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New European study aims to better understand child abuse online

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Researchers from RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) will undertake a new study which aims to achieve a better understanding of online child abuse, thereby preventing online child abuse while identifying new strategies for law enforcement. This study will be run in collaboration with other institutes in the UK, Italy, and the Netherlands and is funded by the European Commission.

This project, entitled Developing research informed good practice policing and industry collaborative models in preventing online child abuse and profiling child victims, will use existing evidence of the online behaviour of perpetrators of crimes such as online grooming and accessing indecent child images which will inform policing and industry best practice in prevention of such crime. It will publish a set of good practice models and guidelines which will help in identifying potential child victims of grooming, while creating a safer online environment for children and young people.

The study is being undertaken by the RCSI CyberPsychology Research Centre, Tilburg University (Netherlands); Kore University of Enna in Sicily and is being led by Middlesex University, the Centre for Abuse and Trauma Studies (CATS).

Speaking on this cross-EU study, Mary Aiken, Director of RCSIs CyberPsychology Research Centre said, ‘Keeping vulnerable children and young people safe when online is a priority for our work. This new study will help us to further understand those who are preying on children across the globe. This is an issue that crosses borders and these findings will resonate across the globe. From our launch symposium last October, a central part of our vision for the CyberPsychology Research Centre has been to become an academic resource for law enforcement across the world and we are delighted to work with CATS and our EU partners in furthering that vision.

Dr Ciarán Mc Mahon, Research & Development Co-Ordinator at the RCSI CyberPsychology Research Centre added, ‘This is an important first step in the growth and expansion of the Research Centre, not only with regard to strengthening existing collaborative relationships and developing new academic partnerships, but also in terms of adding high quality researchers to our team.

Founded in 1784, RCSIs mission is to develop healthcare leaders who make a difference worldwide. RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences organisation which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland.


RCSI signs MOU with Hanoi Medical University

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On Thursday 22nd May, RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) signed a memorandum of understanding with Hanoi Medical University (HMU) which will enable further collaboration between both institutions in both education and training in the health sciences. HMU is the oldest medical University in Vietnam and it is located in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam.


Pictured (l-r back row) is Prof. William Hall, Atlantic Philanthropies; Mr. Tran Nam Binh, Peapros Consulting, Vietnam; Prof. Nguyen Duc Hinh, President of HMU; Prof. Luu Ngoc Hoat, Vice President of HMU; Prof. Ciaran OBoyle, Head of the RCSI Institute of Leadership; Dr Nguyen Van Huy, Institute for Preventive Medicine and Public Health; and (l-r front row) Ms Fiona Walsh, RCSI Enterprises; Dr Nguyen Thanh Minh, Deputy Director General of Vietnam International Education Development, Vietnam Government; Ms. Tran Phuong Mai, Enterprise Ireland, Vietnam; and Dr Bui My Hanh, Director, of the Centre for Development of Curriculum and Human Resource in Health.

This announcement follows a visit to RCSI by representatives of the Vietnamese Government and HMU in March of this year. The medical course in HMU is the leading programme in the country and one of the most prestigious medical programmes in the continent of Asia.

Over the past year Professor Ciaran OBoyle and his colleagues in the RCSI Institute of Leadership have been collaborating with Hanoi to better understand HMUs faculty and student needs. Both institutions hope that this initial MOU will lead to a series of fruitful collaborations. RCSI is honored to have the opportunity to collaborate with one of Asias most prominent health sciences institutions. Both RCSI and HMU would like to acknowledge the support of Atlantic Philanthropies and the Embassy of Ireland in Vietnam, both of which helped significantly in facilitating this partnership.

Founded in 1784, RCSIs mission is to develop healthcare leaders who make a difference worldwide. RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences organisation which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland.

Inaugural Watson award recognises excellence in Waterford interns

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RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) teaching hospital, University Hospital Waterford (UHW) recently held its first awards ceremony for training interns. The inaugural Gordon Watson Intern Award was won by Dr Sean Fitzpatrick for his study on acute pancreatitis.


Pictured (l-r standing) Professor Fred Jackson, Mr David Smyth, Prof Arnold Hill, Professor Riona Mulcahy, Dr Rob Landers and Dr George Pope. Seated (l-r) is Dr Sean Fitzpatrick and Mr Gordon Watson

Dr Fitzpatrick was presented with the award by the Head of the RCSI School of Medicine, Professor Arnold Hill for his winning presentation entitled ‘Acute Pancreatitis Secondary to non-Alcoholic Steato-Hepatitis. This award is named after Mr Gordon Watson, a retired Consultant Surgeon and former RCSI council member, for his outstanding contribution to University Hospital Waterford and its patients.


Pictured with Prof Arnold Hill, Head of the RCSI School of Medicine, are the six shortlisted interns (l-r) Dr Padraic Kennedy, Dr Brian Ahern, Dr Jennani Magandran, Prof Arnold Hill, Dr Darakhashan Ansari, Dr Rory Lavelle, Dr Sean Fitzpatrick

Originally, six interns were shortlisted to present their cases, having previously submitted abstracts to the adjudication panel, comprising Professor Arnold Hill, Head of the RCSI School of Medicine; Professor Riona Mulcahy, RCSI UHW Undergraduate Dean; Dr Rob Landers, Clinical Director of UHW; and Mr David Smyth, Consultant ENT surgeon. The event was chaired by Professor Fred Jackson, Department of Medicine, RCSI UHW; and Dr George Pope, Consultant Geriatrician at UHW.


Pictured (l-r) is Prof Arnold Hill, Head of the RCSI School of Medicine; prizewinner, Dr Sean Fitzpatrick and Mr Gordon Watson

The Dean of the RCSI Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Professor Hannah McGee, paid tribute to Mr Watson by saying, ‘Senior management at RCSI are delighted to support the enthusiastic request from many of Mr Watsons colleagues in University Hospital Waterford to name this new intern prize in his honour. He is a fitting inspiration to doctors at the start of their careers to strive to achieve the best they can for their patients and for their profession. Mr Watson, who attended the award ceremony with his family, thanked his colleagues for considering him for this accolade.


