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Seven Fellows, One Goal [2]
Wadsworth Center has long been committed to providing the next generation of public health professionals with the necessary knowledge, skills and abilities.
More than 300 students have made Wadsworth Center their summer home over the course of nearly 30 years through the National Science Foundation-funded Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) Program.
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Seven Fellows, One Goal
[3]
Dr. Kimberlee Musser Appointed Director of Clinical Testing for Wadsworth Center’s David Axelrod Institute [5]
Wadsworth Center’s David Axelrod Institute, and all of Wadsworth Center for that matter, may be known to many as a place for research and education. But there’s a lot of clinical testing that goes on here too. You could even say the work performed here impacts every native New Yorker - from screening every baby born in the state, to testing for the measles, the flu, Legionella, Zika, C. auris, Ebola and much, much more. It all happens here.
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Dr. Kimberlee Musser Appointed Director of Clinical Testing for Wadsworth Center’s David Axelrod Institute
[6]
Dr. Christina Egan & Michael Perry Receive the 2019 North American Global 3Rs Award from AAALAC International and the IQ Consortium [8]
This award recognizes those who effectively advance ethical science through significant, innovative contributions to the 3Rs of animal research - Refinement, Replacement and Reduction.
Up to four such awards are presented annually – one each from North America, Europe, the Pacific Rim, and countries outside these three geographic areas.
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Dr. Christina Egan & Michael Perry Receive the 2019 North American Global 3Rs Award from AAALAC International and the IQ Consortium
[9]
Bacterial FOMO [11]
Wadsworth Center Welcomes Dr. Jon Paczkowski
Dr. Paczkowski received his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 2014 and was a postdoctoral fellow in the Bassler Laboratory at Princeton University prior to joining the Wadsworth Center. Here he uses the model organism Pseudomonas aeruginosa to study microbial signal transduction and cell-cell communication.
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Bacterial FOMO
[12]
Funding Opportunity: Screening for Candida auris at point-of-care [14]
New questions and answers added September 27, 2019!
The Wadsworth Center and Health Research Inc. are requesting applications from up to three investigators/inventors/companies to work closely with the Wadsworth Center to develop and optimize a point-of-care device that can detect the presence of Candida auris from a skin or nasal swab.
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Funding Opportunity: Screening for Candida auris at point-of-care
[15]
Nod to Wadsworth Center Antibiotic Resistance Laboratory [17]
The Summer 2019 issue of the Association of Public Health Laboratories' (APHL) publication Lab Matters features an article recognizing the work of the Wadsworth Center's Antibiotic Resistance Lab Network (AR Lab Network) - Northeast Regional Lab.
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Nod to Wadsworth Center Antibiotic Resistance Laboratory
[18]
Wadsworth Center Unveils Statue of Ignaz Semmelweis [20]
Wadsworth Center Director Dr. Jill Taylor welcomed to the ceremony honored guests and speakers including Dr. Howard Zucker, New York State Health Commissioner; H.E. Ambassador István Pásztor, Consul General, New York; and Dr. Jonathan Jakus, Director of Obstetrics and Gynecology Montefiore Nyack Hospital and US Representative of the Semmelweis Memorial Committee.
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Wadsworth Center Unveils Statue of Ignaz Semmelweis
[21]
Greg Farrell Earns CDC Lifetime Achievement Award [23]
Virology Laboratory staff member Greg Farrell is the inaugural recipient of the National Respiratory and Enteric Virus Surveillance System (NREVSS) Lifetime Achievement Award.
Unsolicited. Inaugural. Lifetime Achievement. Weighty words.
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Greg Farrell Earns CDC Lifetime Achievement Award
[24]
New Wadsworth Center Fellowship Program [26]
The application period is closed. Check back Spring 2020.
About the Wadsworth Center Fellowship Program
The mission of the Wadsworth Center Fellowship Program is to provide scientists with broad experience in laboratory science and research in infectious disease, genetics, environmental health or translational medicine. Fellows will gain broad experience at one of the nation’s premier public health laboratories, renowned for developing and utilizing high complexity testing using advanced technologies and state of the art equipment.
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New Wadsworth Center Fellowship Program
[27]
Dr. Keith Derbyshire Named AAAS Fellow [29]
Dr. Derbyshire joins the ranks of distinguished scientists recognized by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) since 1874 - from Thomas Edison and Linus Pauling, to four of the 2018 Nobel Prize laureates.
