Tag: Healthcare & Education

Chemical Reaction – Grad Student Eric Steinman Has Found Synergy in Delaware

Growing up near Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Eric Steinman benefited from the abundant sunshine and proximity to the beach. But a drive to a town in another state could take a day or more, which is why the University of Delaware grad student enjoys his new state’s central location.

“It’s near New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore or Washington, D.C.,” he says of Delaware. Steinman currently isn’t able to travel as much as he’d like, though, because he’s a Ph.D. candidate in UD’s chemical and biomolecular engineering department. He’s also serving on the board of the Delaware Sustainable Chemistry Alliance (DESCA).

Steinman feels at home on campus in Delaware. “The University of Delaware has a top 10 program,” he explains, noting that the faculty are also impressive. “When you’re applying to grad school, it’s important that there isn’t just one perfect professor for you, but there are multiple professors.”

As he quickly discovered, the acclaimed chemical program is not the only thing the state has going for it.

Destined for Science in Delaware

Science and mathematics were familiar subjects in the Steinman household. His father is a radiologist and his mother, skilled in accounting, helps run their teleradiology practice.

Steinman, the couple’s middle child, realized he was interested in STEM at an early age. While he values medicine as a career, he is more interested in research. In many respects, being a researcher or scientist is the flip side of being a clinician as both are seeking solutions.

Steinman, who earned his undergraduate degree in chemical engineering at the University of Florida, is now researching catalysis for national gas upgrading. Sound complex? The process is about minimizing waste.

“If you have a steak but it’s got a lot of gristle, you end up losing your raw material, right?” he explains. “We’re trying to reduce loss.”

By using consecutive processes, reducing separation needs and improving thermodynamics, he seeks to increase the efficiency of natural gas upgrading. His advisor is Marat Orazov, a former postdoctoral scholar at Stanford University, whose research aligns with Steinman’s interests.

Making Delaware Connections

As a new doctorate student, Steinman began attending DESCA-sponsored events, and when a position on the board became available, he expressed his interest. He says both DESCA and the university do a good job of letting students know about area resources.

For instance, UD students can attend presentations featuring representatives from multiple companies on the same night. That’s easy to do, considering the state is an acknowledged hub for the chemical industry. Plus, it’s near national research labs.

Steinman is particularly interested in events featuring local entrepreneurs.

“Some people went the traditional route through a legacy company and ultimately spun off a technology, or they wanted to do something unrelated using the skills they’d learned,” he says. “Other people went straight into a startup out of their Ph.D., and some people started a company with their advisor.”

At some point in his career, he wants to work in a startup lab, whether it’s an expansion lab of a legacy chemical company or a startup proper.

Delaware: The Best of Many Worlds

When Steinman isn’t hitting the books or spending time in the lab, he likes to play or watch basketball. He’s hoping to see the Delaware Blue Coats, an affiliate of the Philadelphia 76ers, play on their Chase Fieldhouse home court in Wilmington.

Steinman has already experienced the many trails that wind through and around Newark. “There are a lot of good activities here — biking and hiking trails, good restaurants. The nearby historical sites are great,” says Steinman, who was fascinated by the American decorative arts collection at Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library.

Overall, he’s found that Delaware has much to offer in a small, accessible package – education, career opportunities, location, and quality of life.

“That,” he says, “has all been good to me in Delaware.”

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Beebe Healthcare to Host Multiple Job Fairs in April

(LEWES, Del.) – Beebe Healthcare will be hosting multiple healthcare job fairs for clinical and support staff positions in the coming weeks.

Candidates must bring a copy of their resume and wear a mask. Please RSVP online by visiting this webpage and selecting the date: https://tinyurl.com/2p95u932. You may also call 302-645-3336 or email employment@beebehealthcare.org. Walk-ins welcome.

Working at Beebe is not just a job, it’s a lifestyle, a feeling of community, and Beebe is a wonderful place to call home. Beebe’s success is a direct result of our team members. Their care and safety for patients and their community is obvious. Attracting and retaining the best healthcare professionals is a priority. Come, join a team of heroes!

For complete job descriptions and requirements for any of the listed positions, go to www.beebehealthcare.org/career-opportunities.

Beebe Medical Group Clinical Positions Job Fair

Beebe Medical Group will be hosting a job fair on Saturday, April 23, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Sunshine Café on the Margaret H. Rollins Lewes Campus. Beebe is offering a $1,000 sign-on bonus.

