Register for the VIGH Global Health Case Competition

The Global Health Case Competition is an opportunity for undergraduate, graduate, and professional students from diverse disciplines and backgrounds to collaborate in developing innovative solutions to a global health problem. Participants compete in teams of 4-6 students. Each team must have at least three (3) different Vanderbilt or Meharry schools/colleges represented. Global health is an interdisciplinary field and draws its strength from a diversity of perspectives.

UVP Program Update

The University of Zambia (UNZA)-Vanderbilt Training Partnership for HIV-Nutrition-Metabolic Research (UVP) made substantial progress on its goals of training new UNZA PhD scientists to investigate complex nutritional and metabolic factors related to long-term HIV complications and comorbidities. The paper entitled, "HIV Research Training Partnership of the University of Zambia and Vanderbilt University: Features and Early Outcomes," was recently published in Annuals of Global Health.

Martin to help guide Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health’s education, training efforts

Marie Martin, PhD, MEd, assistant professor of Health Policy, has been named associate director for Education and Training in the Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health (VIGH). Marie Martin, PhD, MEdMartin stepped into the role at the beginning of the fiscal year, succeeding Douglas Heimburger, MD, MS, who will focus his time on leading projects with grant funding from the Fogarty International Center of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Heimburger started in 2009 as associate director of Education and Training.

Margaret Tarpley, MLS

Margaret
Tarpley
MLS
Adjunct Instructor
Department of Surgery, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Adjunct Lecturer
Department of Medical Education, University of Botswana
margaret.tarpley@vanderbilt.edu

Topics: Biomedical Ethics, Education and Training (Capacity Building), Medical Education

Country: Botswana

Publications Link

Mrs. Tarpley is an adjunct instructor in the Department of Surgery at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, and adjunct lecturer in medical education at the University of Botswana. After 15 years as a theological librarian in Nigeria, she spent 15 years in the Department of Surgery at Vanderbilt working with general surgery residents and medical students. Her current focus is on medical education and medical journal editing. She has worked in Kenya, Rwanda, and currently works in Botswana. Mrs. Tarpley’s research interest is in surgery education and cultural competence in the field of medicine and health care delivery.

Mrs. Tarpley earned her bachelor’s degree in English from Vanderbilt University and a master’s degree in Library Science from Peabody College.

VIGH study seeks to expand epilepsy care efforts in Africa

The Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health, with Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, will conduct a 60-site cluster randomized clinical trial in three cities in northern Nigeria to determine the efficacy of shifting childhood epilepsy care to epilepsy-trained community health extension workers with a five-year $5.9 million federal grant, “Bridging the Childhood Epilepsy Treatment Gap in Africa (BRIDGE),” from National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the National Institutes of Health. Edwin Trevathan, M.D., M.P.H., Amos Christie Chair in Global Health, Professor of Pedi

Roy Zent, MD, PhD

Roy
Zent
M.D., PhD
Thomas F. Frist Sr., Professor of Medicine
Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Roy Zent is the Thomas F. Frist Sr Professor of Medicine at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, Tennessee. He is a member of the division of nephrology and is the Vice Chair of Research for the department of Medicine and is a Professor in the departments of Cell and Developmental Biology as well as Cancer Biology. He received his medical training at The University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg in South Africa and specialized in internal medicine and nephrology at the University of Cape Town. Dr. Zent received a Ph.D in cell biology from the University of Toronto in Canada and did a post-doctoral fellowship with Dr. Mark Ginsberg at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA. He is board certified in South Africa, Canada and the USA in internal medicine and nephrology. Dr. Zent has a clinical nephrology and internal medicine practice.

The main research focus of the Zent group is to define mechanisms of cell-extracellular matrix interactions and how they affect kidney development and function. The family of proteins focused on is called integrins, which are the principal cell receptors for extracellular matrix. The major projects in the group include: 1) defining the mechanisms whereby integrins regulate cell function and signaling; 2) defining how integrin cytoplasmic tails interact with cytoplasmic proteins to regulate cell function; 2) defining the structural determinants of specificity of integrin-dependent signaling. The major techniques used to answer these questions include the making and characterization of transgenic mice, cell biology and biochemical techniques as well as structural methodologies including 3-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance. Our group has extensive collaborations with other groups within the division of nephrology and other departments at Vanderbilt Medical Center.     

(616) 322-4632
roy.zent@vumc.org
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