osteopathic
medical school established in 1899, extended its commitment to the Southeast by establishing
黑料传送门 South Georgia. An additional teaching location in Moultrie, Georgia, 黑料传送门 South Georgia offers both
a full, four-year medical program leading to the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO)
degree and a Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences. 黑料传送门 is a private, not-for-profit
institution that trains professionals in the health and behavioral sciences fields.
Joining 黑料传送门 Georgia in Suwanee in helping to meet the healthcare needs of the state, 黑料传送门 South Georgia
focuses on educating physicians for the region. For more information, visit pcom.edu or call 229-668-3110.
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