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Tag: Tulane University

  • Mom shoots escaped monkey from Mississippi highway crash to protect her children

    One of the monkeys that escaped last week after a truck overturned on a Mississippi highway was shot and killed early Sunday by a woman who says she feared for the safety of her children.Jessica Bond Ferguson said she was alerted early Sunday by her 16-year-old son who said he thought he had seen a monkey running in the yard outside their home near Heidelberg, Mississippi. She got out of bed, grabbed her firearm and her cellphone and stepped outside where she saw the monkey about 60 feet away.Bond Ferguson said she and other residents had been warned that the escaped monkeys carried diseases so she fired her gun.“I did what any other mother would do to protect her children,” Bond Ferguson, who has five children ranging in age from 4 to 16, told The Associated Press. “I shot at it and it just stood there, and I shot again, and he backed up and that’s when he fell.”The Jasper County Sheriff’s Office confirmed in a social media post that a homeowner had found one of the monkeys on their property Sunday morning but said the office didn’t have any details. The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks took possession of the monkey, the sheriff’s office said.Before Bond Ferguson had gone out the door, she had called the police and was told to keep an eye on the monkey. But she said she worried that if the monkey got away it would threaten children at another house.“If it attacked somebody’s kid, and I could have stopped it, that would be a lot on me,” said Bond Ferguson, a 35-year-old professional chef. “It’s kind of scary and dangerous that they are running around, and people have kids playing in their yards.”The Rhesus monkeys had been housed at the Tulane University National Biomedical Research Center in New Orleans, Louisiana, which routinely provides primates to scientific research organizations, according to the university. In a statement last week, Tulane said the monkeys do not belong to the university, and they were not being transported by the university.A truck carrying the monkeys overturned Tuesday on Interstate 59 north of Heidelberg. Of the 21 monkeys in the truck, 13 were found at the scene of the accident and arrived at their original destination last week, according to Tulane. Another five were killed in the hunt for them and three remained on the loose before Sunday.The Mississippi Highway Patrol has said it was investigating the cause of the crash, which occurred about 100 miles from the state capital, Jackson.Rhesus monkeys typically weigh about 16 pounds and are among the most medically studied animals on the planet. Video recorded after the crash showed monkeys crawling through tall grass beside the interstate, where wooden crates labeled “live animals” were crumpled and strewn about.Jasper County Sheriff Randy Johnson had said Tulane officials reported the monkeys were not infectious, despite initial reports by the truck’s occupants warning that the monkeys were dangerous and harboring various diseases. Nonetheless, Johnson said the monkeys still needed to be “neutralized” because of their aggressive nature.The monkeys had recently received checkups confirming they were pathogen-free, Tulane said in a statement Wednesday.Rhesus macaques “are known to be aggressive,” according to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks. It said the agency’s conservation workers were working with sheriff’s officials in the search for the animals.The search comes about one year after 43 Rhesus macaques escaped from a South Carolina compound that breeds them for medical research because an employee didn’t fully lock an enclosure. Employees from the Alpha Genesis facility in Yemassee, South Carolina, had set up traps to capture them.

    One of the monkeys that escaped last week after a truck overturned on a Mississippi highway was shot and killed early Sunday by a woman who says she feared for the safety of her children.

    Jessica Bond Ferguson said she was alerted early Sunday by her 16-year-old son who said he thought he had seen a monkey running in the yard outside their home near Heidelberg, Mississippi. She got out of bed, grabbed her firearm and her cellphone and stepped outside where she saw the monkey about 60 feet away.

    Bond Ferguson said she and other residents had been warned that the escaped monkeys carried diseases so she fired her gun.

    “I did what any other mother would do to protect her children,” Bond Ferguson, who has five children ranging in age from 4 to 16, told The Associated Press. “I shot at it and it just stood there, and I shot again, and he backed up and that’s when he fell.”

    The Jasper County Sheriff’s Office confirmed in a social media post that a homeowner had found one of the monkeys on their property Sunday morning but said the office didn’t have any details. The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks took possession of the monkey, the sheriff’s office said.

    Before Bond Ferguson had gone out the door, she had called the police and was told to keep an eye on the monkey. But she said she worried that if the monkey got away it would threaten children at another house.

    “If it attacked somebody’s kid, and I could have stopped it, that would be a lot on me,” said Bond Ferguson, a 35-year-old professional chef. “It’s kind of scary and dangerous that they are running around, and people have kids playing in their yards.”

