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星期四, 6月 22, 2017

同濟醫學院校友商議成立世界聯盟

同濟醫學院海外校友總會成員及嘉賓合影。(周菊子攝)
               (Boston Orange 周菊子劍橋市報導)同濟醫學院海外校友總會、華中科技大學武漢同濟校友會和美中醫學交流協會合作,618日在即將開張的素描湘菜館舉辦健康醫學發展與創業國際研討會,倡議同濟海外校友組成聯盟,把武漢,同濟和世界連接起來。
會場。
               研討會由同濟醫學院海外校友總會主席,也是俄亥俄州立大學醫學院正教授,兒童創傷研究中心主任向惠云博士主持,出席的專家校友陸續報告,分享經驗。
向惠云。
               華中科技大學武漢同濟校友會會長暨青春百歲健康管理(武漢)有限公司董事長張明以他和政府合作的經驗指出,如果海外同濟校友和地方政府合作,交流資源,可發揮數以倍計力量。他自己就響應了武漢硚口區政府的引智回漢號召,參與健康項目。
張明。
               哈佛醫學院助理教授暨麻省總醫院介入腎臟科主任吳世新講談醫學健康與新機遇。他認為中國目前最有發展機會的就是健康醫學,連王健林,馬雲都感興趣,因此要把握時機,現在就回去開疆闢土。只是在海外待久了的人,回中國會有不接地氣,連裏弦外之音都聽不懂的障礙。
               加拿大藥物與衛生技術署高級顧問袁洪波從藥物研發、大數據,商機三方面分析,認為現在是中國新藥走向世界的好時機。
吳世新。
               美中醫學交流協會秘書長盧剛,也是同濟醫學院海外校友總會董事。他以自己擔任世界針灸聯合會工委委員,美國達所系統總部大數據和機器學習工程資深經理的經驗指出,美國和中國醫院的電子健康病歷,面對不同挑戰。中國在數據收集,整理和分析,計算上有很好的發展機會。個人化的健康資料歸納,統計,將可在治療,預測人類疾病上發揮很好的作用。他指出,波士頓人才濟濟,絕對是合作發展的好地方。
盧剛。
               素描湘菜館創辦人陳素描也是同濟醫學院校友。她表示自己早從1997年就開始回中國投資,卻屢試屢敗,究其主因,都是去國已久,已不了解中國的制度與運作。她認為校友聯盟可發揮平台作用,幫有心做事的校友掃除障礙。
               武漢哈福健康管理集團董事長邱小益認為,在醫療體系的改革上,最難改的其實是醫生的習慣與想法,只談用藥,不理會健康管理。
               華肽集團董事局主席曾建華也認為健康需要管理。
               同濟醫學院海外校友總會副主席暨美捷登生物科技創辦人夏華向,前主席汪爾佳,當天還有許多同濟校友踴躍發言討論。
陳素描(左),朱少純夫婦。
               同校醫學院海外校友總會董事長劉垣意指出,要制定好短,中,長期目標。

               向惠云在會末總結,將推動海外校友成立產業發展聯盟,以期結合眾力,加速校友把構想落實成為企業,為社會做更多貢獻的速度。(所有圖片周菊子攝)




曾建華。

包氏藝術中心展出梅青"花天下"

 Mei Ching: Fantasies of Spring
梅青中国画展花天下
BCNC Pao Arts Center, 99 Albany Street, Boston, MA
May 6 - August 26, 2017

Boston, MA – In its inaugural exhibition, the Pao Arts Center presents the work of Chinese brush-painter, Mei Ching.  Mei Ching was born in Taishan, Guangdong in 1938. From 1957-65, Mei Ching studied at the Hubei Institute of Fine Arts in the Department of Traditional Chinese Painting with a concentration in Birds and Flowers. He moved to Boston in 1980 with his family and has continued to study, paint, teach and share his love of Chinese art.

Mr. Mei believes that the essence of Chinese art is the emotional feeling that a creation evokes in those who appreciate the work and the lasting impression it instills upon those who has seen something they enjoyed. In his exhibit, Mei Ching celebrates the arrival of spring, as well as the beauty and re-awakening that the season represents.

Exhibit highlights:

World of Flowers (花天下) depicts a pavilion nestled into a mountainside covered with flowers in full bloom. Using foreshortening to highlight the branch above, Mei Ching invites viewers to enter the realm of the painting and imagine themselves surrounded by blossoming trees. One flower is just about to bud, signaling the arrival of spring.

The philosopher Zhuangzi’s famous anecdote on the happiness of fish left a lasting impression on Mei Ching, and his painting Song of Fish (鱼歌) captures their joy, as they swim freely. Mei Ching hopes everyone who visits the gallery can experience the joie de vivre that the fish embody.

