Westbrook College of Health Professions

Westbrook College of Health Professions Jennifer Morton, DNP, MPH, PHNA-BC
Dean of the UNE Westbrook College of Health Professions

Hello,The Occupational Therapy Department is holding a Retirement Celebration for four distinguished OT faculty: Dr. Jan...
04/27/2023

Hello,

The Occupational Therapy Department is holding a Retirement Celebration for four distinguished OT faculty: Dr. Jane O’Brien, Dr. Kathryn Loukas, Dr. Regi Robnett, and Professor Jan Froehlich and you are invited! Please RSVP by so we can plan accordingly. The party will take place on Wednesday, May 17, 2023 from 4-5:30pm in the Alumni Hall Newberry Room on the Portland Campus. Please RSVP via this link: https://forms.gle/C6qcABQbMeyFhGYx7 If you have any sentiments to share with these individuals and their influence in your professional and/or personal lives, please be in touch. Our Staff Assistant, Natalie Perry ([email protected]) would love to hear from you. Please send cards to: (Retiree Name) UNE Occupational Therapy Department, c/o Natalie Perry 716 Stevens Avenue—Proctor Hall 320 Portland, ME 04103 We will share cards and sentiments (for their eyes only!) with them during their Retirement Celebration on May 17, 2023. Hope to see you there!

University of New England - Occupational Therapy

01/03/2023

UNE School of Pharmacy is pleased to announce, Dr. Ravi Vumma, as the new Clinical Associate Professor of Pharmacology who joined our School of Pharmacy family on November 28th. Dr. Vumma previously served as Associate Professor at Linnaeus University and Örebro University in Sweden.
He is joining us with over ten years of Pharmacology teaching experience, in Biomedicine, Medicine, Pharmacy and Optometry Degree Programs. He will be a member of the School of Pharmacy Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Administration and he will be providing Pharmacology and other related didactic teaching support in our curriculum.
His Research experiences are in areas of Neuro-immuno-pharmacology, Nutrition Gut Brain Interactions, Neuropsychiatric Disorders and Urinary Tract Infections by using human cells as In-vitro models. Welcome Dr. Ravi Vumma! 💊

01/03/2023

Lilia Brooks, Rebekah Guay, Victoria Mitchell, and Ifeoma Ogbodo from the Class of 2023 presented results of their research with Dr. George Allen at the ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting and Exhibition.

01/03/2023

Information Courtesy of Dennis Brown, DrPH, PA-C, Program Director and Associate Clinical Professor, University of New England PA Program

01/03/2023
12/01/2022
Jim Cavanaugh co-authors publication on walking performance in individuals with Parkinson’s diseaseJim Cavanaugh, PT, Ph...
12/01/2022

Jim Cavanaugh co-authors publication on walking performance in individuals with Parkinson’s disease
Jim Cavanaugh, PT, Ph.D., professor in the Department of Physical Therapy, is a co-author on a new publication entitled “Does clinically measured walking capacity contribute to real-world walking performance in people with Parkinson’s disease?”

The work represents a baseline data analysis conducted as part of a five-year, dual-site, National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded clinical trial (“Walking and mHealth to Increase Participation in Parkinson Disease”), on which Cavanaugh is a co-investigator.

According to the researchers, walking limitations are one of the most disabling features of Parkinson’s disease (PD) and a primary reason for seeking rehabilitation services. Studies have shown that, even in early disease progression, those with PD demonstrate a 12% reduction in daily steps and 40% reduction in daily moderate intensity walking minutes over one year when compared to their non-PD older adult counterparts.

“Such decline is particularly concerning given that walking at higher intensities may produce substantial health benefits and have disease-modifying effects,” the researchers assert. “Moreover, PD interventions incorporating real-world walking practice show promise for improving function, reducing disability, and slowing the expected natural decline in daily walking activity.”

According to Cavanaugh, when developing walking exercise programs for their patients with PD, physical therapists rely on clinical measures of walking capacity to make inferences about real-world walking behavior. He said the validity of such inferences, however, is not clear.

To better understand the issue, the purpose of the study was to determine the contribution of clinically measured walking capacity in persons with PD to their walking performance at home and in the community.

For the study, participants with mild to moderate idiopathic PD were assessed using two tests of walking capacity — the 6-minute walk test (6MWT), a measure of walking distance over a period of six minutes, and the 10-meter walk test (10MWT), a measure of gait speed. Participants’ real-world walking performance over the course of one week was assessed using a small device that measured the amount and intensity of their walking.

Ultimately, the researchers found that walking capacity contributed to, but explained a relatively small portion of the variance in, real-world walking performance, and that the contribution was somewhat greater in less active individuals.

“The study adds support to the idea that clinically measured walking capacity may have limited benefit for understanding real-world walking performance in PD,” they concluded. “Factors beyond walking capacity may better account for actual walking behavior.”

12/01/2022
11/18/2022

Congratulations to our third years for winning the intramural volleyball championship game! A well deserved win 🥇 🏐

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716 Stevens Avenue
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04103

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