2019 President’s Cabinet Awards

View event photos here
The President's Cabinet celebrated nineteen UTMB faculty, staff and students at a dinner and awards program the evening of Friday, September 6, 2019 at Moody Gardens Hotel in Galveston. Eight awards were given for projects that recognize and address health needs in our community. The 2019 grant recipients are, seated front row from left, Dr. Premal Patel, Dr. Misha Syed, Ms. Cheron Hillmon, Dr. Michelle Sierpina and Dr. Claudia Hilton. Stand, from left, Dr. David Niesel, President's Cabinet Awards Committee Chair, Ms. Hanan Khalil, Dr. Karen Ratcliff, Mr. Zhihao Zhu, Ms. Mary Schmitz-Brown, Dr. Lance Lyons, Dr. Marguerite Sognier, Mr. Naim Mekdess, Dr. J. Michael Leger, Mrs. Stephanie Kemmerling, Mr. Michael Washburn, Dr. Thomas Kimbrough, President's Cabinet Chair, and Dr. Ben Raimer, UTMB President ad interim.
The Gift of Life: Building & Sustaining Capacity for Eye Care at St. Vincent's HouseMona Singh, MD, MPA, PGY4
Lance Lyons, MD, PGY3
Jed Assam, MD, PGY2
Misha Syed, MD, MEHP
Mary Schmitz Brown
Ophthalmology and Visual Science
Building on the success of a 2011 President's Cabinet Award that provided hundreds of patients in the greater Galveston area with sight-saving diabetic retinopathy treatment and follow-up exams, this new award will expand vision services to a large economically disadvantaged population that depend upon the St. Vincent's Eye Clinic for their complete eye care. Award funds will be used to upgrade and purchase new equipment, broaden services, supply patients with quality eyeglass prescriptions, provide testing modalities and treatment avenues for patients with glaucoma and develop charity cataract surgery services.
Pain, Pain Go Away: Reducing the Perception of Pain in Children with Comfort for Kids
Stephanie Kemmerling, MSN, FNP-CDermatology
The pain associated with medical procedures can cause significant stress and anxiety for child and their families. Studies show that distractions are considered an effective, safe and low-cost method to reduce pain and anxiety during medical procedures. Because UTMB's outpatient pediatric clinics lack resources to provide distraction techniques for children, President's Cabinet funds will provide for the creation of 25 specialized portable pediatric care kits that will include age-appropriate toys, an iPad loaded with specialized comfort applications and an external vibratory buzzing device. These kits will be distributed to clinics based on the severity of the medical procedures that take place, including immunizations, venipuncture, cryotherapy, biopsies, etc.
Lifelong Learning for Angleton DanburyMichael Washburn, MA
Michelle Sierpina, PhD
Osher Lifelong Learning Institute
Since 2002, the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) at UTMB in Galveston has successfully provided a welcoming learning environment to adults age 55 and over. Because of its enormous success and the growth of UTMB's presence in Brazoria County, this project will help establish a similar lifelong learning community for residents in Angleton, Danbury and surrounding areas. President's Cabinet funds will be used to create a basic classroom infrastructure at an Angleton location and provide free one-year memberships to the program for under served community members. College level courses, age appropriate fitness activities, consultations and a variety of health-related workshops will be modeled after the successful OLLI program in Galveston.
Transitional Care Management Program for St. Vincent's Nurse Managed ClinicDr. J. Michael Leger
Dr. Maureen Biggs
School of Nursing
Transitional Care Management (TCM) programs have proven effective in bridging gaps across health care settings, particularly for patients deemed at high risk for poor medical outcomes. With an estimated 3,000 patients seeking medical treatment at the St. Vincent's House Nurse Manage Clinic annually, more than 17 percent of these patients are considered at-risk and often "fall through the cracks." To help with this problem, this project will provide for the services of a nurse transition care manager to facilitate a TCM program at St. Vincent's. The objective is to build a rapport with patients, provide disease-specific education to facilitate self-management, perform medication reconciliation, confirm follow-up appointments, and provide care management to support treatment.
Cancer Connection: From Diagnosis to TreatmentCheron J. Hillmon, LMSW
Community Health
In an effort to support patients with cancer at UTMB, Chemo Care bags will be given to patients at the beginning of their chemo or radiation therapy. These bags will contain educational and treatment materials and comfort items such as lip balm, lotion, blankets, journals, socks and ginger candies. Each bag will be specially packed by people who have gone through similar treatments and know what items would be of most value. The goal is to provide first-time patients with much-needed items and allow them to pack other comfort itmes for subsequent appointments. This award will provide funding for 600 bags over a two-year period.
Building Long-Term Academic Success Through Ongoing Fun Fitness (BLASTOFF) ProgramKaren Ratcliff, PhD, OTR
Claudia Hilton, PhD, OTR, MBA, FAOTA
Occupational Therapy
Studies have shown that physical activity during school time can increase attention and memory and reduce inappropriate behavior, resulting in improved academic performance. In an effort to assist academically low-performing students at Odyssey Academy in Galveston, the UTMB Occupational Therapy Department will create a sustainable motor lab program called BLASTOFF and work with students in the school's reading intervention program five days per week for 20 minutes per session. The BLASTOFF lab will be equipped with dance software, a gaming system, gross motor skills equipment, motor coordination and fitness gams and more.
St. Vincent's PUSH for Prevention: Partnership with UTMB to Screen for HIVDr. Premal Patel
John Davis, PhD student
Manasa Kanukurthy, School of Medicine Student
Naim Mekdessi, School of Medicine Student
Zhihao Zhu, School of Medicine Student
Internal Medicine
Currently, St. Vincent's Clinic does not have the necessary infrastructure or resources to screen patients for HIV/AIDS according to the guidelines of the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF). Because of these limitations, the decision to order HIV testing is often based on patient requests and clinical intuition. The development of a pilot HIV screening program at St. Vincent's will improve adherence to USPSTF guidelines, provide linkage to care for a vulnerable populations likely to be at high-risk for transmissions and serve as a platform for incorporating comprehensive preventive medical care and establish population health monitoring.
Inspiring Girls to Help Meet Our Future STEM Workforce NeedsDr. Marguerite Sognier
Science Education
There is a critical need for additional qualified workers in careers utilizing Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM). Women continue to remain underrepresented in STEM fields and strategies are needed to inform and inspire more pre-college level girls to this arena. To foster awareness, this project will create an annual STEM Career Conference for girls in grades 3-8 throughout Galveston County. Participants will be exposed to science, math, engineering and technology-related careers by attending hands-on workshops presented by successful women from universities, businesses and government agencies. Examples of conference exploration workshops are aerospace, accounting, engineering, petrochemical industry, maritime industry, biomedical sciences, health care, zoology, and more.
For more information about the President's Cabinet contact Marie Marczak at (409) 747-4876.