    The Rhesus monkeys had been housed at the Tulane University National Biomedical Research Center in New Orleans, Louisiana, which routinely provides primates to scientific research organizations, according to the university. In a statement last week, Tulane said the monkeys do not belong to the university, and they were not being transported by the university.

    A truck carrying the monkeys overturned Tuesday on Interstate 59 north of Heidelberg. Of the 21 monkeys in the truck, 13 were found at the scene of the accident and arrived at their original destination last week, according to Tulane. Another five were killed in the hunt for them and three remained on the loose before Sunday.

    The Mississippi Highway Patrol has said it was investigating the cause of the crash, which occurred about 100 miles from the state capital, Jackson.

    Rhesus monkeys typically weigh about 16 pounds and are among the most medically studied animals on the planet. Video recorded after the crash showed monkeys crawling through tall grass beside the interstate, where wooden crates labeled “live animals” were crumpled and strewn about.

    Jasper County Sheriff Randy Johnson had said Tulane officials reported the monkeys were not infectious, despite initial reports by the truck’s occupants warning that the monkeys were dangerous and harboring various diseases. Nonetheless, Johnson said the monkeys still needed to be “neutralized” because of their aggressive nature.

    The monkeys had recently received checkups confirming they were pathogen-free, Tulane said in a statement Wednesday.

    Rhesus macaques “are known to be aggressive,” according to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks. It said the agency’s conservation workers were working with sheriff’s officials in the search for the animals.

    The search comes about one year after 43 Rhesus macaques escaped from a South Carolina compound that breeds them for medical research because an employee didn’t fully lock an enclosure. Employees from the Alpha Genesis facility in Yemassee, South Carolina, had set up traps to capture them.

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  • Biden announces $150 million in research grants as part of his ‘moonshot’ push to fight cancer

    Biden announces $150 million in research grants as part of his ‘moonshot’ push to fight cancer

    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — President Joe Biden is zeroing in on the policy goals closest to his heart now that he’s no longer seeking a second term, visiting New Orleans on Tuesday to promote his administration’s “moonshot” initiative aiming to dramatically reduce cancer deaths.

    The president and first lady Jill Biden toured medical facilities that receive federal funding to investigate cancer treatments at Tulane University. Researchers used a piece of raw meat to demonstrate how they are working to improve scanning technology to quickly distinguish between healthy and cancerous cells during surgeries.

    The Bidens then championed the announcement of $150 million in awards from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health. Those will support eight teams of researchers around the country working on ways to help surgeons more successfully remove tumors from people with cancer. It brings the total amount awarded by the agency to develop breakthrough treatments for cancers to $400 million.

    Cancer surgery “takes the best surgeons and takes its toll on families,” Biden said. He said the demonstration of cutting-edge technology he witnessed would offer doctors a way to visualize tumors in real time, reducing the need for follow-on surgeries.

    “We’re moving quickly because we know that all families touched by cancer are in a race against time,” Biden said.

    The teams receiving awards include ones from Tulane, Dartmouth College, Johns Hopkins University, Rice University, the University of California, San Francisco, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, the University of Washington and Cision Vision in Mountain View, California.

    Before he leaves office in January, Biden hopes to move the U.S. closer to the goal he set in 2022 to cut U.S. cancer fatalities by 50% over the next 25 years, and to improve the lives of caregivers and those suffering from cancer.

    “I’m a congenital optimist about what Americans can do,” Biden said. “There’s so much that we’re doing. It matters”

    Experts say the objective is attainable — with adequate investments.

    “We’re curing people of diseases that we previously thought were absolutely intractable and not survivable,” said Karen Knudsen, CEO of the American Cancer Society and the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network.

    Cancer is the second-highest killer of people in the U.S. after heart disease. This year alone, the American Cancer Society estimates that 2 million new cases will be diagnosed and 611,720 people will die of cancer diseases.

    Still, “if all innovation ended today and we could just get people access to the innovations that we know about right now, we think we could reduce cancer mortality by another 20 to 30%,” Knudsen said.

    The issue is personal enough for Biden that, in his recent Oval Office address about bowing out of the 2024 campaign, the president promised to keep fighting for “my cancer moonshot so we can end cancer as we know it.”

    “Because we can do it,” Biden said then.

    He said in that speech that the initiative would be a priority of his final months in office, along with working to strengthen the economy and defend abortion rights, protecting children from gun violence and making changes to the Supreme Court, which he called “extreme” in its current makeup during a recent event.

    Both the president and first lady have had lesions removed from their skin in the past that were determined to be basal cell carcinoma, a common and easily treated form of cancer. In 2015, their eldest son, Beau, died of an aggressive brain cancer at age 46.