 Positions include:

  • Physician Office Nurses
  • Certified Medical Assistant
  • Electronic Health Records Informatics Specialist
  • Patient Experience Specialist
  • Training Specialist

Nutritional Services and Housekeeping Job Fair

Beebe will host a job fair on Monday, April 25, from 8 a.m. to noon at the Specialty Surgical Hospital on the Rehoboth Health Campus located at 19161 Healthy Way, Rehoboth Beach, DE, 19958.

Beebe will be offering on-site interviews for this hiring event for Nutritional Services and Housekeeping positions. Pay starts at $15 per hour with benefits and paid time off. Shifts may vary depending on department needs. Additionally, Beebe is offering a $1,000 sign-on bonus.

Behavioral Patient Sitters Job Fair

Beebe will host a Behavioral Patient Sitters Job Fair on Tuesday, April 26 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Sunshine Café on the Margaret H. Rollins Lewes Campus.

Beebe is seeking to hire full-time and part-time team members. Pay starts at $15 per hour with benefits and paid time off. Shifts may vary depending on department needs. Additionally, Beebe is offering a $1,000 sign-on bonus.

Beebe Healthcare Clinical Job Fair

Beebe will host a Clinical Job Fair on Wednesday, April 27, from 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the Margaret H. Rollins School of Nursing, which is located on the Lewes Campus and behind the Emergency Department.

Clinical positions include:

  • RNs (Hospital In-Patient, Bedside & Procedural)
  • CNAs
  • Patient Care Assistants
  • Respiratory
  • Med Tech (ASCP)
  • RN’s (Home Care, Cancer Center)

Beebe Healthcare is a not-for-profit community healthcare system with a charitable mission to encourage healthy living, prevent illness, and restore optimal health for the people who live in, work in, and visit the communities we serve. Beebe Healthcare has three campuses: the Margaret H. Rollins Lewes Campus, which houses the medical center; the Rehoboth Health Campus; and the South Coastal Health Campus. Beebe Healthcare offers primary care as well as specialized services in the areas of cardiovascular, oncology, orthopaedics, general surgery, robotic surgery and women’s health. Beebe also offers walk-in care, lab, imaging and physical rehabilitation services at several locations throughout Sussex County, in addition to a home health program and a comprehensive community health program.

For more information about Beebe Healthcare, visit beebehealthcare.org.

 

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ChristianaCare’s Center for Heart & Vascular Health Earns Top Rating for Heart Bypass Surgery

(Wilmington, DE) – ChristianaCare’s renowned Center for Heart & Vascular Health has earned the highest quality rating—three stars—from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) for its patient care and outcomes in isolated coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) procedures.

The prestigious three-star rating places ChristianaCare among the elite health care organizations for heart bypass surgery in the United States and Canada.

The STS star rating system is one of the most sophisticated and highly regarded overall measures of quality in health care, rating the benchmarked outcomes of cardiothoracic surgery programs across the United States and Canada. The star rating is calculated using a combination of quality measures for specific procedures performed by an STS Adult Cardiac Surgery Database participant.

“Earning a three-star rating for heart bypass surgery places us among the top heart hospitals in the nation,” said Ray Blackwell, M.D., the W. Samuel Carpenter Chief of Cardiac Surgery at ChristianaCare. “Delaware residents can be confident that they have one of the best heart surgery teams in the nation right here, close to home, at ChristianaCare.”

The three-star rating from STS adds to ChristianaCare’s long list of awards for quality heart care. For the past two years, the Center for Heart & Vascular Health has earned the designation HeartCARE Center National Distinction of Excellence from the American College of Cardiology for its commitment to high-quality cardiovascular care. In addition, the Center for Heart & Vascular health received the American Heart Association’s 2021 Mission: Lifeline Gold Quality Achievement Award for the treatment of patients who suffer severe heart attacks; the 2021 Get With The Guidelines NSTEMI Silver Award for patients with a less severe form of heart attack; and the 2021 Get With The Guidelines Gold Plus Award for Heart Failure.

“Our Center for Heart & Vascular Health and our community have much to be proud of,” said Kirk Garratt, M.D., medical director of the Center for Heart & Vascular Health. “We provide great outcomes, and we also listen to patients and families and work to ensure that the stressful experience of surgery is as easy as it can be. That kind of commitment leads to this kind of recognition.”

Heart Disease Remains a Leading Killer in the U.S.