Mr Gordon Watson and his wife Hazel (seated) are pictured with thier family

Founded in 1784, RCSIs mission is to develop healthcare leaders who make a difference worldwide. RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences organisation which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland.

New President and Council of RCSI

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The Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) announces the election of Mr Declan J Magee as the 169th President of the College. Mr Magee takes up office following the College’s biennial council elections today. He replaces outgoing President, Professor Patrick Broe.

Professor John Hyland, a Consultant Colorectal Surgeon at St Vincent’s University Hospital, has been appointed as the new Vice-President.

Originally from Co Fermanagh, Mr Declan Magee is a graduate of University College Dublin. He trained in surgery in Ireland and at Guy’s Hospital, London and Harvard Medical School, Boston, before taking up post as Consultant General Surgeon at St Columcille’s Hospital, Loughlinstown and Blackrock Clinic, Dublin.

Mr Magee has served on the Council of RCSI since 1993 and has chaired most major committees of the organisation. During this time, he has been intimately involved in the governance of surgical practice and training, as well as the many other College activities in the broad field of health sciences education and training.

He has a keen interest in medical education, having previously chaired the Academic Council of Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, at RCSI.

In addition, he has been instrumental in the development of the collaboration between RCSI and the College of Surgeons of East, Central and Southern Africa (COSECSA), a most successful initiative, supported by Irish Aid, which enhances and expands surgical training and, ultimately, the delivery of essential surgical services across this vast region.

Speaking on his appointment, Mr Magee said: “It is a great honour and privilege for me to be elected as the President of this great institution and follow in the footsteps of my predecessors, both recent and historical. I look forward to leading the college, over the next two years, as it continues to work with the HSE and Department of Health in improving the delivery of safe and efficient surgical services. The successful establishment of the new hospital groups will be a key factor in this task.”

“Retention of our highly skilled, newly trained surgeons within our permanent workforce is a critical issue at this time and requires delivery of a well-resourced working environment and attractive terms of employment. We are committed to excellence in our delivery of health sciences education and post graduate training and we are excited about the imminent construction of our new €80 million teaching facility.”

“I will continue the work, already begun, of active engagement with our surgical members and fellows, both here and overseas, to build a strong, inclusive and relevant College”, Mr Magee continued.

The 2014 - 2016 Council comprises the following members
President Mr Declan Magee
Vice-President Professor John Hyland

Council

* (in order of year of Fellowship)

Professor W Arthur Tanner
Professor Patrick Broe
Professor Tom Gorey
Mr. Parnell Keeling
Mr. Kevin OMalley
Mr. James Geraghty
Mr. Paul Burke
Mr. Joseph OBeirne
Professor Patrick Ronan OConnell
Mr. Michael E. OSullivan
Mr. Kenneth Mealy
Mr. David Quinlan
Professor Kevin Conlon
Mr. David Moore
Professor K. Simon Cross
Dr. Laura Viani
Professor Michael Kerin
Ms. Bridget Egan
Ms Deborah McNamara




Higher Degree Conferring Ceremony takes place at RCSI

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47 candidates will graduate at the RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) Higher Degree Conferring Ceremony which will take place this evening in the College Hall. This is the first time that a dedicated conferring ceremony for higher degrees has taken place in the College during the June Conferring Week.

From the School of Postgraduate Studies, there are four Master of Science (MSc) by research candidates, eight Doctor of Medicine (MD) graduates and 25 Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) graduates. This is the highest number of higher degree by research graduates in a single RCSI graduation. The group consists of graduates from Ireland, Bahrain, India, Malaysia, Uganda, Kuwait, UK, Spain, Italy and Germany.

From the School of Pharmacy, ten candidates will be conferred with degrees of Master in Pharmacy (MPharm).

The event will be live-streamed and you can watch it live at this link.

The ceremony is the first official engagement of the new President of RCSI, Mr Declan Magee, who will take up office later today. Speaking at the ceremony, to the graduates of the Masters in Pharmacy programme, he said "In common with other healthcare professionals, you share a vocation of caring. I urge you to always place the patient at the heart of your practice and to employ your unique expertise in medicines so as to benefit your patient, the health service and wider society." To the recipients of higher degrees by research, he said: "All of you have and will contribute substantially to the RCSI research profile, of which we are justifiably proud. We wish you every success as you pursue careers in your chosen fields and continue to advance the frontiers of our knowledge and understanding, for the benefit of our patients."

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.

RCSI Conferring Week 2014 Celebrations get Underway

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RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland)s Conferring Week celebrations got underway on Tuesday 3rd June with more than 310 guests attending the 2014 Undergraduate Conferring Dinner, hosted by Professor Hannah McGee, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. Among those invited were graduating medical students; Professor Patrick Broe, Immediate Past President; Professor Cathal Kelly, CEO/ Registrar; Council Members; Senior Management; RCSI Academic and Administration Staff; Consultants and Clinical Tutors. A commemorative RCSI Class of 2014 video to congratulate the graduands and to inspire them on their career paths as RCSI alumni will unveiled at the dinner.


Pictured (l-r) is Professor Abraham Verghese, physician and best-selling author; Ms Cari Costanzo Kapur and Professor Cathal Kelly, CEO/Registrar, RCSI.

A number of awards will also be presented at the dinner. President, Professor Patrick Broe will announce the Clinical Tutor Teaching Awardees and Gleeson Teaching Award Winner. Awards to students to be announced include the Dan Kelly Memorial Medal, the British Pharmacological Society (BPS) Undergraduate Prize in Clinical Pharmacology, the Gold Medal of the Association of Graduates and the Connolly Hospital Sir William Osler Medal.


Pictured (l-r) is Ros Whelan, Aislinn Pearce, Nasrin Samji, Elaine Houlihan and Chris Armstrong

For the first time, there will be two separate Conferring Ceremonies taking place during the Conferring Week. Both ceremonies will be live-streamed and the links to view will be circulated on the day of the ceremonies.


Pictured (l-r) is Dr Darcy Reed, Professor Michael Brennan and Ms Linda Matti

The Higher Degree Conferring Ceremony took place on Wednesday 4th June in RCSI. 47 candidates were conferred with degrees of Master in Pharmacy (MPharm), Master of Science (MSc), Doctor of Medicine (MD) and Doctor of Philosophy (PhD).


