Monday, July 6


Students help detect stroke victims

As possible stroke victims enter the emergency room of the busy Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, they are met by undergraduate UCLA students trained in detecting the symptoms of the condition. The Student Stroke Team, formed in 1992 by UCLA neurologist Dr. Sidney Starkman, is one of the only programs of its kind in the United States. It gives UCLA undergraduates an important role in helping detect stroke victims, said Marissa Campbell, a fourth-year physiological sciences student and Student Stroke Team coordinator. The student team is critical in this early detection process because like a heart attack, treatments for stroke patients are time-dependent, Campbell said. Searching for hallmark symptoms, such as headaches, the inability to communicate and unresponsiveness on certain sides of the body, members of the student group work in the emergency room to screen incoming patients. Once a suspected stroke victim has been identified, Student Stroke Team members immediately notify Starkman, who confirms the diagnosis and immediately notifies the UCLA Medical Center's neurologists. Strokes are caused by the interruption of blood flow to parts of the brain. Read more...



Finding a family

Tesfanesh and Elsae Seplow were born in an Ethiopian village, where their family slept under the same thatched roof as cows and pigs. Read more...

Photo:

Faculty-in-residence Suzanne Seplow plays with her adopted son Elsae, her partner Robin Seplow and her adopted daughter Tesfanesh.


Ashe Center prepares for flu season with free shots at fairs or by appointment

NEWS BRIEF: Ashe Center calls the shots this flu season

With the return of its annual flu shot fairs, the Arthur Ashe Student Health and Wellness Center is trying to get students ready for flu season quickly and conveniently.



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"NEWS BRIEF: Ashe Center calls the shots this flu season"

As flu season approaches, the Ashe Center is preparing students with vaccines before the virus hits. Read more...