    “It’s not just personal,” Biden said Tuesday. “It’s about what’s possible.”

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    The president’s public schedule has been much quieter since he left the race and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, making Tuesday’s trip stand out.

    Advocates have praised Biden for keeping the spotlight on cancer, bringing stakeholders together and gathering commitments from private companies, nonprofit organizations and patient groups.

    They say that the extra attention the administration has paid has put the nation on track to cut cancer death rates by at least half, preventing more than 4 million deaths from the disease, by 2047. It has done so by bolstering access to cancer treatments and reminding people of the importance of screening, which hit a setback during the coronavirus pandemic.

    “President Biden’s passion and commitment to this effort has made monumental differences for the entire cancer community, including those who are suffering from cancer,” said Jon Retzlaff, the chief policy officer at the American Association for Cancer Research.

    Looking ahead, Retzlaff said, “The No. 1 thing is for us to see robust, sustained and predictable annual funding support for the National Institutes of Health. And, if we see that through NIH and through the National Cancer Institute, the programs that have been created through the cancer moonshot will be allowed to continue.”

    Initiatives under Biden include changes that make screening and cancer care more accessible to more people, said Knudsen, with the American Cancer Society.

    For instance, Medicare has started to pay for follow-up colonoscopies if a stool-based test suggests cancer, she said, and Medicare will now pay for navigation services to guide patients through the maze of their cancer care.

    “You’ve already paid for the cancer research. You’ve already paid for the innovation. Now let’s get it to people,” Knudsen said.

    She also said she’d like to see the next administration pursue a ban on menthol-flavored cigarettes, which she said could save 654,000 lives over the next 40 years.

    Scientists now understand that cancer is not a single disease, but hundreds of diseases that respond differently to different treatments. Some cancers have biomarkers that can be targeted by existing drugs that will slow a tumor’s growth. Many more targets await discovery.

    “We hope that the next administration, whoever it may be, will continue to keep the focus and emphasis on our national commitment to end cancer as we know it,” said Dr. Crystal Denlinger, CEO of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, a group of elite cancer centers.

    Will Weissert, Carla K. Johnson and Associated Press

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  • Expert: Addressing mental health will be crucial next step following deadly Maui wildfires

    Expert: Addressing mental health will be crucial next step following deadly Maui wildfires

    How can first responders and others address mental health challenges following the widespread destruction of the deadly wildfires in Hawaii? 

    Tonya Hansel, PhD, associate professor in Tulane’s School of Social Work and expert in disaster mental health and trauma services, is available to speak to: 

    • Mental health symptoms following a disaster and what services should be made available
    • How disasters of this magnitude affect children
    • What mental health experts have learned about recovery from other weather-related disasters 

    “Like other disasters, the surrounding communities of Maui with less damage will likely spearhead disaster response to help displaced individuals and the affected area,” Hansel said. “Children are not too young to be affected. However, their reactions are very different than adults. Once safety has been established, routines are important to reestablish. This might not look exactly like pre-disaster, but having one expected routine is important. Getting back into school is also very important to that routine for school-age children. Importantly, with time, most children are resilient.”

    Tulane University

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  • Beyond IT: Protecting operational technology from cyberattacks

    Beyond IT: Protecting operational technology from cyberattacks

    Tulane University cybersecurity expert Joshua Copeland is available to speak on the importance of protecting operational technology (OT) from cyberattacks. Among other applications, OT controls valves, engines, conveyors and other machines vital to daily life. OT cyberattacks often lead to dire consequences beyond system delays. 

    According to a recent Waterfall Security report, a 140% surge in cyberattacks against industrial operations resulted in over 150 incidents in 2022. Attacks on critical infrastructure inflicted damage and delays in vital operations such as banking, manufacturing, airline, mining, shipping, schools, libraries and various other organizations. 

    “The simple answer is businesses must develop new tools and solutions to these problems. You can’t take the processes that you’re familiar with from the IT side and try to apply them to operational technology. People or local governments get into situations where operational technology is costly to upgrade. The big question is, what can businesses do nationally or internationally to incentivize doing the right things and building out more secure operational technology?”

    Late last month, several lawmakers accused Microsoft of negligent security over a hack that allowed China to spy on top Biden administration officials. According to a Wall Street Journal article, researchers say the breach may be worse than initially suspected. More than two dozen organizations globally were affected. Microsoft described the attack as narrowly targeted at individuals whose communications were believed to possess high intelligence value. 

