Latest Chan Division News
Faculty
8 Trojans to be honored with OTAC awards ⟩
September 27, 2017
Alumni Associations and Bodies Awards Conferences Faculty
By Mike McNulty Eight Trojans have been named recipients of annual awards presented by the Occupational Therapy Association of California, a non-profit professional society that represents the interests of the more than 15,000 occupational therapy practitioners working in California. Associate Chair…
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Leland earns record $4.7M to compare models for nursing home residents with Alzheimer’s, dementia ⟩
August 17, 2017
Associations and Bodies Awards Chan in the Media Clinical Community and Partners Faculty Research
Five-year PCORI contract is largest single award in USC Chan Division history
By Mike McNulty / USC Today More than half of America’s 1.4 million nursing home residents have Alzheimer’s disease or dementia. On any given day in any of the thousands of nursing homes across the country, medications need adjusting and activities require adapting as residents are monitored for…
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New research shows occupational therapy helps people in pain ⟩
July 19, 2017
Chan in the Media Clinical Faculty Lifestyle Redesign Research
Lifestyle treatment for chronic pain management improves quality of life, confidence and function
By Mike McNulty / USC Today A new study from the USC Chan Division of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy shows that lifestyle-based occupational therapy treatment significantly improves the experiences of people living with chronic pain. “Having quantitative evidence for occupational…
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China Initiative Visits Beijing and Guiyang | June 2017 ⟩
June 27, 2017
China Initiative Community and Partners Conferences Faculty Lectures and Talks Students
Purpose To meet with China Initiative partners and attend the “3rd Annual Conference of Rehabilitation Medicine Society of China International Exchange and Promotion Association for Medicine and Healthcare” highlighted with a keynote address by China Initiative Director Julie McLaughlin Gray.…
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Occupational therapy helps young adults with diabetes ⟩
June 21, 2017
Associations and Bodies Chan in the Media Conferences Faculty Lectures and Talks Lifestyle Redesign
By Miriam E. Tucker/Medscape An occupational therapy intervention can help improve HbA1c and improve quality of life in young adults with diabetes, new research finds. Results from the randomized, controlled Resilient, Empowered Active Living (REAL) diabetes study were presented June 11 here at the…
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Virtual Reality Rehab ⟩
June 13, 2017
Faculty Research Technology
Assistant professor Sook-Lei Liew MA ’08, PhD ’12 is exploring new brain-computer interfaces that connect stroke survivors to the worlds of tech and medicine.
By Katharine Gammon For people recovering from a stroke, even the simplest motions can become a struggle. To lift a hand, for example, requires a signal from the brain that travels all the way down an arm to the hand. That’s a lot of moving parts — and when something is damaged, it makes…
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Building better doctor’s visits for adults with autism ⟩
April 20, 2017
Autism Clinical Conferences Events Faculty Research
Newly funded study aims to improve primary health care encounters of autistic adults
By Mike McNulty/USC Today Challenges with communication, environmental factors and decision-making processes can add to the anxiety of a doctor's visit for a person with autism./Photo by Martin Kenny (Flickr) During his first visit to the doctor’s office, Bobby fled from the waiting room, ran…
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Mattingly among three USC faculty honored as 2017 Guggenheim Fellows ⟩
April 12, 2017
Awards Chan in the Media Faculty Research
Fellowship to support writing new book on stigma
By Mike McNulty with Susan Bell and Ian Geckler/USC Today Professor Cheryl Mattingly Professor Cheryl Mattingly has been honored with a 2017 Guggenheim Fellowship, one of only three USC faculty members to receive the prestigious award. She joins a diverse cohort of 173 scholars, artists and…
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The people who make you look good are suffering ⟩
March 7, 2017
Chan in the Media Clinical Faculty Health and Wellness Research
By Monica Luhar/Vice.com "For tattoo artists, hair stylists or anybody holding a device with the tendons contracted and potentially flexing or holding against resistance, that nerve might be getting compressed over time," says Shawn Roll, assistant professor of Occupational Science and Occupational…
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Clinical professor Katie Jordan helps score profession-wide victory ⟩
March 6, 2017
Associations and Bodies Chan in the Media Clinical Faculty
AOTA advocacy success: Evaluation payments expected to rise as CMS corrects error
Last week, clinical professor Katie Jordan met with representatives from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to raise concerns on behalf of the American Occupational Therapy Association regarding what was believed to be an error resulting in decreased Medicare reimbursements for…
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