Exercise Your Mind At The New UCSF Osher Lifelong Learning Institute


The UCSF Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) starts in October with a
series of classes aimed at adults over the age of 50 who remain curious,
thoughtful, and in search of new ideas.

One OLLI course offers the opportunity to meet UCSF authors of best-selling
books -- from crime mysteries, to a guide for reading the emotions behind facial
expressions. Another examines medicine in the short story.

Fans of the crime scene investigation shows popping up on television can learn
the science of forensic medicine directly from the experts in another OLLI
course.

Topics ranging from pain management to dietary supplements are examined in a
course offered by UCSF scientists who study the use of consumer drugs.

In a course called "The Bionic Man and Woman," UCSF experts reveal the latest
in replacement parts and new technology to keep our original parts healthy --
from eyes to knees.

A course in alternative medicine asks what really works among alternative
therapies. How do scientists separate the hype from the hits? The classes
provide an introduction to several major alternative health systems led by
experts in the field of integrative medicine.

The program begins October 8 with classes on Wednesday and Thursday evenings
from 7 to 9 pm and continues for six weeks at UCSF's Parnassus Avenue and Mount
Zion sites. Tuition for each 6-week course is $75, with a limited number of
need-based scholarships available. Call (415) 476-3438, send an email to
lifelonglearning@ucsf.edu for information, or visit the website at
lifelonglearning.ucsf.edu.

Presentations will include an hour-long formal presentation and 30 minutes for
questions and discussion.

OLLI offers participants the simple pleasure of learning -- no tests or grades.
Teachers include many faculty members from the world-renowned UCSF Schools of
Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing and Pharmacy, the UCSF Medical Center and other
experts drawn from the community.

Sponsored by a grant from the Bernard Osher Foundation with support from the
Mount Zion Health Fund, the program offers Bay Area residents unique access to
the wealth of educational resources at UCSF.

The program is designed with an aging Bay Area population in mind. The region'
s over-55 population is predicted to double to more than 2 million by the year
2020, placing almost one in four people in the nine-county region in this age
group.


FALL COURSES


MEDICINE AND THE SHORT STORY

Wednesdays, 7 - 9 pm
UCSF Parnassus campus, 513 Parnassus Ave., San Francisco

"Medicine and the Short Story" will sample the wealth of literature that
provides humanistic connections to current and classical issues in medicine,
with a particular focus on the short story. Specific authors and stories for
discussion will be announced when the class begins meeting.

An opportunity for creative writing will supplement assigned readings and allow
for a more personal exploration of the unique relationship between doctors and
patients.

Course Director
Bonnie Rosenberg, MD, an internist in private practice in Mountain View and a
member of the volunteer faculty at UCSF, is actively involved with teaching
medical students. She has taught literature and medicine courses in the UCSF
School of Medicine to medical students and residents.



UNDERSTANDING MODERN MEDICATIONS: HOT TOPICS IN PHARMACY

Wednesdays, 7 - 9 pm, UCSF Parnassus campus, 513 Parnassus Ave.

Oct. 8: "What Everyone Needs to Know About Managing Pain Effectively" -- Robert
Miller, PharmD, a graduate of the UCSF School of Pharmacy and pain management
practitioner in private practice in South San Francisco.

Oct. 15: "Inappropriate Antibiotic Use and the Risk of Bacterial Infection" --
B. Joseph Guglielmo, PharmD, UCSF professor and vice chair of clinical pharmacy

Oct. 22: "Deciding on Hormonal Options for Menopause" -- Cathi Dennehy, PharmD,
UCSF assistant professor of clinical pharmacy

Oct. 29: "Current Issues in Tobacco Cessation" -- Lisa Kroon, PharmD, UCSF
associate clinical professor of clinical pharmacy, and Karen Hudmon, DrPH, MS,
RPh, UCSF assistant clinical professor of clinical pharmacy

Nov. 5: "Genes and Drugs: How Knowledge About Your Genes Can Improve Your Use
of Drugs" -- Kathryn Phillips, PhD, UCSF associate clinical professor of
clinical pharmacy, and Bernard Shen, MD

Nov. 12: "Consumers and the Dietary Supplement Marketplace" -- Candy
Tsourounis, PharmD, UCSF associate clinical professor of clinical pharmacy



CONVERSATIONS WITH UCSF AUTHORS

Wednesdays, 7 - 9 pm, UCSF Parnassus campus, 513 Parnassus Ave.

Oct. 8: "Better Than Prozac: Creating the Next Generation of Psychiatric Drugs"
-- Samuel Barondes, MD, Robertson professor of psychiatry and director of the
UCSF Center for Neurobiology and Psychiatry, will describe the origins,
benefits and limitations of widely used psychiatric drugs such as Prozac. He
will go on to show how the discovery of the genetic variations that predispose
certain people to severe mental disorders will change the way that psychiatric
drugs are made and prescribed, and will guide the development of better
treatments.

Oct. 15: "The Piano Tuner" -- Daniel Mason, UCSF medical student. A
best-selling debut novel, "The Piano Tuner" tells the story of Edgar Drake, who
travels to a civil war-torn Burma in 1886 on a mysterious mission to repair a
rare grand piano

Oct. 22: "The Pathway: Follow the Road to Health and Happiness" -- Laurel
Mellin, MA, RD, UCSF associate clinical professor of family and community
medicine and pediatrics. Mellin's books discuss how to find the way out of our
tendency toward excess and toward health and happiness by mastering two skills
-- self-nurturing and effective limits.