    Tulane University

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  • Tulane expert available to speak on historic offshore wind sale in the Gulf of Mexico

    Tulane expert available to speak on historic offshore wind sale in the Gulf of Mexico

    Tulane University’s Eric Smith, associate director of the Tulane Energy Institute at the A.B. Freeman School of Business and expert on energy markets, including the oil and gas industry and renewable segments, is available to comment on the benefits to Louisiana and Texas from the Department of Interior’s first-ever offshore wind sale in the Gulf of Mexico.

    Smith can speak on the following:

    • The importance and benefits of the offshore wind sale to the State of Louisiana, as well as the entire Gulf Coast.
    • Why offshore deep-water wind power opportunities may benefit the state longer term.
    • The 10 significant benefits of deep-water wind power vs. shallow water. 

    The areas to be auctioned on August 29, 2023, by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management have the potential to generate approximately 3.7 GW and power almost 1.3 million homes with clean, renewable energy.

    “This is a fairly big deal because it is the first such federal lease offering space offshore of Louisiana, and there are numerous benefits, Smith said. “The former head of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) is consulting to expedite another larger sale. This suggests that the administration is focusing more on developing the Gulf of Mexico offshore wind option. In addition, the Department of Justice is putting money into the fray to specifically support floating wind (wind turbines secured to floating structures rather than fixed structures). That is also a good indication since floating wind is forecasted to represent about two-thirds of the United States’ total potential.”

    Beyond the Department of the Interior (BOEM) efforts, the Department of Energy is putting grant money into the economy to specifically support floating wind (turbines secured to floating structures in deeper water rather than to shallower fixed structures). That is heading in the right direction since floating wind is forecasted to total about two-thirds of the United States’ total offshore wind potential.

    Smith has been interviewed on various energy-related topics, including gas prices, renewable energy transmission and power distribution.

    Tulane University

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  • Expert on Disney: Can ‘Little Mermaid’ enchant audiences into forgetting culture wars?

    Expert on Disney: Can ‘Little Mermaid’ enchant audiences into forgetting culture wars?

    Tulane University professor Peter Kunze, an expert on Disney’s history and societal impact, is available to speak to media on all things House of Mouse, from the feud with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to the cultural weight Disney’s casting decisions carry as it revamps old films for new audiences. 

    With Disney’s latest live action feature “The Little Mermaid” set to hit theaters May 26, Kunze said any lingering complaints about the casting of Halle Bailey as Ariel fail to consider that the film has always included African-Caribbean influences. 

    “’The Little Mermaid’ has always used Black musical styles like calypso and other Caribbean influences in songs like ‘Under the Sea’ and ‘Kiss the Girl,’” Kunze said. “This movie doubles down on that and creates space for inclusion.”

    As Disney continues to remake its animated features as live action movies, some have called for the media and entertainment company to be even more progressive. The planned live action remake of “Lilo & Stitch” was criticized for casting lighter-skinned actors, and actor Peter Dinklage took aim at Disney’s announcement of a planned remake of “Snow White and The Seven Dwarves.”

    Kunze said Disney tries to walk a fine line to avoid controversy.

    “They’re not trying to be progressive, and they’re not trying to be conservative,” Kunze said. “They’re trying to work the middle. The problem is, as our society becomes more and more polarized through a range of factors, the middle is going to draw the ire of the left and the right.”

    Kunze said the irony of Disney coming under fire now by the “anti-woke” crowd is that the modern Disney renaissance was catalyzed by Howard Ashman, a theater talent and gay man whose vision, songs and casting decisions helped “The Little Mermaid,” “Aladdin” and “Beauty and the Beast” cement Disney as an animated musical powerhouse in the 1990s.

    “This is the point where Disney went from being a theme park company to being a major media conglomerate,” Kunze said. “And a lot of these individuals who have been written out of the story of the Disney Renaissance, at least by the company, were gay.”

    Kunze discusses this and more in his new book “Staging a Comeback: Broadway, Hollywood, and the Disney Renaissance,” due out in September.

    Tulane University

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  • Will clean energy incentives, EV tax credits survive debt ceiling showdown?

    Will clean energy incentives, EV tax credits survive debt ceiling showdown?

    As the nation prepares for a showdown between President Biden and House Republican leadership over the impending default date of the federal debt ceiling, a House Republicans’ proposal to avoid the country’s first default could raise the federal debt limit but would undermine President Biden’s climate law— the Inflation Reduction Act.