Immediate past-President of RCSI, Prof Patrick Broe addresses the dinner attendeed

On Thursday 5th June, the School of Medicine conferring ceremony will take place at 4pm in the Convention Centre Dublin. 250 candidates will be conferred with degrees in Medicine, Surgery and Obstetrics (MB, BCh and BAO). Professor Abraham C. Verghese, physician and best-selling author, will receive an honorary doctorate from RCSI at the Ceremony.


Pictured (l-r) is Ross Whelan and Professor Arnold Hill

The weeks celebrations conclude with the Graduation Ball in the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel, Burlington Road.


Prof Hannah McGee is pictured with Prof Verghese

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.


Pictured (l-r) is Dr Orna Tighe; Siun Aherne, Margaret McCarthy, Deans Office and her daughter Aine who will graduate this week; and Aidan Healy.


Iolanda Tiedt addresses the audience at the medical dinner

Doctors of the future graduate from RCSI at Ireland's largest medical conferring

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Physician and best-selling author of ‘My Own Country, Professor Abraham Verghese, to receive honorary doctorate


250 future doctors from 26 different countries around the world donned caps and gowns to graduate from RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) on Thursday 5th June. Medical degrees were presented to graduands at the annual conferring ceremony in the Convention Centre, Dublin.


Pictured outside RCSI are recent graduates (l-r) Ciara Nolan, Fetema Mewa, Nasayem Alquraini and Elaine Houlihan

The RCSI School of Medicine conferring ceremony sees the largest number of doctors in Ireland graduate each year. The conferring ceremony is a celebration for students and their families who travelled from all over the world to attend the ceremony.


Fetema Mewa fixes her brother and fellow graduates cap, Shabbir Mewa

Mr Declan Magee, President RCSI, congratulated all those who graduated on their success. "You have become the newest constituents of, what I call, the RCSI World Wide Web and, wherever you end up in the world, you will not be far from a fellow Royal Collegian. So, be confident that you are now armed with the knowledge, clinical skills and attitudes to properly, in the words of your oath, consecrate your lives to the service of humanity. Go forward with enthusiasm to share our vision that you will be the healthcare leaders of tomorrow, who WILL make a difference worldwide."


Pictured (l-r) is Ciara Nolan, Elaine Houlihan, Michael Flanagan, Nasayem Alquraini and Elias Chamely

An honorary doctorate was awarded to Professor Abraham C. Verghese, physician and best-selling author. This is the fourth RCSI honorary doctorate to be awarded since RCSI received independent degree awarding status in 2010. An infectious disease physician, Verghese is senior associate chair and professor of the theory and practice of medicine at Stanford University. He is a strong advocate for the value of bedside medicine skills and physical diagnosis; skills he sees as waning in an era of increasingly sophisticated medical technology. At Stanford, he was instrumental in the development of the "The Stanford 25″ initiative that is designed to showcase and teach 25 fundamental physical exam skills and their diagnostic benefits to interns. His books, My Own Country, The Tennis Partner and Cutting for Stone, which have appeared on the New York Times bestseller list, offer his insights into the fundamentals of bedside medicine, which he feels are essential to patient care and to the doctor/patient relationship.


Pictured is Ciara Nolan, Elaine Houlihan, Michael Flanagan and Elias Chamely

In reading the citation at the conferring ceremony Professor Hannah McGee, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences said: "RCSIs motto is Consilio Maneque - with Scholarship and Dexterity - with the head and the hand - and so Professor Abraham Verghese - your values concerning the practice of medicine, and in your skilled communication of these as a writer to a wide public as well as professional audience - are values that seamlessly align with our own foundation motto. Indeed your title of Professor in the Theory and Practice of Medicine does so too. We felt your achievements particularly suited and would bring honour to our annual single award of honorary doctorate - and so we are very pleased that you have accepted this invitation to join our special graduation ceremony today and to accept the highest academic award of the RCSI - the RCSI 2014 Honorary Doctorate."


All smiles at graduation!

The 250 graduates were conferred with Honours Degree of Bachelor of Medicine, NUI, Bachelor of Surgery, Bachelor of Obstetrics MB, BCh, BAO (NUI, RCSI), LRCP & SI.


Perfect day for Conferrings

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.

RCSI Researchers Awarded Funding for SFI Industry Fellowship Programme

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The Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation Richard Bruton TD today announced the award of funding of over €1.7 million to support twenty new industry-academia partnerships through the Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) Industry Fellowship Programme. The programme is funded by the Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation through SFI.

RCSI researchers Dr Annette Byrne and Professor Caroline Jeffries were among those who were awarded funding through the programme. Dr Annette Byrne, Senior Lecturer, RCSI Department of Physiology and Medical Physics, received funding for a project in partnership with Bayer Healthcare Pharmaceuticals for research on cancer biomarkers. Professor Caroline Jeffries, Associate Professor and Head of Biochemistry, RCSI Department of Molecular & Cellular Therapeutics (MCT), was awarded funding for research in partnership with AMGEN on biomarkers in lupus (SLE).


Professor Caroline Jeffries

Announcing the funding, Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Richard Bruton TD said: "A key part of our Action Plan for Jobs is delivering measures to deliver more commercial outcomes and ultimately jobs from the excellent research infrastructure we have built up over recent years. The SFI fellowships are an important measure in delivering this, by providing funding to research projects working directly on solutions to problems that particular companies are facing. In this way, we can support researchers who are working on projects which can ultimately be developed into commercial ideas and employment - turning good ideas into good jobs. I congratulate all involved and wish them every success with their projects."

The SFI Industry Fellowship Programme provides researchers from academic institutions with the opportunity to gain important first-hand experience in a commercial research environment, while also providing industry with access to highly specialised trained researchers from academic institutions. The aim of the programme is to increase levels of collaboration between industry and academia.

These are the first twenty awards approved for funding under this new programme and involve research in key sectors such as animal health, smart grid, marine, solar energy, transport and mobility studies, and diagnostics in oncology with both multinational companies and SMEs participating.


