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  • Gateway & J-Term Health Form PART A Self-Assessment Study Away 2024-2025 (pdf) view download To use TimelyCare to complete Student Health History PARTS A & B, please follow these instructions.

  • KINESIOLOGYStudentsExercise Science Breeze Bartle Health and Fitness Education Katy Cook Pre-Physical Therapy Sianna IversonOUTSTANDING UNDERGRADUATE SOCIAL WORK PRACTICUM STUDENTStudentsStephanie GulledgePEACE SCHOLARSStudentsElijah Noel Wright PaezPSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT MERIT IN SERVICEStudentsAmberly Jayne LunsfordPSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT RESEARCH AWARDStudentsAmberly Jayne Lunsford Sonika NigamROBERT D. MONROE AWARD IN BOOK ARTSStudentsKaren Zamora-ChavezSEAL OF BILITERACY IN SPANISH - GOLDStudentsEva Reutercrona Celeste

  • victims’ bodies in anatomical education and research can be interpreted as stages of an ethical transgression. The legacies from this history for today’s medicine will be discussed.Keynote Speaker:Dr. Sabine Hildebrandt is an associate professor of pediatrics in the Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital, and a lecturer on Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Her research interests are the history and ethics of anatomy, and

  • New StudentsWelcome to PLU! We are delighted to have you with us, and we will do everything to keep you safe, healthy, and happy throughout your PLU education. Prior to arrival on campus, there are several important steps to protect your health and to meet PLU’s Health Requirements. Before you arrive: Complete the Medical History Record form Bring a copy of your insurance card Bring any medications you are taking Call us if you need a prescription filled before moving in, or if you need a

  • is to demonstrate it as a veneer of Feminine Agency, where the superficial understanding is positive, and the obstructed significance is evident of social control. Why I Majored in Religion: I decided to major in religion because it allowed me to ask questions about the Bible and explore the ancient cultures found within. My academic journey began with a passion for archaeology and led me to declare for both Anthropology and Religion. While in my first religion class, I found my love for learning

  • Amazon drivers, grocery-store workers and nurses. One student was one of 10 children in the family, with a truck-driving father stranded on the road. Another, the child of a nurse, had to live with grandparents for a while. If a child watched the day’s posted video, Zwang counted that as attendance—as did completing homework over the weekend with an essential-worker mom. Zwang addressed social-emotional needs, too, talking with kids about what the virus meant and that it was OK to be scared.In

  • approaches of the Humanities and Social Sciences. Accordingly, Latino Studies graduates pursue various professional fields and vocations, including work in social services and public health, education, arts and communications, activism, ministry, business, law, and politics.History of Latino StudiesThe first Latino Studies programs in the United States, founded in the late 1960s and early 1970s, were Chicano and Puerto Rican Studies programs. As part of the Civil Rights movement, the Chicano and Puerto

  • immunological concepts within the context of human health and disease. Prerequisites: BIOL 330 and one of the following courses BIOL 341, 342, 352, 442, 445, or 453. (4) BIOL 449 : Virology The diversity that exists among viruses is staggering, and there is no type of life on Earth that is not subject to infection by viruses. This course will explore viral origins, replication, transmission, pathogenesis, oncogenesis, and host immunity. Emerging viruses, pandemics, and vaccines will also be discussed

  • student-athlete. Bradd Busick ’99, MBA ’09 is an adjunct business professor at PLU and chief technology officer and vice president at MultiCare Health System. Join their conversation about business, mentorship, and seizing opportunity. Brooke Brown '06 PLU MAE alumna Brooke Brown named the 2021 Washington State Teacher of the YearBrooke Brown MAE ’06, an ethnic studies teacher at Parkland’s Washington High School, was recently named the 2021 Washington State Teacher of the Year by the Washington State

  • debt for a fraction of the cost and helps folks run crowdfunding campaigns to settle their medical debt. For Young, part of the appeal of working with RIP Medical Debt was the work the organization is doing in Washington and nearby states. “They own about 15k of debt in Washington and significantly more in Idaho and Montana, so we are working to raise money to settle as much of this as possible,” Young says. Young’s students worked with a representative from the RIP Medical Debt to design a social