    Joshua Basseches, a climate change policy and politics expert at Tulane’s School of Liberal Arts, believes a big part of the Republican’s proposed solution is to speed up the permitting process for fossil fuel projects and control the energy supply. 

    “When you step back and look at the big picture, this is an effort to undermine the goals of the Inflation Reduction Act. This is a way to keep the fossil fuel industry afloat. But even if the Republicans were to get this through, which I don’t think they will in its current form, it would not undo all the positives from the Inflation Reduction Act.”

    “The bill also contains the full text of the energy package the GOP passed in March, which would expand domestic energy production by allowing more oil, gas and mineral exploration on public lands and make dramatic changes to the National Environmental Policy Act by speeding up permitting for energy projects.”

    Basseches can speak on the following:

    -The potential effects of the GOPs debt-limit plan on the clean energy transition

    -Permitting reform, its opportunities and pitfalls

    -The Inflation Reduction Act’s impact on electric vehicles, clean electricity and ongoing state-level climate policy efforts

    Tulane University

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  • One of America’s Oldest Hospitals Lay Abandoned. Then a University Stepped In.

    One of America’s Oldest Hospitals Lay Abandoned. Then a University Stepped In.

    The last time Lee Hamm was working in New Orleans’s Charity Hospital, critically ill patients were being hauled up and down dark, sweltering stairways as nurses hand-pumped oxygen to keep them alive. In August 2005, for those inside a hospital ravaged by Hurricane Katrina, the sounds of helicopters whirring nearby only added to the frustration, as day after day went by with no rescue.

    Over the next 18 years, Hamm,now a senior vice president and dean of medicine at Tulane, relived memories both horrifying and inspiring as he looked out the window of his nearby office building. There, in a gritty portion of New Orleans’s downtown, the abandoned skeleton of Charity Hospital loomed, boarded up behind chain-link fences and overgrown weeds. The million-square-foot Art Deco building occupied a full city block.

    To many, the state’s decision in 2005 to shutter Charity represented the neglect of New Orleans’s most vulnerable residents. The iconic hospital had served as a safety net since the 1700s, doing so in its current structure since 1939. “This building that was brought to its knees during Katrina and not built back,” said Tulane University’s president, Michael A. Fitts. “That symbolized a lot to the community.”

    So too, he hopes, will Tulane’s decision to help bring Charity back. The university is spending $135 million on the hospital building, where it plans to move its School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine by the end of 2026. Approximately 600 researchers and research staff from the medical and public-health schools will also move into the overhauled building. Tulane will serve as an “anchor tenant,” taking up about a third of the former hospital. Hamm will oversee the creation of new labs and research space for Tulane’s medical school.

    The mixed-use building will also house apartments and retail space, as well as the Tulane Innovation Institute, a center designed to turn university-funded research into products faster. Beyond its investment in Charity, Tulane will spend another $465 million expanding its presence in the surrounding downtown biomedical corridor, with the hope of revitalizing the area as a hub of bioscience research.

    At a time of public questioning about the contributions colleges make to their communities, Tulane’s latest investment demonstrates how deeply the fates of higher-education institutions and the cities they inhabit are intertwined. When urban campuses swallow city blocks and residents are displaced, the projects often breed resentment. Tulane’s plans, though, have been welcomed because the hospital and its immediate surroundings have been abandoned in a section of downtown that’s become an eyesore and a constant reminder of Katrina.

    Expanding in a downtown biosciences corridor makes sense, strategically and financially, for the private university of more than 14,000 students, Tulane officials say. The university’s enrollment has been inching up, and construction continues at its pristine uptown campus. But given the growth in its health-related graduate programs and the desire to be closer to the city’s economic center, expanding downtown is a priority, they say.

    Meanwhile, Charity Hospital is “an iconic building with so many stories and histories,” Fitts said, a place where thousands of lives were saved and generations of health-care workers trained. The building that stood empty for nearly two decades “symbolized in many respects the tragedy of Katrina.” Although Charity will no longer be involved in the kind of direct patient care it provided before Katrina, the education and research that will take place there send an important signal, Fitts said, about the university’s commitment to the community’s well-being and health.

    This building that was brought to its knees during Katrina and not built back. That symbolized a lot to the community.

    By supporting and encouraging the development of biomedical start-ups, Tulane hopes to help diversify the economy of a city that has historically relied on hospitality and tourism, both of which took huge hits following Hurricane Katrina and the Covid-19 pandemic.