Dr Annette Byrne

Companies participating in the programme include: Siemens AG, Alcatel-Lucent Ireland Ltd., Bell Labs Ireland, Crystal Innovation, ESB Networks, IBM, Intel Ireland, Orbsen Therapeutics Inc., Pavement Management Services Ltd, Tech Works Marine Ltd, TreeMetrics Ltd, Westway Health, AstraZeneca, AMGEN, Bayer Healthcare Pharmaceuticals and Perkin Elmer.

Professor Mark Ferguson, Director General of Science Foundation Ireland and Chief Scientific Adviser to the Government of Ireland said, "The Industry Fellowship programme is an important element of SFIs Agenda 2020 which aims to build strategic partnerships between industry and academic institutions, to encourage cutting-edge research and further grow Irelands competitive advantage. The awards will provide academic researchers with practical working knowledge of relevant business drivers as well as legitimate industry experience and important industry contacts. Industry partners participating in the programme will gain from the up skilling of staff and input into their research and development. The partnerships will in turn provide an important stepping stone for fuelling future collaborations between industry and academia."

Professor Ray Stallings, RCSI Director of Research said: "RCSI welcomes the announcement to award funding to two RCSI research projects through the Science Foundation Ireland Industry Fellowship Programme. I congratulate the RCSI researchers involved; their success is a testament to the world-class, high-impact biomedical translational research being carried out here in the College and its relevance to industry."


RCSI approved projects:

Name of Fellow Industry Partner Host Institution Title of Proposal
Annette Byrne Bayer Healthcare Pharmaceuticals RCSI Collaborative Predictive Biomarker/Companion Diagnostic Programme in Oncology: Integration of Bayer Healthcare Pharmaceuticals/ Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Translational Research Agenda through application of a Global Medical Affairs Strategy
Caroline Jefferies AMGEN RCSI Biomarker analysis in SLE


Under the SFI Industry Fellowship programme 20 research projects were funded through 8 research bodies, as follows: University College Dublin (5), Trinity College Dublin (1), University College Cork (2), Tyndall National Institute (1), University of Limerick (1), National University of Ireland Galway (3), National University of Ireland Maynooth (5) and RSCI (2).

Applications for the 2014 Industry Fellowship Programme are now open. The programme allows the exchange of people at all levels between academia in Ireland and industry in Ireland and abroad.

More information is available at - http://www.sfi.ie/funding/funding-calls/open-calls/sfi-industry-fellowship-programme-2014.html

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.


Launch of Rotunda Hospital Leadership Development Programme

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The Rotunda Leadership Development Programme led by Dr. Mary Collins from the RCSI Institute of Leadership launched on Friday, May 30th. This is a cross-disciplinary programme of high potential leaders in the Rotunda Hospital. A key focus of the programme is the completion of Quality Improvement Projects linked to the hospital strategy.

Rotunda Hospital Leadership Development Programme

Dr Mary Collins, Senior Executive Development Specialist, RCSI Institute of Leadership, Ms Pauline Treanor, Secretary Manager Rotunda Hospital, Prof Ciaran OBoyle, Director RCSI Institute of Leadership & Ms Margaret Philbin, Director of Midwifery Rotunda Hospital

Rotunda Hospital Leadership Development Programme

Participants at the launch

New leukaemia drug boosts survival rate to 90% and could eventually replace invasive chemical treatment

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Patients in Ireland have been involved in a breakthrough international trial of a new cancer drug which has given researchers renewed hope in the fight against leukaemia. Research published in the New England Journal of Medicine has found Ibrutinib, an inhibitor of Bruton’s Kinase, to have better rates of survival for patients with the commonest form of leukaemia than conventional therapy and is a breakthrough for people with resistance to chemotherapy.

The results of a trial on 391 patients showed the drug Ibrutinib gave patients fighting a type of slow growing blood cancer called Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) a 90 per cent chance of survival, compared to 81 per cent who survive on more conventional treatment.

Dr Patrick Thornton, Consultant Haematologist, Senior Lecturer RCSI and co-author of a New England Journal of Medicine report said “Ireland was per capita the highest recruiter globally to this trial. During the trial the patients responded quicker to the new drug than to monoclonal antibody therapy and showed fewer side effects. The trial also found that patients, who had not responded to, or have resistance to chemotherapy, now have an alternative treatment option. This drug represents a complete paradigm shift in the treatment of leukaemia which could replace the need for chemotherapy at all and changes completely how leukaemia can be treated.”

The research found the drug is better tolerated than traditional forms of treatment, and is an alternative for patients whose cancer cells have built up a resistance to chemotherapy. Results from the trial also showed that four out of every 10 patients entered remission within a year, compared to four in 100 on a traditional treatment

Ibrutinib works by disabling the enzyme, Bruton’s Kinase, crucial for Leukaemias survival. Due to the success of the clinical trial Dr Thornton said “Ibrutinib is now available to patients with the aggressive and chemotherapy resistant forms of CLL in Ireland.”

Although one of the rarest forms of cancer, CLL is the most common type of leukaemia and the older you are the higher the chance you have of developing it. Almost 80 per cent of all new cases are diagnosed in people over the age of 60. It occurs more frequently in men than women, and because it develops slowly, many people dont show symptoms in its early stages. Many people can live for a long period of time with CLL, however there are aggressive variants, such as P53 deleted CLL which may be fatal in only a few years despite chemotherapy. This new treatment gives tremendous hope to these patients as it can overcome the usual resistant mechanisms seen in refractory chemotherapy resistant cases.

Leukaemia Facts:
• Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia (CLL) is a slow growing leukaemia that affects specialised white blood cells known as Lymphocytes

• Its symptoms include swollen lymph nodes, pain or discomfort under the ribs, anaemia, excessive sweating and weight loss

• About 30 per cent of people diagnosed with CLL never require treatment, while for 70 per cent the disease can spread and multiply

• There are approximately 500 Leukaemia diagnoses each year in Ireland of which around 40% of these are CLL

• More than 200 people in Ireland die every year of Leukaemia

Novel training approach to management of ruptured aneurysms introduced to Ireland

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A new approach to the management of ruptured aneurysms from presentation in the emergency department through to keyhole surgery and aftercare is being implemented by a team at RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) and Beaumont Hospital. The first team training day to enable this minimally invasive approach in a hospital setting in Ireland took place at Beaumont Hospital, led by Mr Peter Naughton and Mr Daragh Moneley, Consultant Vascular Surgeons, RCSI.

