Dr. Frank Anderson
There are so many things that happen out in the world that may not make sense to people. Mindfulness and meditation provides another way to make sense of many of the things going on.
Dr. Anderson is an OBGYN physician and also teaches at the U-M Medical School and School of Public Health. He is one of the founders of Open Mindfulness Meditation that provides weekly (online right now due to the pandemic) group meditations.
He offers suggestions for using mindfulness techniques as a way to deal with all the chaos and confusion in the world, including the current pandemic. He says mindfulness techniques allow us to find a place of peace and joy within ourselves. He suggests just becoming aware of your breath mindfulness of the breath that can help settle and soothe you, and that is your ability to be mindful and can bring relief from what might currently be happening.
Midland native named new president of U-M Health System
Dec. 16, 2020
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Dr. David Miller, a Midland native, will be the new president of the University of Michigan Health System on Jan. 1, 2021 after approval earlier this month from the U-M Board of Regents. (Photo/Michigan Medicine) Show MoreShow Less
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Dr. David Miller, a Midland native, will be the new president of the University of Michigan Health System on Jan. 1, 2021 after approval earlier this month from the U-M Board of Regents.
“I am honored to take on this job and ready to work at building and enhancing the culture of collaboration, innovation, and inclusiveness at one of the nation’s top academic medical centers,” he said.
Michigan Medicine vaccinates first employees for COVID-19
ANN ARBOR, Mich. Michigan Medicine began vaccinating people against COVID-19 today with an initial group of five frontline workers.
The first employee vaccinated, Johnnie Peoples, is a registered nurse with Survival Flight, Michigan Medicine’s critical care transport program. The others who received vaccinations today are a registered nurse in the Emergency Department, a physician in Infectious Diseases, a physician in the Surgical Intensive Care Unit, and a resident physician in Internal Medicine.
Today’s initial shipment included 1,950 doses of the Pfizer Inc./BioNTech vaccine. Michigan Medicine, the academic medical center of the University of Michigan, expects to vaccinate about 40 employees beginning Tuesday and ramping up the volume further as early as next week, depending on supply
First Michigan Medicine employees receive COVID-19 vaccine
Meredith Bruckner, Community News Producer, All About Ann Arbor
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Dr. Payal Patel gets vaccinated against COVID-19 on University of Michigan s medical campus on Dec. 14, 2020. (Joe Hallisy | Michigan Medicine)
ANN ARBOR – Michigan Medicine began vaccinating its frontline workers against COVID-19 on Monday, with an initial group of five employees.
The first employee to be vaccinated was registered nurse with Survival Flight, Johnnie Peoples. Others to receive the inoculation on Monday included a physician in Infectious Diseases, a registered nurse in the Emergency Department, a physician in the Surgical Intensive Care Unit and a resident physician in Internal Medicine.
Family doctor, 104, poses with one of the hundreds of children he fathered over his 40-year career by donating his own sperm after she tracked him down with five siblings she found through DNA tests
Jaime Hall, 61, is one of six siblings who traced their paternal DNA to Dr Philip Peven, 104, via 23andMe decades after he treated each of their mothers
Hall said when she met Peven for the first time last year he admitted to inseminating her mom when he was an obstetrician/gynecologist in Detroit
She said he also claimed to have inseminated hundreds of other women, sometimes without their knowledge