The prescription for advancing health sciences

Do you love the idea of researchers being able to spend more time on their research and less time on paperwork?

free-the-researchers

About the Authors

Dr. J. Patrick "President Pat" Vandersluis is our fearless leader here at HealthRx. He spends much of his time learning about and researching cardiology, bioengineering, medical informatics, and health IT. Someday Pat plans to write a novel that has nothing to do with any of those things. In his little free time, he enjoys Battlestar Galactica, home improvement, How It's Made, and circus peanuts. Say hi to Pat on email or LinkedIn.

Kelly Morgan is our Director of Marketing and Communication. She is a health communication researcher and Ph.D. candidate, adjunct professor, and a fitness instructor outside of HealthRx. Kelly has also been "fixin' to" finish writing a novel for the last five years, but prefers talking about it to doing it. She also enjoys party stores, ghost stories, fashion mags, The Simpsons, and ginger tea. Holler at Kelly on email, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Facebook, or Twitter.

Patrick Walsh is our COO. He directs operations from our offices in Myrtle Beach (tough duty) and cracks the whip when the rest of us start going down rat holes. Pat is crazy for golf at its highest level (so the Golf Channel is a favorite), American history, classic movies, fast cars (as they go by), and an occasional Rocky Patel and cognac. Send your love to Pat by email .

Eric Morgan is our Director of Advanced Technologies. He specializes in iPad development, but willingly dabbles in less exciting "hacking" as well. In his spare time, Eric brews beer and occupies Micro Center. Eric loves sci-fi, fast cars, Batman, and fancying himself as an Ancient Alien Astronaut Theorist. Transmit geeky messeges to Eric on email or LinkedIn.

Lauren Spengler is our Customer Support Manager.  She spends her time guiding researchers down the easiest path to solving their problems. Lauren has also spearheaded our healthy company fitness initiative! She is a proud cat lady who loves bowling, live music, crafting, indoor rock climbing, painting, and being an advocate for women's health. Tell her all your secrets by email.

Jackson Sunuwar is one of our Software Developers. Outside of work, he plays soccer and cranks up his Xbox with Fifa and Halo. When he wants to show his artsy side, Jackson works on his photography skills with some sweet Nikon cameras and taps into his inner Jason Mraz by playing soft rock/acoustic on his guitar. Send a song request his way by email.

Dylan Pullia is a Software Development Intern. He is currently studying Computer Science at George Mason University and aspires to start his own software company. Outside of work, Dylan likes to play paintball, video games, and work on his own programming projects. Interface with Dylan by email or on Skype at dylan.pulliam.

Subscribe via E-mail

Your email:

Join Us on Social Media!

The Health Sciences Spotlight

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

What exactly is health sciences research?

  
  
  

The term “health sciences” refers to the multiple disciplines that deal with issues of human and animal health, including “biomedical, psychosocial, organizational, and societal aspects of health, disease and health care” (University of Twente, 2010). The health sciences field is divided into two parts: research and application (Penn State, Hershey, n.d.).

Applications of health sciences knowledge are driven by research. The applications include interventions, campaigns, and programs to “improve health, prevent and cure diseases, and understand how humans and animals function” (Penn State, Hershey, n.d.). Health sciences research focuses on acquiring knowledge based on the basic sciences as well as subcategories of those sciences like biochemistry, biotechnology, engineering, epidemiology, genetics, nursing, pharmacology, pharmacy, public health, psychology, physical therapy, and medicine (Penn State, Hershey, n.d.). Health sciences research can be conducted at Government and Government-funded facilities, universities, and contract research organizations (CROs).

beakersKelly Vandersluis Morgan

 

 


Tags: ,

Comments

Currently, there are no comments. Be the first to post one!
Post Comment
Name
 *
Email
 *
Website (optional)
Comment
 *

Allowed tags: <a> link, <b> bold, <i> italics