According to the American Heart Association (AHA), heart disease remains a leading killer in the nation—claiming more than 600,000 lives each year. In addition, the AHA anticipates the effects of COVID-19 are likely to influence cardiovascular health and mortality rates for many years.

“February is American Heart Month, and there is no better time for us to take stock of our heart health than now,” Dr. Garratt said. “The COVID-19 pandemic has presented new challenges to people living with chronic conditions such as heart disease. People with heart conditions are at greater risk of complications from the virus and also continue to need assistance managing their heart health. If you are a heart patient, please do not postpone your regular visit with your cardiologist.”

The STS is a not-for-profit organization that represents more than 7,600 surgeons, researchers and allied health care professionals worldwide who are dedicated to ensuring the best possible outcomes for surgeries of the heart, lung and esophagus, as well as other surgical procedures within the chest. The STS National Database was established in 1989 as an initiative for quality improvement and patient safety among cardiothoracic surgeons.

About the Center for Heart & Vascular Health
ChristianaCare’s Center for Heart & Vascular Health is among the largest, most capable regional heart centers on the East Coast. It is one of the only centers in the region that integrates in a single location and under one roof cardiac surgery, vascular surgery, vascular interventional radiology, cardiology and interventional nephrology. Its team of experienced cardiovascular surgeons and heart experts perform nearly 700 open-heart procedures each year and treat more than 8,000 total heart and vascular cases annually. For more information, visit https://christianacare.org/services/heart/.

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Young Professionals Choose Delaware

Not many people are lucky enough to say that where they live has all the ideal factors, but when it comes to the citizens of Delaware, they can proudly boast about a place that is perfect for all aspects of life. Delaware has been experiencing an influx of young professionals who choose to live somewhere they know will provide them with job opportunities along with a welcoming community.

Over the years, while the size of the state has remained the same, the business and residential communities have grown. Residents of Delaware feel connected to each other, and this allows them to make meaningful connections. As interviewee Jason James points out, more people seek out diversity when it comes to their work and home lives. The younger workforce wants to become involved with people unlike themselves—they want to engage with others so that they can learn and become more in tune with their communities.

Because of these reasons, young professionals choose Delaware as it is a state whose diversity is growing each and every year. The range of diversity allows people to pursue a variety of interests, showing that Delaware is truly a place where anyone can come and thrive.

Kyle Gay: Delaware is a place to live, work, and play, for millennials and for people of all ages.

Kyle Barkins: Really easy to meet people here. I think it’s very easy to establish strong relationships. And it’s easy to get things done.

Charles Vincent: If you can’t get ahold of the person, you have somebody who can, and you’re able to just get things done faster. Instead of talking out stuff, we’re able to do stuff.

Nicole Magnusson: I love the community in Delaware. It’s small enough to know your neighbors, but also big enough to explore and learn new things, and find new places to eat, and shop, and have fun.

Jason James: This generation that’s coming up is really interested in living and working in diverse spaces. Research studies support that over and over again, when millennials are asked, what attracts them to being in a certain place, it is diversity. It’s multiple people, multiple people with different backgrounds, and multiple things to get involved in. So this is really an opportune area for millennials to really move into and work in.

Daniel Walker: We’re flexible as a small state, so we’re able to find what interests a person, and really capitalize on that. And I think that’s what makes the networking so great.

Kyle Gay: We chose Wilmington because we knew that this was a great opportunity for us; both in our careers and finance, and in law, and for the family that we wanted to have, and we finally do have now. It’s a great place to raise children. A great opportunity for people and families to be ingrained into the community.

Jennifer Saienni: And you don’t have to wait years to see the difference of what your work is doing. You are able to come to Wilmington, come to Delaware, and make an impact!

Young Professionals Living the Good Life in Delaware

Young professionals like these agree that Delaware is an ideal location for work and life. You can find great fulfillment and success in your career through the ever-growing job market. More businesses are discovering that Delaware is a great state to locate in, and this allows for job opportunities of all kinds.

And work isn’t the only positive Delaware has to boast. From restaurants to shops to parks to beaches, Delaware has everything that makes a home state worthwhile. Residents of the state take advantage of its many amenities while also making meaningful connections with their fellow neighbors. The community of Delaware, in both the business and residential life sense, provides endless support for all those looking to make the First State their home.