Previously, ruptured aortic aneurysms (a swelling of the artery) were treated by open surgery. In recent years, minimally invasive ‘keyhole endovascular techniques have been developed which can avoid open surgery in certain cases. This incurs a number of changes in the management of the patients at the time of arrival in the emergency department.

The multidisciplinary team training which has taken place at RCSI and Beaumont Hospital involved doctors in the emergency department, interventional radiologists, vascular lab, ward and theatre nurses to enable implementation of this new minimally-invasive approach to the potentially life-threatening condition. The training involved virtual reality simulation on a symbionix simulator and bench models to practise open repair.

Mr Peter Naughton, Consultant General / Vascular Surgeon, Clinical Lecturer, RCSI said: ‘Multi-disciplinary team-training with clear treatment protocols for ruptured aneurysms may facilitate improved performance and treatment of patients presenting with this catastrophic condition. It is important that surgical trainees and theatre staff are appropriately trained to expediently and efficiently perform both open and endovascular repair of patients with ruptured aneurysms. Access to minimally invasive treatment in suitable candidates will contribute to improved patient care by avoiding increased recovery times and risks associated with open surgery.

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.

Launch of RCSI Court of Examiners to Drive Excellence in Assessment

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The Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) has announced the establishment of a Court of Examiners (CoE) at the College. The CoE will enable the College to acknowledge the essential role examiners play in the assessment of MRCS and FRCS candidates.
Speaking at the launch event in RCSI, Mr Declan Magee, RCSI President said “Examiners play a vital role in assessing the knowledge, clinical skills, judgement, decision making and professional competence of Membership and Fellowship candidates. This is crucial for the College and ultimately to the well-being of patients as it ensures that the candidates are safe and competent to practise as surgeons.”
The purpose of the Court is to increase the profile of postgraduate surgical examining and to provide a forum for examiners to discuss and be involved in the future direction of Membership and Fellowship exams. Membership of the Court is open to current and potential examiners involved in MRCS or FRCS exams.
“Recent changes to the surgical training pathway in Ireland mean that trainees are now required to successfully undertake all parts of the MRCS exam before progressing to higher training. This has resulted in an increased number of candidate applications and there is a need now for more examiners to contribute to the assessment, development and progression of surgical trainees,” Mr Magee continued.
Court Members will be recognised by RCSI for their work by receiving Professional Competence Scheme or CME / CPD credits for both examining and attending an annual meeting. The annual Court of Examiners Meeting will keep examiners up-to-date on developments and international best practice in clinical assessment as well as providing examiners the opportunity to network with colleagues.

If you are interested in finding out more about becoming an MRCS or FRCS examiner and a member of the RCSI Court of Examiners, you can email examiners@rcsi.ie for further information.

Court of Examiners

L-R: Mayilone Arumugasamy, Michael Browne, Lars Nolke, Hy Browne.

Court of Examiners

Ehab Mansour, Jane Fotherell, David Brooker

Court of Examiners

Parnell Keeling, Patricia Logan, Zaib Khan, John Hyland, Denis Mehigan

Court of Examiners

Seanan O Rourke, Tom Walsh, O.J. Francis

Court of Examiners

William Quinlan, Declan Magee, John Webster

Court of Examiners

Hy Browne and Declan Magee

Court of Examiners

Court of Examiners Project Team


I Have A What Now? radio series continues guided tour of the human body to explore the ‘suprachiasmatic nuclei'

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The third episode in the RCSI / Newstalk radio series ‘I Have A What Now? will air on Saturday 21st June on the Newstalk radio show Futureproof between 10 am and 11 am.


Zena brings listeners on a journey of discovery through the human body

Professor Zena Moore, Head of the School of Nursing and Midwifery, RCSI in conjunction with Futureproof presenter Jonathan McCrea will take listeners on a journey to explore the ‘suprachiasmatic nuclei which are responsible for controlling circadian rhythms. These are important in determining the sleeping and feeding patterns of human beings and animals.


Newstalks Futureproof is presented by Jonathon McCrea

The ‘I Have A What Now? series takes an entertaining look at the fascinating processes that go on in our bodies to main our health; focusing on the more unusual parts of the human body. During the series listeners are brought on a visceral sight-seeing tour of the human body through the skin, tissue and bone to a brand new destination in the body.

In the first episode Zena discussed the coccyx, otherwise known as the tailbone. In the second episode Zena discuss the Bundle of his, which is an important part of the electrical conduction system of the heart. If you missed the earlier episodes you can listen to them here.

RCSI and Blackrock Clinic celebrate partnership in clinical education

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RCSI and Blackrock Clinic staff celebrated the long standing relationship between the two institutions at a reception in Blackrock Clinic on Monday 16th June. The reception was held to unveil a plaque that names Blackrock Clinic a Teaching Hospital of RCSI.

Speaking at the event, Ms Carmel Mangan, Director of Nursing welcomed staff from both RCSI and Blackrock Clinic and said that ‘Blackrock Clinic has enjoyed a close relationship with RCSI since its inception and more recently had formalised arrangements to enable the delivery of a structured teaching programme. RCSI medical students attend Blackrock Clinic for clinical teaching in both Graduate Entry and Undergraduate Medicine Degree Programmes.


Pictured (l-r) are Professor Arnie Hill, Head of RCSI School of Medicine; Ms Carmel Mangan, Director of Nursing, Blackrock Clinic; Ms Moira Hennessy, Blackrock Clinic; Dr Tom Farrell, RCSI; Mr Bryan Harty, CEO, Blackrock Clinic

Professor Arnold Hill thanked the Blackrock Clinic staff for their commitment to the delivery of a high quality clinical teaching programme to the RCSI students. He paid tribute in particular to Dr Tom Farrell who was key to creating and sustaining the link with the hospital. Professor Mark Laher, Consultant Physician was thanked for his longstanding support and engagement with RCSI. Ms Moira Hennessy is central to the organisation of the clinical teaching programme at Blackrock Clinic and Dr Saira Nasim, Consultant Oncologist is the Clinical Tutor for the Graduate Entry Medicine Programme.