AAAS recognized Dr. Derbyshire “for distinguished contributions to the fields of molecular biology and microbial genetics, particularly in DNA exchange by transposition and conjugation in mycobacteria.”
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Dr. Keith Derbyshire Named AAAS Fellow
[30]
Dr. Kramer Garners International Award for Career Contributions in Arbovirology [32]
Every three years, the American Society of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene (ASTMH) bestows the Richard M. Taylor Award on an individual who has made an outstanding contribution to the field of arbovirology throughout his or her career.
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Dr. Kramer Garners International Award for Career Contributions in Arbovirology
[33]
Wadsworth Center's TB Laboratory Featured in CAP TODAY [35]
Wadsworth Center scientists from the Mycobacteriology and Bacteriology Laboratories, the Bioinformatics and Statistics Core, and the Sequencing Core, supported, developed and validated a test based on whole genome sequencing that provides comprehensive resistance detection for TB.
The TB Laboratory started work on a whole genome sequencing resistance test about five years ago. After demonstrating that the test provided rapid, accurate and comprehensive drug prediction, they began using it as the first line of testing on Oct. 1, 2018.
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Wadsworth Center's TB Laboratory Featured in CAP TODAY
[36]
New Wadsworth Lab in the City of Albany [38]
As announced in the Executive Budget Briefing Book
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New Wadsworth Lab in the City of Albany
[39]
Australia to Albany and Back [41]
On the heels of receiving the 2017 Diagnostic Virology Award, an international career achievement award, Dr. Kirsten St. George, Chief of the Laboratory of Viral Diseases, was presented with the Alumni Award from the University of South Australia (UniSA) in Adelaide.
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Australia to Albany and Back
[42]
Longer seasons and higher virus levels in 2018 for some pathogens carried by mosquitoes [44]
Each year, Wadsworth Center’s Arbovirology Laboratory undertakes the seasonal surveillance of mosquitoes for arboviral pathogens. Surveillance is important for control of vector-borne viruses. First, it tells us which mosquito species are present and where. Different species are capable of transmitting different pathogens, so this is crucial information. Second, it allows us to know exactly which pathogens are being carried by the mosquitoes present. Together, this informs the public, informs mosquito control efforts, and alerts physicians.
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Longer seasons and higher virus levels in 2018 for some pathogens carried by mosquitoes
[45]
Cover Story - Colorful Crustacean [47]
This colorful crustacean comes to us as part of a larger research investigation into environmental exposures among the Upstate New York Chinese community. The NIH-funded, home-based study looked at some unique cultural foods, personal care products, and traditional Chinese medications as potential sources of exposure to toxic metals and metalloids.
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Cover Story - Colorful Crustacean
[48]
Souvenirs: What did you bring home from your last trip to the hospital? [50]
The stuff we carry around says a lot about us. If I were to dump my purse right now, you'd find a shell from my last trip to the ocean, a garnet from a hike up north and a penny pressed from an amusement park. Bacteria tell us a lot about themselves from the stuff (genes) they carry around as well. Just as you can tell where I've been from the contents of my purse, scientists can tell where bacteria have been from the contents of their genes.
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Souvenirs: What did you bring home from your last trip to the hospital?
[51]
Fighting Antibiotic Resistance with Printing Technology [53]
Wadsworth Center's Antibiotic Resistance (AR) Regional Laboratory was chosen by CDC as one of four labs in the AR Lab Network to serve as a pilot site, "printing" with new drugs rather than ink, in order to find the most effective antibiotic.
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Fighting Antibiotic Resistance with Printing Technology
[54]
Wadsworth Center’s TB Lab Launches New Testing Algorithm Based Upon Years of Development and Evaluation [56]
Magnitude of Disease Impact
Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) is a group of closely related and very important pathogens, infecting a quarter of the world’s population; New York State ranks 3rd in the nation for highest number of cases, approximately 800 new cases diagnosed per year.
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Wadsworth Center’s TB Lab Launches New Testing Algorithm Based Upon Years of Development and Evaluation
[57]
Dr. Joe Orsini Receives Legacy of Hope Award [59]
In commemoration of the organization’s twentieth anniversary, the Hunter’s Hope Foundation presented Wadsworth Center’s Dr. Orsini and Duke University School of Medicine’s Dr. Kurtzberg with the Legacy of Hope Award. Co-recipients in the area of science and medicine were recognized for their contributions to newborn screening and the work of the organization during the 2018 Hunter’s Hope Family and Medical Symposium.
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Dr. Joe Orsini Receives Legacy of Hope Award
[60]