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The Department of Preventive Medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC has been pivotal in advancing the field. The Department is known for its strong research, excellence in teaching and commitment to promoting community health through education. Thanks to the foresight of its founders, the Department has become world renowned for its research, faculty and vision.
National and International Recognition
Stanley P. Azen, Ph.D.,
Fellow, International Statistics Institute
Scientific Journal Editorships
Steve Sussman, Ph.D.,
Associate Editor, American Journal of Health Behavior
John Peters, M.D., Sc.D.,
Associate Editor, American Journal of Industrial Medicine
Stanley P. Azen, Ph.D.,
Editor-In-Chief, Computational Statistics and Data Analysis
William J. Gauderman, Ph.D.,
Associate Editor, Computational Statistics and Data Analysis
Bryan M. Langholz , Ph.D.,
Associate Editor, Biometrics
Public health expert to join USC »
Jonathan Samet will lead the Keck School’s Department of Preventive Medicine and launch the Institute for Global Health.
Study
shows higher rates of lung cancer in African-American, Native
Hawaiian smokers »
Lung cancer is more likely to develop in cigarette
smokers who are African American or Native Hawaiian than in
smokers who are white, Japanese American or Latino, according
to a study published in this week’s issue of the New
England Journal of Medicine. “We wanted to see to what
extent population-based differences in lung cancer incidence
can be explained by differences in cigarette smoking,”
said Christopher Haiman, assistant professor
of preventive medicine at the Keck School and lead author
on the study.
Melanoma
study finds Latinos at rising risk »
Latinos in California are increasingly being diagnosed
with melanoma, a potentially deadly form of skin cancer, according
to a study by researchers at the Keck School of Medicine of
USC. The study will appear in the March 1 issue of the journal
Cancer but was published early online on Jan. 23. “When
a tumor is thick, that usually means it has been developing
for a while,” said lead author Myles Cockburn,
assistant professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School.
“This is a disease that has a great chance of cure when
found early, and routine screening can catch early cases.
But in this population, the cancer is becoming more common,
and it’s not being caught early enough.
USC-led
Study Probes Perils of Smoking »
“We wanted to see to what extent population-based differences
in lung cancer incidence can be explained by differences in
cigarette smoking,” said Christopher Haiman,
assistant professor of preventive medicine in the Keck School
of Medicine and the lead author on the study. “This
is the largest study to date to address this question.”
Manuela Gago-Dominguez and Can-Lan
Sun each won Scholar-in-Training awards to attend
the 2002 annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer
Research (AACR). The award, which is based on the quality
of the science presented by each researcher. Was given to
only 242 Out of 2,200 candidates, according to Sheri Ozard,
AACR program coordinator for the awards.
Along with the honor, winners received between $400 and $2,000
to assist their attendance and research presentations at the
meeting, which was held in San Francisco.
Gago-Dominguez and Sun, both of the Department of Preventive
Medicine, won an AFLAC Award. Such awards are specially selected
and are given to the top abstract presenters who also are
associate members of the AACR, Ozard said.
Gago-Dominguez presented results from her ongoing studies
on carcinogens in hair dyes and their link to increased bladder
cancer risk, while Sun discussed research linking certain
polyphenols found in tea to reduced risk of stomach and esophageal
cancers among men in Shanghai, China. Both researchers work
with Mimi C. Yu, professor of preventive medicine.
High-sugar
Diet May Harm Latino Children»
Overweight Latino children who consume lots of sugar
– especially in sugary drinks – show signs of
beta cell decline, a precursor of type 2 diabetes, according
to researchers in the Keck School of Medicine of USC. “If
left untreated, overweight and poor diet among these children
could have disastrous consequences for minority health and
the health-care costs for future generations,” said
Michael Goran, professor of preventive medicine
in the Keck School, associate director of the USC Institute
for Prevention Research and the study’s senior author.
Smoking
damage may jump generations»
“This is the first study to show that if a woman smokes
while she is pregnant, both her children and grandchildren
may be more likely to have asthma as a result,” said
the study’s senior author, Frank D. Gilliland,
professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School.
American
Cancer Society honors Keck School professor of preventive
medicine»
Malcolm C. Pike, renowned cancer researcher
and professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School of
Medicine, was one of five cancer pioneers and volunteers honored
by the American Cancer Society
Howard
Hodis named Bauer/Rawlins Professor in Cardiology»
Howard N. Hodis, director of the USC Atherosclerosis
Research Unit, has been named the Harry J. Bauer and Dorothy
Bauer Rawlins Professor of Cardiology.
Parents’
unhealthy lifestyles trigger numerous detrimental effects
on chidren»
Bin Xie, a Ph.D. candidate and research associate,
investigated the effect of parental smoking on patterns of
consumption of vegetables, fruit, meat, milk and sweets, time
spent watching television, and engagement in vigorous physical
activity, alcohol consumption and cigarette smoking in Chinese
adolescents.
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