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Wilmington University Is Helping to Rethink What It Takes to Teach

An assistant professor from Wilmington University’s College of Education (COE) is leading a team of teachers and school officials as part of a national effort to examine the entry requirements for education degrees and the teaching profession.

The Delaware Department of Education selected Dr. Michele Brewer, the COE’s chair of Technology, Assessment and Compliance, to direct the state’s contributions to the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education (AACTE) Consortium for Research-Based and Equitable Assessments. The research that the 14 participating states deliver could help many more aspiring educators pursue teaching careers.

“Reconsidering teacher certification and licensure requirements may change the profession by providing more opportunities for recruiting and training talented individuals who have a passion for teaching,” Brewer said. “Delaware’s education stakeholders understand that these assessments and examinations may be an obstacle for potential teachers, which is why exploring possible reforms and innovations is crucial.”

Brewer, COE Dean Dr. John Gray and the WilmU director of teacher preparation Alfred DiEmedio join more than a dozen educators and administrators from school districts, charter schools, college teaching programs and the federal Department of Education in surveying stakeholders and collecting data for the AACTE’s research efforts. The main focus of these efforts — which are funded in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation — is an evaluation and comparison of the criteria that states use in setting standardized test score requirements, or “cut scores,” for entry into college-level teacher preparation programs.

Upon their conclusion, these research efforts aim to present state education authorities and lawmakers nationwide with recommendations for rethinking test score requirements as a way to address teacher shortages and diversity concerns.

“Setting cut scores on commonly used tests in educational contexts should involve policymakers, educators, measurement professionals and other stakeholders in a multi-stage process,” said Brewer. “Unfortunately, this is not the norm across the country, with arbitrary cut scores creating barriers for aspiring educators, particularly for minority candidates. It is critical to obtain consensus among the stakeholders.”

Delaware eliminated entrance exam requirements for teacher preparation programs (known as the Praxis Core) in 2017. It still requires passing scores on Praxis II Content tests, which measure general and subject-specific content knowledge, for state licensure and certification. While this research is occurring, Wilmington University’s teacher preparation programs incorporate new and innovative enhancements designed to help those in teacher preparation programs meet Praxis II requirements. WilmU also awards credit for students who have passed the Praxis II exam. With its well-established and nationally recognized yearlong residency program for student teachers, reputation for teaching innovation and available scholarships, Wilmington University is a leader in providing more and diverse teachers to educate the next generations of pre-K, elementary, middle and high school students.

Learn more about teacher preparation programs at WilmU at www.wilmu.edu/academics/education.

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Nemours Community Engagement Director Yvette Santiago Leads With Intentionality

For Yvette Santiago, the key to achieving diversity and inclusion in the workplace and in the nonprofit sector is “intentionality.”

“First, you need to ask who we envision in this seat or seats to reflect our goals,” she says. “Then, you need to look at your processes and practices to attract the workforce that meets or exceeds those goals.”

Santiago has been at Nemours for 17 years, currently serving as director of community engagement and also co-leading the Delaware Racial Justice Collaborative’s Public Policy Committee. She points to areas like revising job descriptions that often require a bachelor’s or master’s degree to focusing on experience and changing the approach to new-hire interviewing. With the latter, Nemours takes a behavioral approach, where candidates are asked to provide specific examples of how they have demonstrated certain behaviors, knowledge, skills and abilities that reflect their cultural competence.

Yvette Santiago – A Vocal Advocate for Diverse Representation

She’s also been a vocal advocate for rules governing the setting of minimum percentage targets for diverse representation on state and local boards. “Boards govern and set policy, so it is incredibly important to have boards that understand the needs of and adequately represent the population they are serving,” she says.

But it goes far beyond that. Santiago says Nemours has started to expand on its pipeline recruiting and onboarding efforts. The hospital recently developed a partnership with nursing technology students from Hodgson Vo-Tech where they will complete their clinical rotations in the spring. Nemours is also assessing internally to create learning opportunities for current associates that will expand their career possibilities and potentially qualify them for higher-paying or more desirable positions. 

“It’s important for professionals in the workplace to have a career pathway and ladder,” Santiago says, “and this enables job satisfaction and retention.”

At Nemours, she is a member of the Diversity, Anti-Racism, Inclusion, Value, and Equity (DRIVE) Taskforce and also co-chairs the internal Adelante group for Latino employees. Adelante is one of a number of resource groups at the hospital targeted at such constituencies as African Heritage Americans, the LGBTQ+ community and Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

“We’re trying to move every mountain that’s in our way, and that extends to my nonprofit work,” she says. “When we’re intentional, we can find the rockstars who are out there looking for an opportunity to show what they can do for the organization.”