    The president cited a number of cities that were transformed because of their relationships with prominent universities. “You look around the country, and it’s amazing how much development has occurred in cities as a result of universities — obviously Silicon Valley and Cambridge — but also Nashville, Austin, and Pittsburgh,” Fitts said. “We’re in the middle of an idea revolution as well as a biomedical revolution. I just think this is the perfect moment for Tulane to make a commitment substantively, geographically, and symbolically to the downtown.”

    Another plus, according to Mike Strecker, a Tulane spokesman, is that external funding for Tulane research has risen by close to 50 percent over the past four years, and the university expects it to increase another 50 percent over the next few years.

    The overhauled Charity Hospital building will include about 20,000 square feet of space for students to study and socialize. The developers plan to retain the building’s Art Deco facade, as well as the lobby and other historical features.

    Plans for the innovation district include affordable-housing units and jobs for neighborhood residents. That’s especially important in a place where rapid gentrification has made living in the city unaffordable for long-time residents, many of them families of color, said Marla K. Nelson, a professor of planning and urban studies at the University of New Orleans. Urban-renewal projects and tourism influxes were largely blamed for pushing families out of the historic Tremé neighborhood, near the French Quarter, one of the nation’s oldest Black neighborhoods and to many, the birthplace of jazz.

    Fitts said that’s not going to happen in the area around Charity Hospital, which is blighted and largely abandoned. “We’re taking over vacant buildings and parking lots,” he said. “We’re not displacing anybody at all.”

    ‘Where the Unusual Occurs’

    Charity Hospital was founded in 1736 as a New Orleans hospital for the poor, funded by a dying French ship builder. It became the second oldest continually operating public hospital in the country. The 1939 building, whose architects also designed the Louisiana State Capitol, in Baton Rouge, replaced earlier ones that burned or were too small for the growing number of indigent people needing care. It served the city’s poor until the severe damage caused by Hurricane Katrina forced it out of service.

    Until Katrina struck, “Big Charity,” as it was known, was one of two New Orleans teaching hospitals affiliated with Louisiana State University. The other, located nearby, was University Hospital. Instead of reopening Charity Hospital after Katrina, the state approved LSU’s proposal to replace the two hospitals with a new, $1.1-billion University Medical Center. That move, made possible by a hefty disaster-relief payment from FEMA, left bitter feelings among those lobbying for Charity to reopen, as recounted in an award-winning documentary about the hospital’s closure.

    Over the years, the 20-story building became a fixture on the city’s ghost tours and the subject of rumors of paranormal activity. (Part of the recently released movie Renfield, a modern-day adaptation of Dracula, was shot on site after the production designer noted that the building “looks like the classic silhouette of a vampire castle.”)

    In 2005, I was among a group of Chronicle reporters who traveled to New Orleans and Baton Rouge, where many New Orleans residents had been evacuated, in the days immediately following Katrina. Having heard harrowing stories about the conditions inside Charity and the city’s other public hospitals, I was eager this year to see for myself what was behind the broken and boarded-up windows and locked gates that had shielded the inside from view for the past 18 years.

    A tour in February with Hamm, the Tulane med-school dean, started on the first floor, where the emergency room stood before the rising floodwaters forced the staff to relocate it upstairs. The hospital’s motto is written in large letters on the wall, still visible beneath the grime: “Welcome to the Medical Center of Louisiana. Where the Unusual Occurs and Miracles Happen.” In another room, a ceiling-mounted surgical light is poised over an operating table, seemingly frozen in time.

    The hospital held up surprisingly well during the initial phase of the storm, which slammed into the Gulf Coast on Monday, August 29, 2005, lashing New Orleans with heavy rain and high winds, the dean said. By late that day, the streets were dry, the air calm, and it appeared the city had dodged a bullet. But by that night, water from distant, breeched levies began trickling down the street and on Tuesday, was flooding into the hospital buildings, he said. The next several days, as the water rose to waist height in the streets around the hospital, were a nightmare inside Big Charity. The generators that had kicked in were in the basement and soon submerged. With no water or electricity, temperatures swelled well above 100 degrees.

    Hamm and two other doctors paddled over to Charity, one block away from his office, in a canoe a colleague had brought in from home to check on evacuation efforts. Without electricity, emergency workers were using manual ventilation bags to breathe for patients who would normally be hooked up to machines. Residents were hauling patients on flat stretchers that weren’t designed to make the tight turns in the dark stairways. Bodies from a flooded morgue were stacked in a stairwell.

    More than 1,500 patients, staff, and refugees from the community were trapped inside Charity Hospital for days without food and drinkable water. While people were being plucked off of rooftops in submerged sections of the city, and evacuations were underway at the private Tulane University Hospital, no one seemed aware that thousands were trapped inside the city’s public hospitals. When word did get out, Hamm said, “They were told help was coming, and it didn’t come.”

