Medical Conference "Thalassemia: A Responsibility
of All Medical Disciplines"
Washington, D.C. 1990
Funde
d
by:
In 1986, the NIAF Medical Council, in conjunction with the Cooley's Anemia
Foundation, co sponsored a conference in Washington, D.C. on Thalassemia.
Thalassemia is a form of anemia which was once thought to affect only those
of Mediterranean ancestry, but has since been found in some thirty countries.
Experts on the disease from Italy and the U.S., included Dr. Antonio Cao
of Rome and Dr. Carlo Valenti of Sardegna, participated in the conference.
The screening and occurrence of Thalassemia with the Mediterranean population
was discussed along with current research.
Washington, D.C.
Medical/Legal Council
Funded by:
A salient program of NIAF was conducted by the Medical/Legal
Council on a yearly basis during the NIAF Gala. Dr. Maria Lombardo coordinated
with Georgetown University and other schools for doctors and lawyers to received
CME and CLE credits for participating in the events held during NIAF's Gala
Dinner. One of the outstanding events included Health Care Reform, A Mini
White House Conference on Aging. Dr. Maria Lombardo sought and was able to
obtain outside funding to conduct the conferences on a yearly basis. The topics
selected benefitted the Italian American community with information about
options regarding caretakers, wills and resources for the elderly. Dr. Lombardo
worked with the National Institutes of Health, the Italian American Bar Association,
Sigma-Tau Pharmaceuticals and the White House to organize the events.
Medical/Legal Conferences
Washington,
D.C. 1999
Medical Conference "The Right to Die"
Funded by:
This
seminar explored how decisions affecting life's end impact upon the
medical and legal professions. The seminar discussed living wills, durable
powers of attorney, the Patient Self Determination Act of 1991, and
the Model Death with Dignity Act. The program examined these issues
by positing case histories, which the panelists discussed from a moral,
ethical, and legal standpoint. There was an examination of the Italian-American
family's role in the decision making process of a family member's death.
A question and answer session followed the panelists. The speakers included:
Tom Beauchamp, Senior Research Scholar, Kennedy Institute of Ethics,
Dr. Edmund Pellegrino, Ethic's Director at Georgetown University Center
for Advanced Studies, Dr. Elliott Perlin, Professor of Medicine at Howard
University Hospital, Dr. Richard Doerflinger, Associate Director for
Policy Development for the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and
Dr. Greg Bloche, a physician/lawyer and a professor at Georgetown University
Law Center. Paul Anthony was the Moderator.
Washington, D.C. 1995
Conference: "Life's Journey: Will Your Mind Go The Distance"
Funded by:
The symposium focused on medical/legal issues in the long term health
care of Alzheimer's Disease. Case studies of Alzheimer's patients were
presented and discussed. Cultural differences of the Italian family
as caretakers were noted. Ira Magaziner of the White House was the keynote
speaker at the Alzheimer's conference.
Washington, D.C. 1994
Conference: Health Care Reform
A comparison of the Italian and United States Health Care Systems was made
with focus on the aging population. The "U.S. Health Care Reform"
conference was sanctioned as a Mini White House Conference on Aging. The
NIAF conference was funded and co-sponsored by the Sigma Tau Pharmaceuticals
Foundation, with collaboration from the White House and the National Institutes
of Health. Giancarlo Schettino, former Director of Public Relations for
Sigma Tau, said in his introduction to the 1994 "U.S. Health Care Reform"
conference that health care reform is "undoubtedly the most urgent
social problem facing the U.S."
The conference was open to the public and discussed not only U.S.
health care reform but also health care systems of other countries.
Dr. Antonia Novello, former U.S. Surgeon General, said health care reform
should be a priority if we are to move forward as a nation.
In the second half of the conference, White House Senior Policy Advisor
Walter Zelman addressed the White House's position on health care reform.
After responding to numerous audience questions, he stated: "We
may not have won the battle, but we'll win the war."