In Spring in the Qinling Mountains (秦嶺之春), a group of pandas gathers in the forests of the Qinling Mountains with the arrival of spring. Bathed in natural light and surrounded by lush nature, Mei Ching imagines them as a warm, welcoming family. As pandas serve as “ambassadors” for China, Mei Ching believes that art can play a diplomatic role as well, transcending ethnic and regional boundaries.


For more information, contact: cynthia.woo@bcnc.net; 617-635-5129 x1028

Baker-Polito Administration Announces $960,000 for Clean Energy Education Program

Baker-Polito Administration Announces $960,000 for Clean Energy Education Program

BOSTON – The Baker-Polito Administration today announced $960,000 in grants for hands-on learning and academic training programs for six Massachusetts high schools in an effort to prepare students to pursue clean energy and STEM higher education majors and careers.  The grants, awarded by the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC), totaled $160,000 each and were provided to Diman Regional Vocational Technical High School, Malden High School, Northeastern University/John D. O’Bryant School of Mathematics and Science, UMass Amherst/High School of Science and Technology, Norfolk County Agricultural High School, and Greater New Bedford Workforce Investment Board/New Bedford High School.

“Our administration is committed to providing new pathways for Massachusetts’ students to explore opportunities in STEM-related fields,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “Encouraging students to pursue studying clean energy and STEM subjects will strengthen our future workforce and further improve our nation-leading innovation economy.”

“Massachusetts is a national leader in education and clean energy,” said Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito. “By leveraging these strengths we can better prepare our students to take advantage of the job opportunities in the growing clean energy industry.”

Through MassCEC’s Learn and Earn Program, schools will provide approximately 160 students with education and training that includes career exploration, work readiness training, and paid work-based learning. The clean energy employment program provides dual enrollment classes that award credit for high school academic work as well as higher education credit.

“A highly skilled workforce is essential to sustaining an innovation and technology-based economy,” said Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Matthew Beaton. “Meeting the growing demands of the Massachusetts clean energy sector will be reliant upon our ability to provide students with opportunities to expand their education in STEM fields.”

“Despite large numbers of jobs available in STEM fields, just 1 in 6 American high school seniors are interested in studying STEM in college. This creates additional strain for states like Massachusetts that want to make sure that STEM employers have highly skilled employees, and more residents have opportunities for careers in this growing sector,” said Education Secretary James Peyser. “Given this reality, these grants are critically important to give students opportunities to learn about STEM careers firsthand.”

Since 2015, the more than 173 students who have participated in the program received academic year training with curriculum focused on clean energy as well as summer jobs at either the participant’s high school or a clean energy business, including design and construction of clean energy systems for low-income housing.

“Massachusetts is home to one of the world’s most vibrant clean tech sectors,” said MassCEC CEO Stephen Pike. “This program not only creates new educational opportunities for these students, but gives them a base of skills that will fuel the future growth of the clean energy economy in the Commonwealth.”

According to MassCEC’s 2016 Clean Energy Industry Report, employers would benefit from educational development in clean energy and STEM topics, as nearly three quarter of employers reported hiring difficulty over the last year, with 47 percent of employers citing insufficient qualified candidates as the most significant barrier to hiring. The funding builds on the Baker-Polito’s initiative to increase opportunities and participation for students in STEM studies. One of the greatest challenges facing Massachusetts’ rapidly growing innovation economy is the gap between available jobs in STEM fields and qualified workers to perform them.

“The clean energy sector in Massachusetts continues to thrive and will need future generations of workers with the skills and training to hit the ground running once they finish their education.  These grants will help provide the pipeline of highly skilled workers to fill good paying cleaner energy jobs in the Commonwealth,” said Senate President Stan Rosenberg (D-Amherst). “Investments in education and STEM programs will keep Massachusetts a leader in renewable energy to combat climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

“I’m thrilled that UMass is one of the recipients of this grant program,” said State Representative Solomon Goldstein-Rose (D-Amherst). “This will help in the important work they do educating students in our area about science and technology.”

“Our state government is intensely focused on leading our nation in the development, innovation, and commercialization of renewable energy,” said Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester).  “Continuing that leadership will depend largely on having a new generation of engaged, skilled, and prepared people, and these grants will invest in supporting them.”

“Clean energy doesn’t just help power our communities, but it is also a growing source of jobs,” said State Senator Jason Lewis (D-Malden). “We need to be proactive in tailoring our schools’ curricula to prepare our students for these and other 21st century jobs, especially in the STEM fields.  I’m very pleased that the Commonwealth can partner with and support Malden High School and other schools in realizing this important effort through the Learn and Earn program.”

