DAY 5

Today was a bit different, as I spent almost the entire day over at the hospital.  I began the morning by meeting with the CFO and CEO of the hospital, which was a highly intriguing experience.  I was apprehensive going into it, as I knew I was going to be meeting some pretty important people.  However, that apprehension quickly disappeared, as both of them immediately put me at ease with their charisma and character.  It became very evident to me as to why they were in their respective positions- both seemed to be fantastic leaders.

I then sat with the office manager over at the hospital for an hour or so, and she explained to me what she does on a daily basis.  It was a nice change of pace being over at the hospital, where all of the action was happening.  I then met briefly with the OR Director, who, much like the CEO and CFO, humbled me with her leadership skills and charisma.  Though our meeting was short and was interrupted by frequent thunder and lightning, I was impressed by her ability to be a strong leader while also clearly showing immense compassion for those who work with her.

I ended the day by meeting with the associate chief nursing officer.  This was probably the most entertaining meeting of the day, as he seemed to have a relatively expansive life story.  In a nutshell, he’s lived everywhere, worked everywhere, and seems to have done every job under the sun (in the medical field).  As an administrator, he has quite a few duties he must carry out on a daily basis.  I thoroughly enjoyed hearing about the career path he has taken over the years.

Tomorrow, I think I am headed back to the hospital again.  It has definitely been a nice change of venue, and I look forward to it!

DAY 4

Today’s post is short, as I was only in for a couple of hours.

I started off the morning today with going to the office’s sort of “weekly wrap-up.”  In this wrap-up, usually several employees come in to the office manager’s office and discuss various issues that have arisen throughout the week.  In this case, it was an issue with a program called MedSuite not appropriately populating the correct categorization for patient need.  Though this was a seemingly simple issue, to me, I began to realize that it was actually very significant.  The classification for the needs of the patient is extremely important, and especially important when handling the patient’s medical records.

There was another, even more important meeting happening at the hospital today, so there wasn’t a whole lot for me to do.  I sat with one of the financial people for almost the entire morning, which was intriguing at first but began to get a bit mundane after about hour 3.  She worked on reconciliations, which I didn’t entirely understand but was still interesting to learn about.  Fridays aren’t usually a particularly busy day, so there wasn’t too much she could show me.

I’m looking forward to next week!

Day 6: Slow Day at the Office

Today was definitely a slower day; we did clinic all day which means no procedures, just patients. Unfortunately, there weren’t many interesting cases that came in which I guess is a good thing. The most interesting case was one involving a kindergarten teacher who thought she just sprained her ankle. Little did she know, she broke both her tibia and fibula in three places. She was also retiring next week, so she had some concerns regarding pay roll and whatnot. Dr. Logel quite explicitly stated that she will not be going back to work considering she is now having surgery tomorrow at 7:30AM. Anyways, I know today was a little slower, but I look forward to tomorrow which is full of surgeries and no clinic.

I apologize; I couldn’t take many interesting pictures today, so here’s a picture of Dr. Logel’s work desk.

Day 6 – Internal and External Communications

Today was a two in one, which was very interesting. In the morning, we learned about internal communications, which was about the communication inside of SAS. In the afternoon we learned about external communications, which was around the same principles with monitoring communication, but with the outside world. An interesting thing that happened today was the speaker we saw talking about technology and its help in disaster situations. It was crazy to see how simple technology could affect so many lives. For example, a simple app could provide shelter for thousands of people, for many disaster areas do not have the technology or electricity for the app. It was eye opening and made us think about what we could do with our technology for these situations. We are excited for Legal tomorrow!

Day Six Kicks

Drugs on drug on drugs. That was my day today. My supervisor dropped me right off with the two ladies of drug chemistry lab for the day and I began my observations. Basically, it is their job to get evidence from the drug vault on DA request cases (meaning cases they plan to prosecute) and check to make sure that the weight and substance is correct. So, they spend their entire day making sure that marijuana is marijuana and cocaine is cocaine etc. Some highlights of my day included watching them weigh about 20 pounds of marijuana and seeing the mass spectrometer in action. I had seen the mass spec in a bunch of crime shows, so I felt like I was in the heart of the action! It was intriguing to learn about the limits for each drug amount that correlate to felonies and trafficking charges. For example, I learned that if you the limit for a trafficking charge is 28g and you have 27g of a cutting agent mixed with 1g of a controlled substance, you would get indicted for the entire mixture, not just the presence of this substance. Basically, sucks for you.

For the last hour of the day I was picked up by the man in charge of toxicology and blood alcohol testing. He was very nice, but clearly not very adept at small talk considering he asked me if I had any questions about every 30 seconds. Overall, while it was not my particular area of interest, it was still fascinating to learn about exactly how drug and DWI convictions happen.

Tomorrow, I am hitting the streets and will be on call for any crimes in Wake County. I am not sure what I will be faced with, but my supervisor said that I may get a homicide if I’m lucky…although don’t know how common it is to commit one’s murderous acts on a Wednesday afternoon. We will see.

Side note: I have made friends with the Wake County Sheriff who works in house and was promised a Chik-Fil-A milkshake from him. Again, we will see.

For my picture, I was very excited because I finagled my way into getting an official badge for a few hours to avoid having an escort during my lunch break. Sadly, very shortly after returning my supervisor whisked it away and I have now felt the hollow feeling after power being brutally stripped from oneself.

