UWS Welcomes Dr. Clyde Jensen

Clyde JensenOn July 1, 2012, Dr. Clyde B. Jensen joined the University of Western States as Vice-President of University Relations. Dr. Jensen will develop new and refine such existing University functions as fund raising, Alumni and governmental affairs, community and industry relations and collaborations with higher education and health professions organizations. Dr. Jensen, who holds a Ph.D. in pharmacology and physiology will also teach Clinical Pharmacology and assist as needed with the development of additional courses and programs.

Dr. Jensen is a veteran higher education executive who is regarded for his success in transforming health sciences institutions and fostering collaboration among conventional and complementary health care professions.

He is the only person to have served as the president of colleges of allopathic, osteopathic, naturopathic and oriental medicine. For the past eight years he has served as a public member of the Council on Chiropractic Education and currently serves as a public member of the Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education.

Among his accomplishments are the merger of the Oklahoma College of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery with Oklahoma State University, planning and fund raising that contributed to the formation of the University of Oklahoma Campus in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the relocation of the National College of Natural Medicine (NCNM) to its permanent campus and the formation of the American Association of Naturopathic Medical Colleges, and the preservation of the Sint Eustatius School of Medicine (Netherland Antilles) following the loss of student financial aid at foreign medical schools. Dr. Jensen has also served as a consultant in the natural products industry where he contributed to the organization of research, product development and university relations at Standard Process, Inc.

Dr. Jensen and his wife, Marteen, live in Happy Valley. They are the parents of three children and have eleven grandchildren.

First Annual Massage Therapy Summer Social

Alumni, students, staff, and prospective students brought their families to campus for the first annual Massage Program Summer Social on August 19. The event gathered 84 people to celebrate the UWS Massage Therapy community. Live music set the stage for a lively atmosphere in which kids and adults alike enjoyed face painting, a photo booth, games and raffles, and a delicious meal.

Time to Rodeo! Master’s students lend a hand at Canby Rodeo

The Master of Science in Exercise and Sports Science program helped WMI and ProActive this past weekend at the Clackamas County Fair and Rodeo in Canby, OR. Many students and faculty members attended and tended to injuries and aches of the rodeo contestants and staff.

Enjoy some photos from the Saturday night rodeo:

 

Master’s student Josie Ball waits behind the chutes of the arena, ready to tend to any injuries.

 

Master’s fellow, William Martindale, tapes an ankle of a competitor before the rodeo begins.

 

Master’s student Josie Ball helps wrap the shoulder of a bull fighter just before the bull riding begins.

A Look at Shepherd’s Door – Portland Rescue Misison

Jill at Shepherd's DoorAfter a car accident with her two sons brought her to realize she needed help with her life and alcoholism, Jill came to Shepherd’s door on 132nd and Halsey in October of 2011.

Through the assistance of Shepherd’s Door, Jill has been sober and upon graduation, plans to work as a medical assistant and go to school part time to get her nursing degree.

“A lot of the programs have helped me learn how to process things differently and the parenting classes have helped me realize I’m not alone,” Jill says. “There is so much support and I couldn’t have been sober still if not for Shepherds Door.”

A part of the Russell Neighborhood community since the mid-1990s and the Women and Children’s Division of the Portland Rescue Mission, Shepherd’s Door is a residential community that helps dozens of women and children each year. Though it offers educational programs, parenting classes, childcare and resources to its residents, Shepherd’s door also provides community childcare and continued support to graduates of the program.

The University of Western States, committed to improving the quality of human life, has partnered with Shepherd’s Door to donate food from the Chiro Cafe. University students have also assisted with yard work and have future plans of involvement.

“Shepherd’s Door transforms women’s lives and has changed so many people,” Jill says. “They equip people to live life and deal with life appropriately.”

To support Shepherd’s Door or get involved, they are always looking for volunteers and you can learn more at www.portlandrescuemission.org and click on Women & Children.

For the week of July 30 to August 3rd, the ASB is running a Sock Drive in collaboration with the Portland Rescue Mission and Shepherd’s Door! Bring new socks to UWS Student Services to help out!

Exercise and Sports Science students treat athletes at Nike Tennis event

The 113th annual GPTC Nike Tennis Championships of Oregon was held July 10th-15th in Portland.

The GPTC Nike Tennis Championships of Oregon is so large is must be played at 3 facilities: the Open and NTRP Divisions at the Tualatin Hills Tennis Center, the Senior Men’s Divisions at Mt. Park Racquet Club, and the Senior Women’s Divisions at the West Hills Racquet & Fitness Club.

University of Western States Master’s of Exercise and Sports Science program interns performed a variety of treatments for participants including taping, stretching, chiropractic care and minor first aid.

Nike Tennis

Nike Tennis Event

Public Comment Requested for New Administrative Rules in Oregon Healthcare

New administrative rules concerning the role of chiropractic physicians, naturopathic physicians, osteopathic physicians, and nurse practitioners as primary care providers within coordinated care organizations will be soon addressed by the Oregon Health Authority.

This is vitally important, especially in where the profession of chiropractic is headed and the role of chiropractic physicians as primary care providers.

Chiropractic physicians (who wish to) practice at the top of their licensure in Oregon can act in the capacity of a primary care provider/physician. A coalition of health care providers (the Oregon Coordinated Care Organization) was able to get this into the proposed rules concerning coordinated care organizations, but the wording is convoluted and needs clarifying language.

The proposed rule language states under “410-141-3160 Integration and Care Coordination, (2)(a) Demonstrate that each member has a primary care provider or primary team that is responsible for coordination of care and transitions and that each member has the option to choose a primary care of any eligible CCO participating provider type.” We suggest adding clarifying language which states; “An eligible CCO provider type means a health care provider who can provide primary services which include chiropractic, naturopathic, osteopathic, or medical physician or a nurse practitioner.”