Santiago describes herself as “100 percent Puerto Rican.” Her parents came to this area from Puerto Rico when they were about 17 years old for a better life and seeking higher wages. “I was actually born right over the line in West Chester,” she says, “and we moved to Wilmington when I was 5.”

She says her parents always stressed that education was an opportunity that could open many doors and that nobody could ever take it away. Santiago got involved in the community for a very personal reason.

“We had a number of family members that really were involved in either the criminal justice system or the social service system,” she says. “I saw very early on the struggles that they went through, whether it was through mental health, addiction, not being able to work for whatever reason. Many times, I served as the translator for my family, whether it was going to the doctor or going to court and learned very early on that they were treated differently, treated as if they were ‘less than’ because they didn’t speak the language.”

Santiago says she wanted to be able to help people like her family, to help the ones struggling with issues such as addiction and mental health and to help them figure out the system and understand the resources available to them.

Questions & Answers with Yvette Santiago

What makes your heart sing?

Yvette Santiago: Seeing communities that are thriving and seeing kids and families who genuinely are happy with where they are and where they’re trying to go. I work for the hospital. I’m not a clinician, but I know the work that I do helps to improve our systems and our policies and our ability to provide services to kids and families. When I see those families turning those tears into smiles and joy that their children are okay, that makes my heart sing.

I also have served as the president of the board for New Castle County Vo-Tech for the past seven years and have served in total for the past 15 years. I will tell you that every graduation, my heart is fluttering because to see kids graduating from high school and walking across that stage and families just cheering in the stands, it gives me goosebumps. I get emotional because I know there are so many kids that are not in that place, so many families that don’t get a chance to experience that.

The first word in your LinkedIn profile is Trailblazer. Talk a little bit about that.

Yvette Santiago: Throughout my career, I’ve often been the only Hispanic female in the room. At Nemours, from a non-clinical perspective, I am the only senior leader that is Latina or Latino. It wasn’t always easy for me to amplify my voice at those tables because I struggled to convey the sentiment that needed to be said. My experiences, perspectives and knowledge were vastly different, and that is my incredible value. In other experiences, there were other Latinos in the room with me who understood the issues that our respective communities were facing. And you could see it made a significant difference in how we approached and sought to address issues.

Throughout my 30-year career, I have gotten so much better at elevating issues that need to be elevated. About 10 years ago, I decided that if I have a seat at this table, it is my responsibility to speak up about the issues that need to be brought to light. If I can’t do that, I need to step away and allow somebody else to have that seat at the table. Over time, I have realized that I have a level of influence that others may not have so if can help move the needle in the right direction, that’s what I want to do. So when I say “trailblazer,” that’s true because even today, I’m still, in many cases, the only Hispanic voice in the room, and I’m trying to blaze the trail for other Latinas and people of color.

At what point in your life did you realize you had the power of change or the power to do something meaningful?

Yvette Santiago: It’s been gradual. When I moved into a supervisory role at Ferris School, I felt like I could create change. But higher-level leadership gave me the feedback that I probably needed to slow down a little bit. And so I learned that influence and authority had its opportunities but also had its limits. As I’ve come up the ranks and gained more authority and influence, I push the envelope a lot harder because of the seat that I’m sitting at. So it’s been gradual throughout my career.

I’m sure you receive a lot of volunteer requests. How do you avoid being stretched too thin?

Yvette Santiago: Wisdom comes with age. I’ve learned to balance doing great things in the community with keeping my connection at home with my son and husband.

I recently accepted an invitation to become a trustee for the Delaware Art Museum. I’ve never really been into the arts, but I realized that that is a creative opportunity to reach our most underprivileged and vulnerable communities if they have not been exposed to the arts and all of the opportunities that offer that, as well as the connection to the vo-tech students and how we can create partnerships. From the perspective of Nemours, we have a lot of kids that sometimes need that type of activity in our hospital, and figuring out partnership ways where we can bring the Delaware Art Museum into the hospital. For families that are at the Ronald McDonald House because their kids are in the hospital for a significant period of time, they can just go visit the art museum and get away from the heaviness of having a child really sick in the hospital.