“These funds will bolster Malden Public Schools’ efforts to prepare our students for the 21st century economy,” said State Representative Steve Ultrino (D-Malden). “As an educator and former School Committee member, I know that this grant will be put to great use, and that our students will benefit from the exposure to different learning environments and the Learn and Earn model. This program propels students toward success in high school, higher education, and career while helping Massachusetts become a leader in the green economy.”

“I am very excited that Malden students will experience the educational opportunities and training provided by this funding,” said State Representative Paul J. Donato (D-Malden).

“The emerging clean energy economy requires us to double down on our investment in STEM education,” said State Senator Michael J. Rodrigues (D-Westport). “The MassCEC grant program will allow schools like Diman to continue to prepare a skilled and modern workforce that embraces innovation and new industries.”

“The clean energy industry is growing rapidly throughout the Commonwealth, especially here in New Bedford,” said State Representative Antonio F.D. Cabral (D-New Bedford). “With the help of this program, New Bedford High School students will gain the necessary skills to become contributing members of today’s renewable energy movement.”

“STEM fields are one of the fastest growing job categories in our nation, and the demand is always increasing,” said State Representative Paul Schmid (D-New Bedford). “As the South Coast continues to invest in renewable, clean-energy technologies, I applaud the Baker-Polito Administration for providing my communities of New Bedford and Fall River with the tools to have a create a stronger, local workforce.”
“Massachusetts manufacturers are truly national leaders in clean energy innovation, which has played a major role in the revitalization of our state economy,” said State Representative Christopher Markey (D-Dartmouth). “However, the largest obstacle to continued growth in the promising clean energy industry has not been demand, which is expanding exponentially every year, but the sufficient supply of a skilled and educated workforce to meet that demand. This timely funding will directly address the educational and training needs of tomorrow’s clean energy workforce - a prudent investment in our overall economy.”

“This is great news for the students of Norfolk Aggie and for the growth of our job market in Massachusetts,” said State Representative Paul McMurtry (D-Dedham). “With the support of the Learn and Earn Program, our clean energy economy will be strengthened and our future will be brighter. I applaud Governor Baker and Lieutenant Governor Polito, as well as, MassCEC for making these critical investments in our hands-on learning and training programs.”

The Renewable Energy Trust, created by the Massachusetts Legislature in 1998, provides the funding for this program. A systems benefit charge paid by customers of investor owned utilities and five municipal electric departments that have opted into the program funds the trust

CAPAC Members Denounce Senate Republicans’ Trumpcare Proposal

CAPAC Members Denounce Senate Republicans’ Trumpcare Proposal

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Senate Republicans released their proposal to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. Members of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC) released the following statements:

Congresswoman Judy Chu (CA-27), CAPAC Chair:

“After hiding from the American people, Senate Republicans have finally released their health care plan. Written in secret without any hearings, committee markups, or formal debate, the Senate’s bill is just as mean as the House’s. Under the Senate Trumpcare bill, millions will lose their insurance thanks to rising costs. Deep Medicaid cuts will hurt the poor, disabled, and elderly in nursing homes, while the new Age Tax will penalize seniors. Out of pocket costs will soar. Women across the country will lose access to essential healthcare because this bill defunds Planned Parenthood. Two million Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders will be at risk of losing critical health coverage. And Americans will once again have to pay out of pocket for basic care like prescription drugs, maternity care, and emergency services, all of which come with hefty price tags. Meanwhile, drug makers, insurance companies and the richest few will line their pockets with tax cuts paid for by cutting healthcare for the less fortunate. This is yet another heartless healthcare bill that must be rejected. Instead, I urge Republicans to join us in improving the existing healthcare system which puts a priority on covering more people so that illness or injury do not mean financial ruin.”

星期三, 6月 21, 2017

Governor Baker Addresses Commonwealth’s Commitment to Growth in Life Sciences

Governor Baker Addresses Commonwealth’s Commitment to Growth in Life Sciences
BIO International Convention To Be Hosted In Massachusetts in 2018



SAN DIEGO – Today, Governor Charlie Baker addressed the 2017 BIO International Convention to reinforce the administration’s commitment to the life sciences sector as tech and innovation firms around the globe look to expand. Governor Baker also welcomed attendees to the 2018 BIO International Convention, that will be hosted in Boston next June.

Earlier this week, the Baker-Polito Administration announced a proposal to build upon Massachusetts’ success and leadership in the life sciences sector by providing up to $500 million over five years for strategic investments in public infrastructure, research and development, workforce training and education.

The convention is hosted by the Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO) which represents more than 1,100 biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products.

For audio of the Governor’s remarks, please click here.