    Some patients were paddled by boat across flooded streets and carried up to a rooftop parking deck, where a few died awaiting rescue that finally came, nearly a week after the hurricane struck. Like others who stayed behind to help with the rescue efforts, Hamm was one of the last people evacuated out.

    Like any financially constrained safety-net hospital where medical trainees are treating unpredictable influxes of poor and mentally ill patients, Charity faced its challenges long before Katrina struck its near fatal blow.

    “A lot of good things happened in that building,” Hamm said. “I’m sure there were things that weren’t as good as they should have been, but the hospital has taken on the symbolism of compassionate care to those that need it most. To be back in that building will be terrific.”

    Katherine Mangan

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  • Tulane University’s Walter Isaacson to receive National Humanities Medal

    Tulane University’s Walter Isaacson to receive National Humanities Medal

    BYLINE: Roger Dunaway

    Newswise — Walter Isaacson, the renowned bestselling biographer, Tulane professor of history and co-chair of the New Orleans Book Festival at Tulane University, will be awarded a National Humanities Medal by President Joe Biden at a White House ceremony on March 21 at 3:30 p.m. CDT. The event will be livestreamed here.

    The National Humanities Medal, one of the nation’s highest honors, recognizes individuals and organizations whose work has deepened our nation’s understanding of and engagement with history, literature, languages, philosophy and other humanities subjects. 

    “This is such a profound and well-deserved honor for Walter, who is one of America’s great public intellectuals.” Tulane President Michael A. Fitts said. “Whether he is teaching in the classroom or penning another bestselling biography, Walter is driven by an intense interest in human curiosity and the nature, meaning and impacts of innovation. Walter’s own curiosity enables him to be an amazing teacher and to vividly tell the stories of the people behind many of the achievements that have defined, shaped and advanced our society. He is an academic icon.”

    Isaacson’s books include The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race (2021), Leonardo da Vinci (2017), The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution (2014), Steve Jobs (2011), Einstein: His Life and Universe (2007), Benjamin Franklin: An American Life (2003) and Kissinger: A Biography (1992). He is also coauthor of The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made (1986).

    “I’m grateful to President Biden for celebrating the humanities and to Tulane University for being a place where students and researchers connect the humanities to the sciences, business and other fields of endeavor,” said Isaacson.

    The Leonard A. Lauder Professor of American History and Values in Tulane’s School of Liberal Arts, Isaacson is the former editor of Time Magazine. He was previously CEO and Chairman of CNN and CEO of the Aspen Institute. He is also a cohost of the PBS show Amanpour & Co., a CNBC contributor and a host of the podcast “Trailblazers,” from Dell Technologies. 

    “I am thrilled to see Walter being recognized in this way,” said Robin Forman, Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost. “He has emerged as one of the preeminent biographers of our generation, chronicling the lives of innovators who transformed the world and expanded the universe of what is possible.  He is a passionate supporter for the arts and humanities, and a consistent theme in his books and speeches is an idea that underlies our vision for Tulane – bringing people and perspectives together from across disciplines is crucial for creating an environment in which creativity can flourish.”

    A member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Royal Society of the Arts and the American Philosophical Society, Isaacson serves on the board of United Airlines, Halliburton Labs, the New Orleans City Planning Commission, the New Orleans Tricentennial Commission, Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Society of American Historians and My Brother’s Keeper Alliance.

    “When the president of the United States honors a Tulane professor with our nation’s highest honor in the humanities, it brings honor to all members of our faculty,” said Brian Edwards, dean of the School of Liberal Arts. “Walter Isaacson has been a tremendous inspiration to our approach to interdisciplinary research and teaching. His books and classroom teaching show the multiplicity of ways in which the creativity of the humanities and arts combine with discoveries in science to fuel innovations in engineering, which in turn prove revolutionary for society at large. This is at the core of what makes Tulane so special – and also America.”

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  • Tulane expert lauds new ‘cutting edge’ hemophilia treatment

    Tulane expert lauds new ‘cutting edge’ hemophilia treatment

    Newswise — A new treatment that helps people with hemophilia A maintain higher levels of a crucial blood clotting factor with fewer treatments is a victory for patients, according to a new editorial in The New England Journal of Medicine this week by Dr. Cindy Leissinger, director of the Louisiana Center for Bleeding and Clotting Disorders at Tulane University School of Medicine.