My choices are based on how I can connect it back to the things that I’m doing every day. And how can I make sure that my participation is effecting the change that really does need to happen?

How do you want to be remembered?

Yvette Santiago: I want to be remembered as someone who worked hard and rose through the ranks to represent and serve people who did not have a voice. I want to be remembered as someone who genuinely cared about the issues and worked extremely hard to try to get resolution to those issues. And I just want to be remembered as a good person that just wanted to do good things in spite of challenges that were presented.

What’s the question you wish more people would ask themselves?

Yvette Santiago: Am I in the right seat?

What advice would you give your younger self? And what were you doing at the time?

Yvette Santiago: “You are great, and you are worthy.” When I was young, I was extremely shy. For me, magnifying and amplifying my voice to the level that I do now is probably one of my greatest accomplishments. Early on in my career, people saw disagreement as you don’t like them or that person is really not part of the team. And so that’s what I would say. It’s okay to speak up as long as you do it in a way that is respectful.

What do you think is the biggest challenge facing Delaware?

Yvette Santiago: We talk about The Delaware Way, which has historically been defined by very narrow perspectives. But that’s changing, and we need to keep evolving toward how new people coming into Delaware define it as being collaborative and because we’re a small state, we can work across counties and political affiliation to get things done. We now have a Black caucus in the legislature, a transgender representative. But we need more Latinos, and we’re moving in the right direction to truly represent all communities in the state.

What’s the pebble in your shoe, that everyday distraction that takes you off-course?

I think duplication of efforts. There are so many organizations, and many of them are doing very similar things. We need to look for ways to eliminate duplication and silos and work together. The other piece of that is there are some organizations that may not be willing to collaborate because it might be a big content area, a big issue area. And they want to be seen as out in front of that particular issue.

What’s your superpower?

Yvette Santiago: I just like people. I don’t know that I have anything fancy, but I love people. I love to talk to people. I love to work with people. I like being around people. I guess it’s just my ability to connect with people.

What’s your Kryptonite?

Yvette Santiago: Despair. Lack of hope. Sometimes when you see all that you’ve accomplished, you still see there is so much more to do. And when you see there’s so much more to do, you get that sense of despair and you start to feel that lack of hope like, “Are we ever really going to get there?” I know that in my career when I started, a lot of the things that we talked about 30 years ago, we’re still talking about today.

You’ve just been given a giant billboard. What does it say and where are you going to put it? 

Yvette Santiago: What I would say on it is, “Are you going where you want to be?” And you can put it anywhere – the Interstate, in Wilmington, in Sussex County, in vulnerable communities. I’d put that on the billboard, because if you’re not going where you want to be, what do you need to do to change that?

Who or what is inspiring you right now?

Yvette Santiago: My son is 21 years old and is about to [get his degree from] Assumption University in Massachusetts. He’s a football player. He’s an EMT. He’s very focused on what he wants to do. I’m inspired by his youth and focus and by his enthusiasm for life. And I think I’m inspired by him because I know there are a lot of other kids that are in that very same place that he is. What inspires me is if I can continue to do what I’m doing and spread that across whatever platforms I can, then I think we’ll have more people in that very same place.

As I look back on my life, I say, “Not too bad for a Latina girl from West 23rd St. whose parents’ love and encouragement was unwavering.” My parents are my foundation, and I’m only where I am today because of the hard work and ethics they instilled in me. I will never forget where I came from. It’s what has made me who I am today.

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Dr. Milton Muldrow

Dr. Milton Muldrow

Dr. Milton Muldrow loves Delaware

Dr. Milton Muldrow

Wilmington University Chair of Science & Delaware NASA Space Grant Associate Director

Dr. Milton Muldrow was first introduced to NASA’s Space Grant Project when he was named chair of Wilmington University’s Science program six years ago. As he and his team developed science programs for WilmU, “Delaware’s Place for Earth and Space Science,” his goal was to align the university with the nationwide project through the Delaware Space Grant Consortium.

“The Space Grant’s mission is to produce the workforce of the future for NASA,” said Muldrow. “They do this through research engagement for college students, internships and fellowship programs.”

Several WilmU students who have participated in the Space Grant Consortium have gone on to make an impact in the scientific community. “We got involved to get more resources for our students,” Muldrow said. “Now, those students are doing amazing things.”

Through Muldrow’s leadership, research and involvement with NASA, science is now a top priority at WilmU. Just as important, students are continuing into various professions in science, environmental science, engineering and other related fields.

