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October
19, 2001
Contact: Jennifer Day, (313) 577-1058, jday@med.wayne.edu
Wayne State University School of
Medicine to
host community forum on bioterrorism
The Wayne State University School of
Medicine, in partnership with the Wayne State University Physician Group, will
host a community forum on bioterrorism on Thursday, Oct. 25 at 7 p.m.
at the WSU Oakland Center, 33737 W. 12 Mile Road (just west of Farmington Road).
The public is invited to attend this
free educational panel discussion,
which will feature Wayne State University physicians and scientists as well as
government public officials. The discussion, which will include a
question-and-answer session, will focus on steps that have been taken to prepare
for biological terrorism, information about how illnesses induced by
bioterrorism can be recognized and treated as well as cool-headed tips for
handling the fear that has been accompanied by news reports of criminal
dispersion of anthrax.
Panel participants will include
Michigan Sen. John Schwarz, a practicing physician and a member of the Senate
Health Policy Committee; public health officials; and several WSU professors
from a variety of medical backgrounds, including emergency medicine, immunology
and microbiology, occupational and environmental health, psychiatry and
infectious disease. The moderator will be Dr. Tara Washington, WSU assistant
professor of radiation oncology and co-host of WJR’s “The Medical Hour,”
which is sponsored by the Wayne State University Physician Group.
With more than 1,000 medical students,
WSU is among the nation’s largest medical schools. Together with the Detroit
Medical Center, the school is a leader in patient care and medical research in a
number of areas including cancer, genetics, women’s and children’s health,
and the neurosciences.
(For more information, the general
public may call 1-877-WSU-DOCS. Media should call Jennifer Day at 313-577-1058.)
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