華人醫務中心摩頓門診中心今日破土年底啟用

華人醫務中心董事們和摩頓市市長一起動鏟。(周菊子攝)
      (Boston Orange周菊子摩頓市報導) 華人醫務中心今(21)日正式跨入摩頓市。佔地14,000平方呎,位於商業街277號的摩頓市新門診中心,今日破土動工,將斥資600萬元翻修,預定今年底開門服務。
      今年九月將慶祝成立45週年的華人醫務中心,早於2012年已在昆士市自資建成門診中心,現追隨亞裔人口,2017年進入摩頓市。
華人醫務中心董董長廖國鵬(左)和行政主任衛優俊(Eugene Welch)致詞。
(周菊子攝)
      華人醫務中心行政主任衛優俊(Eugene Welch)指出,根據2010年的人口統計調查,摩頓市的亞裔人口在全麻州排名第3,僅次於波士頓市,昆士市。該中心早於5年前已有進入摩頓市提供服務的計畫,但適當地點取得不易,幾經周折,才斥資300萬元買下商業街277號。
      摩頓市新門診中心落成後,將完全符合麻州衛生局規定,設有內科,婦產科,小兒科,驗光護理,實驗室等服務,還會有一組社工協助病人取得聯邦或州政府的醫療保險。
摩頓市市長葛帝生(Gary Christenson)(左)恭喜華人醫務中心。(周菊子攝)
      摩頓市市長葛帝生透露,華人醫務中心很早就開始籌備進摩頓市了,只是適當地點尋覓不易,就連現在這地點,都多虧摩頓計畫局(Planning Board)協助,修訂了區域規劃,才能以僅只76個停車位就取得施工許可。他也指出,諸如華林功夫太極學校余翠梅,華夏文化協會洪梅等社區機構,民眾的支持,是華人醫務中心摩頓門診得以順利啟動的大助力。
      華人醫務中心共有15名董事。今日出席破土動工儀式的董事包括本身是建築師的董事會主席廖國鵬(Nelson Liu),以及董事李炯文,余翠梅,甄翠嬿,伍振中,李錦堂,April Tang等人。
摩頓市長(後右中)和到賀的摩頓市民。(周菊子攝)
      (20)晚,華人醫務中心才舉行了該中心成立以來的第45次年會,匯報了該中心如今在波士頓市,昆士市的4個地點,以275名員工,每年為32,000名病人提供醫療服務。即將推出的摩頓市門診中心將是第5個服務地點。

伍少文在現場拍華人醫務中心記錄片。(周菊子攝)

麻州政府求便民 正翻新網站

Baker-Polito Administration Announces Redesign of Mass.gov, Seeks Public Feedback
Commonwealth’s redesigned website expected to launch by the end of 2017

BOSTON— Today, the Baker-Polito Administration announced an overhaul of the Commonwealth’s website, Mass.gov, and encouraged members of the public to visit the pilot website pilot.mass.gov and provide their feedback.

“People across Massachusetts are increasingly interacting with state government online and redesigning the Commonwealth’s digital front door will improve how we communicate with residents, businesses and visitors,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “Massachusetts is proud of our nation-leading innovation economy and we look forward to the feedback on this website.”

“Through programs like the Community Compact IT Grant program and bringing broadband to Western Massachusetts through the revamped Last Mile program, our administration has prioritized technology,” said Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito. “State government needs to work for everyone in Massachusetts, and we encourage people to visit the pilot website and provide feedback to make mass.gov a strong resource.”

The Massachusetts Office of Information Technology (MassIT) has engaged in an effort over the past year to modernize and improve mass.gov as a crucial step toward improving the state’s digital infrastructure. The project includes moving the website to a cutting-edge Drupal-based content management system, updating the look and feel, reorganizing its navigation structure, and rewriting its content to be data-driven and constituent-focused.

“We look forward to the new Mass.gov serving as a reliable, customer-service focused resource for Massachusetts residents to engage with state government – where everything from renewing your nursing license to filing your taxes will be simpler, faster, and more meaningful,” said MassIT Executive Director Mark Nunnelly. “However, we need input from the public to refine our approach. The data from this comment period will inform additional improvements to the new website.”

Pilot.mass.gov showcases the design developed for the new website, as well as fundamental content types, sample information architecture, and technological features. The website is expanding daily as employees at organizations across the Commonwealth contribute content representing their programs and services. The comment period on pilot.mass.gov will remain open for several months to allow MassIT and its partners to populate the site, evaluate user feedback, implement meaningful changes, and prepare for the launch of the full-scale redesigned Mass.gov.

The Administration anticipates a launch of the full website in the final months of 2017.