2012CAHM
                
JUNE 26

NCAHM NEWS & NOTES
                                              
 
Wayne Brady Receives Heritage Award for Outstanding Work in Television


 

In celebration of June as National Caribbean-American Heritage Month, the Caribbean Heritage Organization hosted The 2014 Caribbean Heritage Salute to Hollywood & Excellence Gala on June 20th which saw Wayne Brady receiving a Heritage Award for Outstanding Work in Television. Other honorees were Val Boreland, Olun Riley, Nicole Bernard & Cleveland Neil.

As a result of the congressional resolution to celebrate June as National Caribbean-American Heritage Month, in 2007 Marva Herman founded the Caribbean Heritage Organization, Inc. (CHO), which produces the official Los Angeles event.In addition to serving as executive director of the CHO, she is the West Coast Representative for the Institute of Caribbean Studies (ICS). 


Wayne Brady receives Caribbean Heritage Award
Wayne Brady speaks about his award  while President of ICS Dr. Claire A. Nelson & Marva Herman, Founder of CHO make use of a photo opportunity in the background.
 

WALL OF FAME
 
 
Dr. Velma Scantlebury
 
   
 

 

Hands too small to be a Surgeon?

  

 

Dr Velma Scantlebury, the United States' first African American female transplant Surgeon and Associate Director of the Kidney Transplant Programme in Delaware at Christiana Care Health System, has performed more than 800 transplants in children and adults.


Born in Goodland, St Michael, Barbados, she spent three years at Alleyne School in St Andrew, before migrating to New York in 1969 with her parents. She completed her high school education at the Prospect Heights High School at Classon Avenue in Brooklyn, New York. She went on to Long Island University in 1973 to read for a Bachelor's Degree in Biology, graduating in 1977 and moving to Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. She earned her Medical Degree from Columbia University, followed by an internship and residency in General Surgery at Harlem Hospital Centre in New York.


She completed her fellowship training in Transplantation Surgery at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Centre, and continued her career in transplantation under the leadership of Dr Thomas Starzl from 1988 to 2002.


In 1989, Scantlebury became an Assistant Professor and later an Associate Professor at the University of Pittsburgh and in 2002, she was recruited from the University of Pittsburgh, one of the top transplant centres in the world, to the University of South Alabama. While at the University of South Alabama, Scantlebury was appointed Professor of Surgery and Director of the University of South Alabama's Gulf Coast Regional Transplant Centre. Throughout her exceptional career, she has performed more than 200 living donor transplants and more than 500 deceased donor kidney transplants in children and adults, according to USA Medicine.


As the co-author of more than 85 medical papers, 10 monographs and book chapters, Dr. Velma Scantlebury is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, a member of the American Society of Transplant Surgeons and the American Society of Minority Health and Transplant Professionals.

 

An active educator in the field of African-American organ donation, she has served on the board for the American Society of Minority Health and Transplant Professionals and as a spokesperson for Linkages to Life, an organization that encourages African-Americans to become organ donors. She continues to mentor young students and residents, and encourages them to "reach for the stars" and follow their dreams.


Dr. Scantelbury was once told her hands were too small to be a surgeon. The discouraging remarks only encouraged her to speak to children about achieving their goals no matter what; most likely a teaching from her own mentor, Dr. Barbara Barlow, a Pediatric surgeon. It is because Dr. Barlow took the time to teach her the ins-and-outs of surgery, and used her network to move her forward, that the doctor is the top surgeon she is today.

 

 

http://blackamericaweb.com/2013/10/25/little-known-black-history-fact-dr-velma-scantlebury/ 

http://www.nationnews.com/articles/view/black-history-month-dr-velma-scantlebury-white/



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The Boiling Lake in 
Dominica is the second largest boiling lake in the world, with temperatures that hover between 82 and 92C (180 and 197F)
 
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