Three years after Muldrow joined WilmU’s faculty, the university had the state’s second-highest enrollment — 94 students — in an undergraduate Environmental Science program, a credit to Muldrow and his team’s efforts to open the science field to students who may not otherwise have had the opportunity.

At WilmU’s Brandywine location in North Wilmington, “we designed new, state-of-the-art laboratories,” said Muldrow. “We also gained funding from the NASA Space Grant to examine genomic engineering of corals and steered Wilmington University toward the science. This has changed the STEM landscape for Delaware as all new programs have succeeded in attracting Delaware students.” WilmU also has launched a bachelor’s degree program in Biology, which Muldrow chairs.

Before coming to Wilmington University, Muldrow worked as a biologist and program analyst for the National Science Foundation (NSF), where he helped write its first reports on climate change. His duties included making funding recommendations for research experiences for undergraduate grants, leading NSF-supported research projects in Florida involving marine invertebrate population studies and producing a climate change brochure.

Muldrow earned his Ph.D. in Environmental Science and Public Policy at George Mason University in Virginia; his Master of Science degree at the University of Missouri – St. Louis; and his Bachelor of Science degree in Biology/Environmental Science from Saint Francis University in Pennsylvania. He came to Delaware by way of Baltimore, Maryland.

“After graduate school, I did a lot of work for the federal government and National Science Foundation,” he said. “But I really wanted to get back to academia. That was always my final goal.”


While looking for opportunities in the education field, he discovered that WilmU had an open position that was perfect for him. “It was such an amazing opportunity to have some influence on a department and create new programs,” he said.

Location was a big part of the position’s appeal. “Delaware is great,” said Muldrow. “Professionally, I find it’s easy to access all types of people throughout the power structure. It’s easy to make partnerships. Delaware is a state that works together, and that’s amazing to see. You don’t find that everywhere. It’s been a great place to launch a scientific career largely because of that.”

Muldrow has delivered two TEDx Talks, including one that hit the top five in the environmental science topic. He also is recording several episodes of “The Great Courses,” a series of recorded courses available on Audible and other platforms.

“I have been working on a series for synthetic biology, which includes discussions about the modern marvels of the genetics revolution, synthetic biology and space, CRISPR and gene editing, de-extinction and xenobiology, among many other topics involving synthetic biology,” he said.

Outside his academic commitments, Muldrow is married and has four children. His family enjoys sports, traveling and visiting Delaware landmarks. “We are a pretty big sports family,” he said. This includes watching sports, both on television and in person, and participating in their favorite games. Muldrow’s two oldest sons play football, and his 11-year-old is interested in running track this year in middle school. “Both watching the game and attending in person, sports is a great way to spend quality time together,” he said.

A favorite place for the Muldrow family to visit is the Delaware Museum of National History. “My kids love the see-through floor section where they can walk on top of a coral reef,” Muldrow said. “They also love the trails outside. We’ve been going there for many years, since they were very small, and it’s a great place to spend the day together as a family.”

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Dr. Tam Honored with American Hospital Association Grassroots Champion Award

LEWES, Del. – David A. Tam, MD, MBA, CPHE, FACHE, President & CEO of Beebe Healthcare, was awarded the Delaware Healthcare Association’s American Hospital Association Grassroots Champion Award at the 25th Annual Delaware Healthcare Forum, which was held virtually on October 28.

The Grassroot Champion Award recognizes those hospital leaders who most effectively educate elected officials on how major issues affect the hospital’s vital role in the community, who have done an exemplary job in broadening the base of community support for the hospital and who are tireless advocates for hospitals and their patients.

Delaware Healthcare Association President & CEO Wayne Smith presented Dr. Tam with the award during the virtual forum. Smith noted that Dr. Tam became the President & CEO of Beebe Healthcare just as COVID-19 was hitting the state of Delaware.

“Your willingness to fully engage your community, your patients, your employees, and policymakers has been tireless and inspiring,” Smith noted. “You have displayed tremendous leadership on behalf of your health system and Delaware hospitals in the midst of the pandemic.”

Dr. Tam, who presented the ACHE Regents Award during the forum, was very thankful for the honor.

“It’s been a privilege to come to Sussex County and Delaware and become a part of this community and Beebe Healthcare during such a challenging time,” said Dr. Tam. “Thank you to all who have welcomed me and my family. There is a lot of great healthcare being provided in Delaware but there is more to do. You can expect Beebe to lead the way for Sussex County.”