We used the term “primary care provider” instead of “primary care physician” to help out our coalition member nurse practitioners.

Your public testimony is needed to help get this vital clarifying language in the rules added.

Please email public comments to: [email protected] in favor of the clarifying language, “An eligible CCO provider type means a health care provider who can provide primary services which include chiropractic, naturopathic, osteopathic, or medical physician or a nurse practitioner.”

Public testimony ends July 22, so please send your public comments by July 21.

– Contributions to this made by Dr. Vern Saboe

UWS Researcher’s Poster Awarded at OHSU Pain Day

Researchers at UWSResearchers from the University of Western States were given the “Best Poster” Award from the 2012 Oregon Health and Science University Pain Day at the Vey Conference Center at Doernbecher Children’s Hospital on February 28.

Sponsored by the OHSU Schools of Nursing and Dentistry, Offices of the Provost and Vice-President for Research, Knight Cancer Institute, and OCTRI, the event included workshops, poster displays and social hour.

The Best Poster Award was selected for outstanding research and compelling results, said Darcy Vavrek, ND.  The poster, “Dose-Response and Efficacy of Spinal Manipulation for Low Back Pain: Short-Term Outcomes from a Randomized Trial” was completed by Mitchell Haas, DC, MA, Darcy Vavrek, ND, MS, David Peterson, DC, (all from UWS and pictured left) and Mikel Aickin, PhD,b (from the University of Arizona.)

Dr. Vavrek and Dr. Haas also presented their poster, “A Causal Model for Expectancy Effects in an Open-Label Randomized Trial of Manual Therapy for the Care of Cervicogenic Headache” by Mitchell Haas, DC, MA, Mikel Aickin, PhD (from University of Arizona), and Darcy Vavrek, ND, MS.

Alumnus Dr. Nicholas Opie Honored by NBCE

Greeley, Colo. – Nicholas G. Opie, D.C., was honored recently for 10 years as a National Board of Chiropractic Examiners (NBCE) Part IV test committee member. Dr. Opie represents Hawaii at annual sessions to review patient case scenarios and select case-related questions for upcoming Part IV exams.

A graduate of Western States Chiropractic College (WSCC), Dr. Opie has a long history of service to the NBCE also including service as a Part IV examiner, a voting delegate at annual business meetings, and a test committee member for the NBCE’s Part III Examination and post-licensure Ethics and Boundaries Examination. NBCE Director of Practical Testing Research and Development Dr. Paul Townsend said, “We owe a debt of gratitude to Dr. Opie for his dedication and commitment to this organization. NBCE’s Parts III and IV examinations focus on the practitioner’s knowledge and ability to perform in a chiropractic setting. Dr. Opie’s devotion to the profession and his experience as a practitioner make him ideally suited to serve on these test committees. We could not do our jobs without individuals, such as Dr. Opie, who are truly committed to testing excellence.”

The governor of Hawaii has appointed Dr. Opie to serve three terms on the Hawaii State Board of Chiropractic Examiners; he is currently chair of that board. In 1998 he was elected to the Distinguished Fellows of the International Chiropractors Association, an organization that he began serving while enrolled at WSCC.

Headquartered in Greeley, Colo., the NBCE is the international testing organization for the chiropractic profession. Established in 1963, the NBCE develops, administers and scores legally defensible, standardized written and practical examinations for candidates seeking chiropractic licensure throughout the United States and in many foreign countries.

Shown in the photo: Mr. Horace Elliott, Dr. Paul Townsend, Dr. Nicholas Opie, Dr. Norman Ouzts.

Former WSCC President Dr. Vear passes

Dr Vear. Herbert VearDR. HERBERT JAMES MORTLOCK VEAR, former Western States Chiropractic College president, and a respected leader in the chiropractic profession passed away peacefully February 2, 2012 at the age of 87 years. Dr. Vear had a long and integral role in the development of what is now the University of Western States and will be greatly missed in the health care community.

Dr. Vear led Western States Chiropractic College through one of its most difficult periods.  In July 1979, Dr. Vear was appointed President of WSCC. WSCC had just lost its accreditation by the Council on Chiropractic Education the month before, but Dr. Vear refused to accept CCE’s decision without a fight.  In late January 1981, Vear and his team of representatives appeared before the CCE Commission on Accreditation. The college had submitted the best Self-Study it had ever written and the Commission on Accreditation granted Western States Chiropractic College accredited status for a period of three years. In 1982 Dr. Vear submitted an application for regional accreditation through the Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges, a recognition the college received shortly thereafter and enjoys to this day.

Under Dr. Vear’s guidance, WSCC established its reputation within the profession as a leader in chiropractic academics, including research and teaching. It was under Dr. Vear that WSCC lead the 1980 formation of the Chiropractic Library Consortium and its Index to the Chiropractic Literature, an important source work for the chiropractic periodic literature.

Dr. Vear is one of the two individuals most strongly responsible for the 1984 policy revision of the American Public Health Association (APHA) toward chiropractic. In collaboration with Rand Baird, M.P.H., D.C., Dr. Vear was able to persuade the APHA to soften its stance toward chiropractic, and chiropractors were admitted as professional members. It was an important step in the legitimization of chiropractic, and in establishing working relations with a wide range of health service providers. Dr. Vear was elected to APHA’s Governing Council for 1985-86 and again during 1989-1992. He served as chairman of the APHA’s Chiropractic Forum during 1989-1991.

Dr. Vear’s positive influence on UWS and the chiropractic profession cannot be overstated. For a more-in-depth look at the life and career of Dr. Vear, please take a few minutes to read a short biography posted here .