    An estimated 20,000 people in the U.S. have hemophilia A, including almost 300 in Louisiana. Those with hemophilia A lack clotting factor VIII in their blood, which can lead to painful and sometimes life- and limb-threatening bleeding.

    The Food and Drug Administration fast-tracked a potential new therapy, efanesoctocog alfa, in 2021, and researchers published the results of their study in the Journal this week. The study shows the treatment helps patients maintain higher levels of the clotting factor VIII with only one infusion a week. Patients currently need two to three infusions a week with existing therapies that don’t prevent all bleeding.

    “Efanesoctocog alfa offers much better protection against bleeding with a more convenient dosing schedule for patients,” Leissinger said. “Most hemophilia patients administer their own intravenous infusions of clotting factor, so reducing infusions from three times a week to once a week is a big help for patients.”

    Hemophilia is a rare disease but the burden of treatment for patients and society has been disproportionately high owing to the intense nature of therapy and its cost, Leissinger wrote in the Journal. In a crowded field of transformative therapies that have recently been approved, are under review or in late-stage clinical trials, efanesoctocog alfa stands out as a winner that could soon make life easier for the patients Leissinger sees at Tulane.

    Although the Tulane center was not a part of the efanesoctacog alfa trial, Leissinger notes that other new therapies are being studied here, including a gene therapy trial that has the potential of a cure or “near-cure” for some patients with hemophilia.

    “Because hemophilia is a rare disease, these kinds of advances are made only because most patients are willing to participate in research and volunteer for trials of new therapies,” Leissinger said.

    “The future for patients with hemophilia has never looked brighter thanks to cutting edge research and to the patients who are willing to be part of that research.”

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  • Tulane race scholar available for comment in Tyre Nichols case

    Tulane race scholar available for comment in Tyre Nichols case

    Newswise — Andrea Boyles is an associate professor of sociology and Africana studies at Tulane University and the author of two books — You Can’t Stop the Revolution: Community Disorder and Social Ties in Post-Ferguson America (UC Press 2019) and Race, Place, and Suburban Policing: Too Close for Comfort (UC Press 2015).

    She is a criminologist, race scholar and ethnographer who is especially knowledgeable on Black citizen-police conflict, neighborhood disorder and disadvantage, and police aggression.

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  • Tulane researcher and Rosov Consulting to study economic insecurity among American Jews

    Tulane researcher and Rosov Consulting to study economic insecurity among American Jews

    Newswise — A first-of-its-kind research study, led by Tulane University’s Ilana Horwitz, PhD, in partnership with Rosov Consulting, will gather data on economic insecurity among American Jews as part of a broader effort to address Jewish poverty.

    The study, supported by the Jewish Funders Network through a grant from The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation, will focus exclusively on the experiences of U.S. Jews facing poverty and economic insecurity. It builds on the work and commitment of the National Affinity Group on Jewish Poverty, a group of funders, service providers and other stakeholders dedicated to fighting poverty in the American Jewish community.

    “Collecting quantitative and qualitative data paints a fuller picture of the lived experiences of the Jewish poor and allows us to share that picture widely across the Jewish communal ecosystem,” Horwitz said. “The data and feedback from survey participants and human service professionals will provide important information that sheds light on the challenges and successes within the community to help enact positive change.”

    Horwitz holds the Fields-Rayant Chair in Contemporary Jewish Life at the Grant Center for the American Jewish Experience. Trained in both qualitative and quantitative research methods, she is a sociologist who examines how gender, ethnicity, race, social class and religious upbringing shape people’s lives. God, Grades, and Graduation: Religion’s Surprising Impact on Academic Success, her book published earlier this year, examines how a religious upbringing shapes the academic lives of teens. Rosov Consulting helps foundations, philanthropists, federations, and grantee organizations in the Jewish communal sector make well-informed decisions through professional research, evaluation and consulting services.

    The project will consist of several components and include multiple methods of data collection and analysis, including a survey of 1,000 U.S. Jews who are experiencing or who have previously experienced economic insecurity, as well as in-depth interviews with about 100 survey respondents and professionals who work in Jewish human service organizations.

    Survey and interview questions will focus on the causes and precipitating events of participants’ economic vulnerability; consequences of the economic insecurity, especially for their involvement in the Jewish community; experiences with interventions intended to address economic distress, both within and outside the Jewish community; challenges participants face in moving beyond economic insecurity; and feedback on successful journeys out of poverty.

    The study will be completed by December 2023 and results will be made available to the public through the Berman Jewish DataBank and other platforms.

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