1st Annual Health Science Research Day Held at the Rinker Campus
April 13, 2016
The
Rinker Health Science Campus
held its first annual Health Science Research Day on April 7, bringing together graduate student and alumni research from inter-professional programs.
Presented research from
Crean College
of Health and Behavioral Sciences programs included
Communication Sciences and Disorders (CSD)
and
Physical Therapy (DPT)
, along with the
School of Pharmacy.
Graduate students and faculty from
Athletic Training
and
Marriage and Family Therapy
programs also participated in the event, creating a collaborative event with five health and behavioral science programs, the first to be held at Chapman.
Students, faculty, alumni and guests were welcomed by speakers including Crean College’s founding Dean, Dr. Janeen Hill, Conference Chair and Associate Dean for Graduate Programs,
Dr. Michelle Cleary
, and Vice Chancellor for Graduate Education, Dr. Richard Redding. Dr. Michelle Cleary, who initiated and spearheaded the planning committee for the event, summarized the evening by stating:
“This inaugural event brings together students and researchers from across the Health Sciences at Chapman University. We are excited about the future possible collaborations and inter-professional research projects that a conference like this can stimulate. Each year we expect this conference to continue to grow and provide an opportunity for future scholarly practitioners to present their research findings.”
Community and family members, along with fellow student and faculty attendees, mingled and made the rounds through the event to hear details of the research collaborations. DPT research presentations ranged from, ‘The effects of circuit-training therapeutic intervention on individuals with chronic stroke (including our Stroke Boot Camp program)’ to ‘Method research design of weight drop perturbation vs. force plate perturbation,’ essentially studying the difference in stress on the body when you challenge a persons’ balance from shifting weight in the hips vs. a force plate moving beneath the participants feet. CSD included several posters that presented collected data from those with traumatic brain injuries and outlined selecting the appropriate speech language and hearing services for particular syndromes. This included, ‘The story: my experiences with traumatic brain injury,’ mentored by
Dr. Mary Kennedy,
who specializes her research in
cognitive rehabilitation for
t
raumatic brain injuries and concussions
.
Thank you to all those that participated in creating a successful and favored event, including many of our Crean College staff and faculty. As Dr. Cleary mentioned, the plan for Graduate Research Day is to continue to expand the event in years to come by inviting additional graduate programs to present. This will include our new
Physician Assistant Program
, which is currently pending accreditation and
first entering cohort is proposed for January 2017.
We hope to see you there! You can support the future of the Graduate Student Research Day and ongoing student research projects
here
. Stay up to date with our events and news on
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Molly Fitzpatrick
.