Pictured (l-r) are Professor Seamus Sreenan, Dr Tom Farrell, Professor Alice Stanton, RCSI and Ms Margaret ODonnell, Consultant Plastic Surgeon, Blackrock Clinic.

Professor Hill remarked ‘feedback that we receive from our students is consistently positive about their experience at Blackrock Clinic. He continued ‘I am delighted to be here today to signal our commitment to the Blackrock Clinic and to build upon this great partnership that promotes excellence in clinical education that ultimately results in better trained doctors to serve our patients needs.


Pictured (l-r) are Mr Peter Meagher, Consultant Plastic and Hand Surgeon, Blackrock Clinic; and Dr Frances Meagher, RCSI

Blackrock Clinic is the leading and longest established private hospital and clinic in Ireland. Since it opened in the mid 1980s, the Clinic has consistently built an unparalleled reputation in high-tech surgical procedures, medical treatments and ground - breaking diagnostics. This reputation means that some of the best international and national consultants work at Blackrock Clinic.

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.

Minister for Education and Skills, Mr Ruairi Quinn T.D officially launches the Campus Engage Charter on Civic and Community Engagement

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At a landmark event in Dublin Castle on June 16th, 20 Presidents of Higher Education Institutions came together as leaders of higher education in Ireland, to publicly sign up to the 10 point Campus Engage Charter on Civic and Community Engagement. Under the charter the presidents underscore their commitment to the civic and community engagement role and responsibilities of their institutions.
Campus Engage Launch
Pictured at the launch of the Campus Engage Charter on Civic and Community Engagement, Minister for Education and Skills, Mr Ruairi Quinn T.D with Presidents and Representatives of 20 HEI’s who signed the Charter on behalf of their institutions, Dublin Castle June 16th 2014
Launching the Charter, Minister for Education and Skills, Mr. Ruairi Quinn T.D said, “Today is an important recognition of commitment by Ireland’s higher education institutions to build on what has been achieved to date and place Ireland at the fore internationally in terms of promoting civic and community engagement by higher education. The importance of ‘engagement’ is recognised in the National Strategy for Higher Education to 2030, and in the HEA’s performance framework, which both ask higher education institutions to engage openly with their community and wider society and for this to infuse every aspect of their mission. I congratulate all involved in the realisation of the Charter, and specifically to the Presidents for their commitment.“

The launch of an Irish Charter for Civic and Community Engagement builds on the pioneering actions taken by other countries including Australia, UK and the US, who have signed up to similar agreements at national level to support and strengthen the civic role and responsibilities of higher education.

Opening the launch event, Prof Paul Hannigan, President of Letterkenny IT and Chair of Institutes of Technology Ireland (IOTI) said, “This Irish Charter aligns us with best practice and captures the essential principles and the underlying purpose of engagement with communities as well as with enterprise”.

The Charter was developed by Campus Engage, a HEA funded, national initiative with representation from 17 HEIs, IOTI and the IUA. Its role is to promote innovative teaching, learning and other activities in the area of civic and community engagement.

In today’s times of economic uncertainly, and a policy context focused on developing our “knowledge society” there has been considerable emphasis on the contribution of Higher Education Institutions to economic recovery. Campuses across the country are building capacity and activating ‘bottom up’ student and staff-led initiatives such as community- based learning, community-based research and volunteering, to tackle the skills deficit, contributing community-based research to inform public policy, engaging in political debate and providing evidenced-informed media debate on matters of public policy and public concern.

Closing the launch Dr. Patrick Prendergast, Provost of Trinity College Dublin and Chair of the Irish Universities Association (IUA) said, “Civic engagement benefits both students and communities. Students get transferrable, ‘work-ready’ skills through accredited learning realised in volunteering, and community-based research and learning. These activities improve students’ capacity for problem-solving and critical thinking. Communities are enhanced by students’ energy and engagement with the public good.”
More information is available on www.campusengage.ie
Clive Lee at Campus Engage launch
A landmark moment as Prof Clive Lee signs the Campus Engage National Charter on Civic and Community Engagement on behalf of RCSI, Dublin Castle June 16th 2014

Third International Education Forum underway at RCSI

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This week RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) is hosting the third annual International Education Forum which began on Monday 23rd and will conclude on Thursday 26th June. The Forum sees more than 40 staff from RCSI Bahrain and PU-RCSI, Malaysia join with over 100 colleagues in Dublin to attend this years meeting. The theme "Curriculum Development in a Transnational Context" aims to build on previous education fora and consolidate the work of the Health Professions Education Centre and Schools of the Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences as RCSI operates in a complex transnational and inter-professional manner.

During the course of the forum, staff from the three campuses review, renew and share challenges and innovations in the core curriculum, educational technology, student support and international education trends.

The programme began with two days of closed Faculty sessions for RCSI Staff. A School of Medicine Junior Cycle programme took place in St Stephens Green with an Intermediate and Senior Cycle programme taking place in ERC Beaumont on Monday 23rd. The programme on Tuesday 24th centred on "Focusing on Vertical Integration within the Medical Curriculum, Inter-professional competencies and transferable models".

This morning, the programme opened to RCSI staff and invited guests and focuses on "Progress on Inter-Professional Themes" including an International Guest Lecture from Dr Jan van Dalen, Director of Training and Assessment Communication Skills, Maastricht University.

On Thursday 26th June the International Education Forum is proceeded by the National Seminar Series ‘Bridging the Gap - Researching and Enacting Transition Pedagogy for STEM and Medical Students; an open session in collaboration with the 3U Partnership and National Forum for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning at Higher Level.
Professor Hannah McGee, Dean, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, RCSI said: ‘Fostering a sense of collegiality and annual renewal is very important in a system where weekly and daily communication, to ensure delivery of a common curriculum in three countries, is done routinely by videoconference and email over three time zones. The Forum provides a fantastic opportunity for staff based in Ireland and overseas to share their experiences during the past academic year to ensure that lessons learned can be built into further development of a common programme across three sites. We welcome our international colleagues to RCSI in Dublin this week to learn from their perspective and expertise.