A Program for the Day

Today was a really cool day. We got to shadow a programmer working on Unreal Engine (similar to Unity which we use) and the coding that goes into making a game. They have this collaborative program so that everytime someone makes a change in the code, they upload it to the server and then another programmer checks it over before it is implemented into the code. This helps the collaboration between programmers and also prevent mistakes like the problem that happened to Kurt. We also got to learn some helpful information to help us code, like setting breakpoints to easily find a problem or researching online for the code to save time. As you can see above, he has the equivalent of five screens (one giant monitor split into 4 windows and one normal sized monitor) to aid with the programming process. We also got to work on our own projects in game design today. Right now I’m creating a 3-d 2 player tanks game where you try and shoot the other player before they kill you first. It’s a step up from the roll a ball program but I can do it. Today was really fun and I can’t wait to see some cool character design tomorrow.

Day 6

Upon arriving to the office Ben was slammed with meetings and we got to sit in with the first one of his. It was cool to see game development companies have to think about more than just the video game when it comes out, but also the products and figures and such that is correlated with the game that people can buy to collect. The meeting was focused on a special edition of the game that was to come out soon, and the items that would come with the special edition package.

After the meeting we got to shadow a guy by the name of Adrian, it was cool because he was more into the dirty coding and programming rather than testing. He in his breaks helped us with the projects we were working on and it was so helpful to get that extra eye from someone who really knows what they are doing. He was working on aspect of the game that were way over our heads, but it was cool to see how after a few lines of code and a few shouts of anger he was able to build the level and we could visibly see the changes he had made.

Once we were done with Adrian, we met back up with Ben for some closing remarks to close out the day and also plan out what we are to do tomorrow.

Day 6: Readily Receiving Receptors

Have you ever locked yourself in a freezer? Neither have I, but I imagine that it’s something like spending thirty seconds in the lab’s cold room. The microbiologists and chemists of the Lefkowitz lab need the cold room at temperatures near freezing to impede natural processes and preserve the trillions of proteins that line their metallic walls. Dr. Masoudi had to leave for a bit, so I spent the early morning reading up on G-Protein Coupled Receptors and helping Dr. Li Yin, Dr. Masoudi’s co-researcher. Dr. Li Yin was kind enough to let me do a majority of the hands-on work for her protein identification process, but this included heading into the cold room to occasionally refill the plastic column she uses for chromatography with a wash solution (it’s freezing in there). This form of chromatography works by employing an antibody that has a high affinity for the receptor that we want to extract. Everything else in the solution passes through the column without strongly interacting with the antibody in the resin. Eventually, Dr. Li Yin will pass a molecule through the same column that has an even stronger affinity for the antibody than our receptor, removing the receptor from the column. We also spent time grinding the cell membranes of moths – not something I thought I’d write in my lifetime. These moth cell-membranes hold the GPCR that we want, but in order to prepare them for filtration we need to homogenize the cell solutions and eventually mix them with some detergent. These soap molecules will act as a shield for the receptor, sustaining the structures for crystallization.

I also had the opportunity to make some stock solutions and use high-tech pipettes to deliver them into tiny aliquot containers. The LB media that I made is a combination of benzonase, a highly reactive enzyme, and protease inhibitor that prevents the denaturation of helpful cellular proteins. We soon moved on to her Western blots that showed the presence of a receptor using a set of primary and secondary enzymes. The secondary enzyme that was involved actually derives from rabbits! Another one of the enzymes she used was horseradish peroxidase that, yep, comes from horseradish.

A majority of the day was used gathering information to understand these receptors on a broader scale. Dr. Masoudi and I went over the sequence that some of these receptors undergo, from the moment an agonist – adrenaline, morphine, a photon – binds, to the recycling of these receptors in the lysosomes of cells. There’s quite a bit of literature on GPCRs, but barely any information on the mapping of these macro-molecules with X-Ray crystallography, and even less info on our synthetic protein Nb6B9 (FUN FACT: Nb6B9 was originally made from the antibodies of llamas).

A llama

Finally, Dr. Masoudi prepared our bacterial colony by taking a set of cells that (hopefully) incorporated the Nb6B9 gene into their DNA. We’ll know for sure that the gene was successfully incorporated after the DNA is sequenced by a lab at Duke, but for now we’re hoping that the colony we’ve set up will grow to produce as much Nb6B9 as possible. To avoid any fungal infections, Dr. Masoudi uses a lamp to ward off aerial imposters, but he also uses ethanol to clean the table. We really only realized how precarious the situation was after we had finished setting everything up.

Ever seen a tornado?

Tuesday, June 6th – Media Room

I am still exploring, during the day today I discovered a new aspect of the building. The opportunity presented itself for me to see the media room within the editing suite. While a show was being recorded Mrs. Holt-Noel and I watched from the media room. This where I learned who typically sits in the room during the shoot. There will be a graphic designer that is in charge of adding name labels and other graphics at the bottom of the screen. Next, an associate producer is connected to the host, and assists in gearing the conversation and flow of the show. Next to them is the time keeper, and the essentially do as their title says. Lastly, there will be an expert that knows about the topic. This gave me a look at many different jobs in the world of communications.

-Kennedy Byrd

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