Beebe Healthcare is a not-for-profit community healthcare system with a charitable mission to encourage healthy living, prevent illness, and restore optimal health for the people who live in, work in, and visit the communities we serve. Beebe Healthcare has three campuses: the Margaret H. Rollins Lewes Campus, which houses the medical center; the Rehoboth Health Campus; and the South Coastal Health Campus. Beebe Healthcare offers primary care as well as specialized services in the areas of cardiovascular, oncology, orthopaedics, general surgery, robotic surgery and women’s health. Beebe also offers walk-in care, lab, imaging and physical rehabilitation services at several locations throughout Sussex County, in addition to a home health program and a comprehensive community health program.

For more information about Beebe Healthcare, visit beebehealthcare.org.

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Dr. Dan Young

Serial Entrepreneur and
Professor

Dr. Dan Young loves Delaware

Dr. Dan Young

Bringing an Academic Legacy into the Future

Dan Young has no shortage of ideas. The serial entrepreneur typically has many initiatives in play. Currently, he is the organizer of TEDxWilmington, the chapter director of StartUp Grind Wilmington and founder of Maverick Class, an edutainment company. His calendar is filled with volunteer activities.

More recently, the Delaware native is receiving accolades for his work at Goldey-Beacom College. In 2018, he became the founding director of the school’s Doctor of Business Administration Program. Students from the first cohort graduate in 2021.

Young, who holds advanced degrees in marketing, took an entrepreneurial approach to the curriculum.

“I looked at the full landscape of doctoral business programs to figure out what we could do that no one else was doing,” he explains. He concluded that the program should be built on the premise that students can help solve business problems in the community.

The doctoral students have tackled projects for the Delaware Department of Labor, American Airlines, the office of the New Castle County [Delaware] Executive, Theatre N in Wilmington and The Mill, a coworking space.

Young is also an assistant professor in the program. But it’s not his first foray into academia. He has education in his blood.

  • ambassor profile Dr. Dan Young

  • ambassor profile Dr. Dan Young

Upholding a Family Legacy

Young’s grandfather — who went to Howard University and the University of Pennsylvania — was the first Black school principal in Delaware. His father, William Young, received a scholarship to Harvard University and became the head of human resources at Wilmington Trust Bank. Young’s mother spent nearly four decades in education, primarily working as a vocational-technical school career counselor.

“I always think of my family as the ultimate Delaware success story,” says Young, whose great-grandfather was a foreman on the Pennsylvania Railroad. 

The Concord High School graduate, who played varsity football and ran indoor track, was accepted at both the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Delaware. He ultimately chose to attend UD on a full scholarship.

Because Young admired his marketing professor, Stewart Shapiro, Young remained at UD for his master’s degree and worked alongside Shapiro. Five years later, when he was a financial planner, he went to Temple University for a Ph.D. in social and behavioral marketing.

“I like to be busy,” he says. 

Delaware’s Academic Spirit

Over the years, Young has taught at Wilmington University and in the Horn Program of Entrepreneurship at the University of Delaware. He’s held his TEDxDover events at Delaware State University, a Historically Black College and University (HBCU), and he has colleagues at Delaware Technical Community College.

“And we have incredible access to our lawmakers, CEOs and the media,” he says. “We can make incredible inroads in terms of communicating between all the stakeholders in business and the entrepreneurial ecosystem.”


“It’s incredibly easy to work with all of them because of the close proximity of those colleges and universities,” he says, noting the schools’ missions and demographics form a talent pool of diversity.

Goldey-Beacom has a reputation as a premier accounting and finance business school. Delaware’s location near major cities makes it easy for the students to visit companies in the Greater Philadelphia area, review best practices and come back to campus.

Part of the students’ mission is to market their “clients” to potential investors. The region also boasts a remarkable number of angel investors, Young notes.

From a personal standpoint, Delaware allows him to pursue his passions easily. Technical.ly Delaware named him their Culture Builder of the Year for 2020 and Delaware Business Times chose him as a Finalist for its 2020 Small Business Advocate of the Year. His personal goal is to recruit, train, mentor and place 100 new Black business professors in Delaware colleges and universities by 2025.

Young, who feels blessed for his opportunities, is not about to slow down. The Delaware success story is fond of quoting the Biblical passage from Luke 12:48: “To whom much is given, much will be required.”

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