Oct. 29: "My Grandfathers Blessings: Stories of Strength, Refuge, and
Belonging" -- Rachel Naomi Remen, MD, UCSF clinical professor of family and
community medicine, is also the author of "Kitchen Table Wisdom: Stories That
Heal." Remen's talk, entitled "The Art of Living," will discuss how we may
find meaning in the second half of life and the role of altruism, generosity
and service in establishing a sense of worth and personal power.

Nov. 5: "Emotions Revealed: Recognizing Faces and Feelings to Improve
Communication and Emotional Life" -- Paul Ekman, PhD, UCSF professor of
psychiatry. CDs that improve sensitivity to emotional communication will be
demonstrated.

Nov. 12: "Triplet Code" -- Frances M. Brodsky, DPhil, UCSF professor of
biopharmaceutical sciences, pharmaceutical chemistry, and microbiology &
immunology. Brodsky's mystery novels, written under the pen name B.B. Jordan,
are meant to describe the workings of academic science, as well as to
entertain. They illustrate that the process of scientific enquiry is not
dissimilar to criminal investigation.



COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE: AN EXPLORATION OF POPULAR THERAPIES

Wednesdays, 7 - 9 pm, UCSF Parnassus campus, 513 Parnassus Ave.

Oct. 8: "Integrative Medicine: An Overview" (with an introduction to herbal
medicine and homeopathy) -- Ellen Hughes, MD, PhD, UCSF clinical professor of
medicine and director of education at UCSF's Osher Center for Integrative
Medicine

Oct. 15: "Traditional Chinese Medicine: Acupuncture, Meridians, & Chi" --
Beverly Burns, MS, LAc, a Chinese medicine practitioner specializing in women's
health and cancer. She maintains a private practice in San Francisco, works as
an acupuncturist at the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, and serves as
part of a multidisciplinary team participating in research for women with
breast cancer at the UCSF Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Oct. 22: "Mind-body Medicine: Reducing Stress, Enhancing Your Life" -- Kevin
Barrows, MD, UCSF assistant clinical professor in the department of family and
community medicine and director of the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction
program at the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine.

Oct. 29: "Manual Medicine: A 'Hands-on' Approach to Healing" -- Harley
Goldberg, DO, director of complementary and alternative medicine for Kaiser
Permanente Northern California Medical Care Program and chief of complementary
medicine at Santa Teresa Medical Center in San Jose

Nov. 5: "Understanding Ayurveda: Ancient Medicine for Contemporary Living" --
Reenita Malhotra, Ayur Virashad, an Ayurvedic clinician, entrepreneur, and
founder and CEO of Ayoma LifeSpa.

Nov. 12: "Energy Medicine: An Overview" -- Judith Sweet, RN, MS, FNP, UCSF
assistant clinical professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine

Nov. 19: "Integrative Models of Care" -- Bradly Jacobs, MD, MPH, UCSF assistant
clinical professor of medicine and medical director at the Osher Center for
Integrative Medicine



THE BIONIC MAN AND WOMAN: USING NEW TECHNOLOGY TO STAY FUNCTIONAL

Wednesdays, 7 - 9 pm, UCSF Parnassus campus, 513 Parnassus Ave.

Oct. 8: "The ABCs of Aging, Bifocals and Cataracts" -- Stephen McLeod, MD, UCSF
assistant professor of clinical ophthalmology and co-director of the refractive
surgery service.

Oct. 15: "Dental Implants vs. Dentures -- How to Choose the Best Cosmetic
Dentistry Alternative" -- Arun Sharma, BDS, MSC UCSF assistant clinical
professor of preventative and restorative dental sciences.

Oct 22: "New Developments in Hearing Aids and Auditory Training" -- Robert W.
Sweetow, PhD, UCSF professor of otolaryngology and director of audiology.

Oct. 29: "Use It or Lose It -- Feel Younger with Exercise" -- Bree Johnston, MD,
UCSF associate clinical professor of geriatrics, and Nancy Byl, PhD, PT, UCSF
professor and chair of physical therapy and rehabilitation science.

Nov 5: "New Advances in Hip and Knee Replacement Surgery: How Far We've Come"
-- Kevin J. Bozic, MD, MBA, UCSF assistant professor of surgery.

Nov 12: "New Techniques for the Management of Common Spinal Conditions in the
Aging Population" -- Sigurd Berven, MD, UCSF assistant professor of orthopedic
surgery.



FORENSIC MEDICINE: THE SCIENCE OF CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATION

Thursdays, 7 - 9 pm, UCSF Mount Zion, 1600 Divisadero St.

Speakers

Oct. 9: Heather Pringle, a science journalist and author of "The Mummy
Congress," an examination of the long and bizarre history of human obsession
with the preserved dead.

Oct. 16: Jessica Snyder, a science journalist and author of "Corpse: Nature,
Forensics, and the Struggle to Pinpoint Time of Death," an exploration of the
means by which pathologists measure the interval between death and a body's
discovery.

Oct. 23: Mary Roach, author of "Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers,"
which includes chapters on embalming, the use of the dead to test vehicles for
safety, forensic pathology, donor transplants, and cremation.

Oct. 30: Steven Karch, MD, assistant medical examiner for the City and County
of San Francisco, is an authority on the effects of drug abuse on the heart and
has published nine books on the subject of drug abuse. He lectures frequently
on the investigation of drug-related deaths.

Nov. 6: Clyde Snow, PhD, a leading medical anthropologist who helped pioneer
forensic law, biological anthropology, and human rights, and is the only
full-time consultant in forensic anthropology in the United States.

Nov. 13: Alison Galloway, PhD, D-ABFA, a forensic consultant and professor of
anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.