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.

New Irish research affirms safety of flu vaccine in pregnancy and reveals uptake patterns in Irish population

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A new study which examined Irish maternity hospital data during the recent flu pandemic has affirmed that the seasonal influenza vaccine is safe at any stage during pregnancy. The research, which was led by RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland)s School of Pharmacy and the Rotunda Hospital, also showed that vaccination uptake was influenced by sociodemographic factors such as age and country of origin of the mother.

The research has been published in the European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology.


Lead researcher of the study, Prof Brian Cleary

Vaccination uptake was found to be less likely in younger age groups; those who were not in the professional/ manager/employer socioeconomic group; women from Eastern Europe, Africa and Asia/Middle East; those who reported an unplanned pregnancy; women who booked late for antenatal care; and recipients of publicly-funded obstetric care. Irish nationality was associated with reporting vaccination.

There was no association between vaccination during pregnancy and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Women who were vaccinated were less likely to have a preterm delivery than unvaccinated women.

Lead author on the study Professor Brian Cleary, Chief Pharmacist, Rotunda Hospital and Honorary Clinical Associate Professor, RCSI School of Pharmacy said: "Our study further provides further reassurance to pregnant women on the safety of flu vaccination in pregnancy. Our findings support current recommendations from the Health Protection Surveillance Centre for all pregnant women to be vaccinated against seasonal influenza at any stage during pregnancy."

"Future public health campaigns should provide clear information on vaccination safety in pregnancy, ensure consistent vaccination recommendations from healthcare professionals and provide easy access to vaccination in order to encourage uptake in cohorts of the population who less likely to be vaccinated," Professor Cleary concluded.

The study was carried out using electronic records from the Coombe Women and Infants University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland. Women who were pregnant with a single baby before (December 2008-September 2009) and during the A/H1N1 pandemic (December 2009-September 2010) were included. Pregnancy outcomes were compared for vaccinated and unvaccinated women, with adjustment for differing maternal characteristics. Outcomes included vaccination status, preterm birth, size for gestational age, neonatal intensive care admission, congenital anomalies and perinatal death.

Of 6894 women pregnant during the pandemic, 43.5% reported vaccination at delivery. In the early weeks of the vaccination programme rates of over 70% were achieved. Of those vaccinated, 8.2%, 57% and 34.5% were vaccinated in the first, second and third trimesters respectively.

Co-authors on the study were Ms Úna Rice, Pharmacy Department, Coombe Women and Infants University Hospital; Dr Maeve Eogan, Rotunda Hospital; Dr Nehad Metwally, Discipline of Paediatrics, School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin; and Professor Fionnuala McAuliffe, National Maternity Hospital and Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, School of Medicine and Medical Science, University College Dublin.

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.

Delivering drugs on cue

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Current drug-delivery systems used to administer chemotherapy to cancer patients typically release a constant dose of the drug over time — but a new study from Harvard, involving a researcher now based at RCSI, challenges this "slow and steady" approach and offers a novel way to locally deliver the drugs "on demand." The study was reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Led by David J. Mooney, Ph.D., a Core Faculty member at Harvards Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering and the Robert P. Pinkas Family Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), the team loaded a biocompatible hydrogel with a chemotherapy drug and used ultrasound to trigger the gel to release the drug. Like many other injectable gels that have been used for drug delivery for decades, this one gradually releases a low level of the drug by diffusion over time. To temporarily increase doses of drug, scientists had previously applied ultrasound — but that approach was a one-shot deal as the ultrasound was used to destroy those gels.
This gel was different.
The team used ultrasound to temporarily disrupt the gel such that it released short, high-dose bursts of the drug — akin to opening up a floodgate. But when they stopped the ultrasound, the hydrogels self-healed. By closing back up, they were ready to go for the next "on demand" drug burst — providing an innovative way to administer drugs with a far greater level of control than possible before.
Thats not all. The team also demonstrated in lab cultures and in mice with breast cancer tumors that the pulsed, ultrasound-triggered hydrogel approach to drug delivery was more effective at stopping the growth of tumor cells than traditional, sustained-release drug therapy.
"Our approach counters the current paradigm of sustained drug release, and offers a double whammy," said Mooney. "We have shown that we can use the hydrogels repeatedly and turn the drug pulses on and off at will, and that the drug bursts in concert with the baseline low-level drug delivery seems to be particularly effective in killing cancer cells."
The advance holds promising implications for improved cancer treatment and other therapies requiring drugs to be delivered at the right place and the right time — from post-surgery pain medications to protein-based drugs that require daily injections. It requires an initial injection of the hydrogel, but the approach could be a much less traumatic, minimally invasive and more effective method of drug delivery overall, Mooney said.
Ultrasound Image
The team used ultrasound to trigger the alginate hydrogel (right) to release the blue-colored chemotherapy drug in high-dose pulses, as indicated by the newly blue color of the surrounding medium. (Drug release by diffusion alone takes much longer and would be less visible) Credit: Harvard’s Wyss Institute and Harvard SEAS
"We want to give clinicians the ability to deliver drugs as locally as possible combined with the flexibility to temporally control the dose," said co-lead author Nathanial Huebsch, Ph.D., who was a Harvard SEAS graduate student in the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology at the time of the research and is now a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease in San Francisco. For example, many cancer patients require a regular dose of pain killers, but unpredictable pain attacks require them to take much larger doses over a short time.
Key to the teams success in designing a hydrogel that self-heals is choosing the right kind of hydrogel with the right kind of drug — and applying the right intensity of ultrasound.
"We were able to trigger our system with a level of ultrasound that was much lower than high-intensity focused ultrasound that is used clinically to heat and destroy tumors," said co-lead author Cathal Kearney, Ph.D., who was a Postdoctoral Fellow at SEAS at the time of the study. He is now a Senior Research Fellow at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI). "The careful selection of materials and properties make it a reversible process," Kearney said.
The team carried out the majority of their work for this study with a gel made out of alginate, a natural polysaccharide from algae that is held together with calcium ions. In a series of laboratory tests they found that with the right level of ultrasound, the bonds break up and enable the gel to release its drug cargo — but as long as the gel in in the presence of more calcium, the bonds reform and the gels self-heal.
Once the team knew the gel would self-heal, they tested out a drug they suspected it would hold well – in this case a chemotherapy drug called mitoxantrone, which is often used to treat breast cancer. Sure enough, the ultrasound triggered the gel to release the blue-colored drug, as indicated by the newly blue color of the surrounding medium. Just a single ultrasound dose was effective, and the gel reformed after it was disrupted, making multiple cycles possible.
Next, they tested the treatment on mice that had human breast cancer tumors implanted in their bodies. They injected the drug-laden gel close to the tumors, and over the course of six months the mice that received a low-level sustained release of the drug with a daily concentrated pulse of ultrasound (just 2.5 minutes) fared significantly better than mice treated the same but without ultrasound. In contrast to the other groups, the tumors in the ultrasound-treated mice did not grow substantially and the mice survived for an additional 80 days to boot.
"These results demonstrate how applying novel engineering approaches and programmable nanomaterials can create entirely new solutions to critical medical problems," said Wyss Institute Founding Director Don Ingber, M.D., Ph.D., who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and Boston Childrens Hospital, and Professor of Bioengineering at Harvard SEAS. "Daves work shows that these new responsive hydrogels that remodel reversibly when exposed to ultrasound energy at the nanoscale not only provide a new way to administer drugs on demand, they also produce better responses to therapy even in a disease as difficult to treat as cancer."
This advance to use simple ultrasound pulses and readily available hydrogels in a new way comes on the heels of Mooneys work using low-power lasers to trigger stem cells to regenerate the material that makes up teeth. The team also demonstrated that the gel can release other kinds of cargo as well, including proteins, which lays the groundwork for potentially using these hydrogels for tissue regeneration, and condensed plasmid DNA – suggesting their potential use in gene therapy.
They plan to explore these other potential applications, as well as the possibility of unleashing two different drugs independently from the same hydrogel, said Mooney.
This work was funded by the Materials Research Science and Engineering Center at Harvard University, a California Institute of Medicine Fellowship, and the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, which is one of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

