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November
20, 2001
Contacts: Amy
DiCresce (313) 577-1429, adiscresc@med.wayne.edu
WSU’s Blaine White Elected to
Prestigious Institute of Medicine
Blaine
White, MD, has been elected to membership in the Institute of Medicine of the
National Academy of Sciences. Dr. White, professor of emergency medicine and
physiology at the Wayne State University School of Medicine, is one of 60 new
members elected to the institute this year. In addition to Dr. Charles Schuster
of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences and Dr. Ada Jacox
of the College of Nursing, Dr. White is one of only three members of the WSU
faculty to be granted this honorary position.
Dr.
White joins a prestigious group of only 632 people in the entire country who
belong to the Institute of Medicine. Membership is both an honor and an
obligation to work on a broad range of studies related to health policy issues.
Members contribute their knowledge and professional judgment to the formulation
of public policy recommendations.
Throughout
his career, Dr. White has been at the forefront of basic science research
related to post-ischemic reperfusion injuries in the brain. His research is
critically important in emergency medicine since only 3 percent of the 70,000
patients who are resuscitated from cardiac arrest each year regain full
cognitive capabilities. His well-funded research team, that currently includes
four other emergency medicine faculty, has provided a better understanding of
many processes and mechanisms associated with neurological injury including:
oxygen radical formation, identification and tissue mapping of lipid
peroxidation, identification and tissue mapping of protein modifications causing
loss of protein synthesis in injured neurons, and recovery of protein synthesis
induced by growth factors such as insulin.
Dr.
White is an academic physician who has served on the Wayne State faculty since
1976 and was a practicing emergency physician from 1974 to 1995. He spent 17
years on the emergency department staff of Detroit Receiving Hospital, treating
critically ill and injured patients and providing urgent care.
In
1999, Dr. White participated on an Institute of Medicine committee that issued a
report about methods and protocols for resuscitating wounded military soldiers
in the field, until they could be transported for professional medical
attention. The report, called Fluid
Resuscitation: State of the Science for Treating Combat Casualties and Civilian
Injuries, offered guidelines for field medics who must rescue and
resuscitate fellow soldiers in difficult terrain with limited medical gear and
unruly conditions. The information contained in this report is also relevant to
civilian populations because it addresses technology and medical needs in the
first line of emergency trauma care.
“I
am pleased to congratulate Dr. White on this distinctive honor in being named to
the Institute of Medicine,” said Dr. John Crissman, dean of the WSU School of
Medicine. “Dr. White is an accomplished researcher, physician and teacher who
has made his mark on the field of emergency medicine. He is a Wayne State
graduate, a founding member of the Department of Emergency Medicine, and a
committed teacher and mentor. He has trained many junior researchers and medical
students who have gone on to serve scientific discovery and patients alike. He
is a dynamic academic physician and the consummate professional.”
Established
in 1970 as a unit of the National Academy of Sciences, the Institute of Medicine
is concerned with the protection and advancement of the health professions and
sciences, the promotion of research and development pertinent to health, and the
improvement of health care. The National Academies are comprised of: the
National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of
Medicine, and National Research Council.
EDITOR’S
NOTE: Dr. White is a resident of Howell, Mich.
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