RCSI Institute of Leadership train 15 Master Trainers for COSECSA

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Last week in Nairobi, the RCSI Institute of Leadership trained 15 Master COSECSA Trainers from Uganda, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Kenya. During the 4 day training programme they were trained on how adults learn, making an effective presentation, how to give and receive feedback from surgical residents, teaching a clinical skill, running effective learning discussions and the surgical trainer as a leader in society.

Mr Dermot OFlynn, Director of Professional Development at the RCSI Institute of Leadership said "It was a pleasure to run this programme for COSECSA who now have 15 surgical trainers who are qualified to deliver the one day COSECSA Train the Trainer course in their countries. This programme is part of the IOLs corporate social responsibility and we look forward to providing further development courses in Africa in the future."
COSECSA photograph
Mr Dermot OFlynn (L) with participants on the programme

RCSI science initiative to bring Primary School Teachers to their senses

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Course to help teachers bring science to life in their classrooms


RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) will host a five-day science course for 25 primary school teachers, from around Ireland, that aims to ignite passion teachers for the subject; something they can pass on to their students. The RCSI ‘Come to Your Senses 2014 programme will run until Saturday 5th July.

This course uses the theme of the human senses to enable primary school teachers to develop their interest and enthusiasm for teaching science with direct relevance to the primary science curriculum for Social Environmental and Science Education (SESE). The programme puts an emphasis on learning through doing and provides teachers with alternative, hands-on and fun ways of teaching science to children, without the need for expensive materials or equipment. Previous participants had this to say about the course: ‘I feel very informed after doing this course and will use a lot of what I have learned this week in the classroom, it has definitely sparked more of an interest for me in science and ‘ the best summer course I have ever done, really enjoyed the week.


The 2014 Primary Science group!

Professor Hannah McGee, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at RCSI said, ‘At RCSI, we are committed to advancing healthcare education and research, building on a core of scientific training. Enthusiasm for science begins at primary school. The ‘Come to Your Senses course is a novel way for our academic staff to work across the educational sectors by supporting primary school teachers to develop their science teaching skills. This course provides on activities and experiments for use in the classroom and in doing so, inspires the next generation of primary school leavers to value and maintain an interest in science subjects and careers in science and healthcare. This is the 6th year of a very successful programme run by our colleagues from Foundation Year, Junior Cycle, and the REACH office which always has excellent feedback from teachers and I complement our staff on the on-going success of the programme.

‘Come to Your Senses is part of RCSIs Primary Science for Teachers Initiative (PSTI) which supports the teaching of science in the classroom. The initiative is a component of the REACH RCSI programme which promotes Recreation, Education and Community Health. It is approved by the Department of Education and is fully funded by RCSI. The RCSI PSTI team are Dr Jacqueline Daly, Dr Marc DeVocelle, Dr Kenny Winser, Ms Maria Kelly and Dr Maria Morgan. Mr Eric Clarke will also introduce an RCSI Moodle site to the teachers as a platform from which they will receive continuing support and resources when they return to their schools in September. 20 per cent of the places on this course were reserved for schools that are part of the DEIS (Delivering Equality of Opportunity in Schools) programme.

Dr Jacqueline Daly, Director of the Primary Science Initiative, RCSI said ‘As well as providing an important opportunity for teachers to network and share experiences with their peers, the ‘Come to Your Senses course empowers teachers to bring new techniques back to their own school and pass these valuable skills on to their colleagues.

REACH RCSI works in partnership with primary and post primary schools, youth and community groups together with the local community on the design and delivery of educational initiatives including Homework Clubs, Science Workshops, Sports & health programmes and an Education Information Service.

RCSI is a not-for-profit health sciences institute which focuses on education and research to drive positive change in all areas of human health worldwide. RCSI is headquartered in Dublin and is a recognised College of the National University of Ireland. In 2010, RCSI was granted independent degree awarding status by the State, which enables the College to award degrees alongside its traditional powers to award licentiates.

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