The Oracle WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014 I VOL. 52 NO. 30
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News.................................................................1 Lifestyle......................................................4 Opinion.......................................................6
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA
USF Health creates futuristic pharmacy Student Fee
increases to be approved next meeting
LI F E STYLE
Healthier treats for Halloween. Page 4
Montage
By Roberto Roldan M A N A G I N G
In a few weeks, Pharmacy Plus will introduce the latest in pharmacy technology. ORACLE PHOTO / ALLISON LESLIE By Allison Leslie SP O RTS Taggart blames losses on mental fatigue. BACK
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C O R R E S P O N D E N T
In the coming weeks, students will be able to enter the pharmacy of the future where robots fill prescriptions and mobile applications monitor heart rates. “It’s a combination of Star Trek, Iron Man and an Apple Store,” said Dean of the USF
College of Pharmacy Kevin Sneed. With $300,000 worth of hightech devices, USF Health’s new Pharmacy Plus will utilize about nine different technologies that aren’t found in regular pharmacies, such as a robot that will fill the vast majority of prescriptions. “It will put the pills in the bottle. It will label the bottle and
it will put a cap on the bottle,” Sneed said. Since healthcare is evolving at such a fast pace, pharmacists must adapt to this technology or be left behind, he said. The robot is less prone to make mistakes than human pharmacists, with an error rate of almost zero, due to the way it fills the prescription.
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FACES OF USF
From student to Health Hero By Nataly Capote A S S T .
N E W S
E D I T O R
Every now and then, USF medical school student Madeline Snyder takes off the white lab coat and picks up the microphone. Snyder performs at an annual talent show that she created in 2012 to raise funds for a student-run clinic, and was named a Health Care Hero by Tampa Bay Business Journal this year for her volunteer work. “I was very surprised the other evening when I received this award,” Snyder said. “When I was a first-year med school student and I came up with this idea of a talent show, I never ever thought that it
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Madeline Snyder was named a Health Care Hero for creating a talent show, raising money for a health care clinic. Special to the Oracle
E D I T O R
The proposed increases to the Activity and Service, Health, and Athletic fees are set to go up for approval at the Local Fee Committee’s final meeting Friday, Oct. 24. The proposal drew student concern and debate when Student Government (SG) posted the proposed increases to its Facebook page last week in an effort to be more transparent and solicit student feedback. Many students were particularly concerned about the proposed 62-cent increase to the Athletic fee. The fee would be used to cover the differential in student-athletes scholarships, which would pay for their full cost of attendance, as estimated by the Financial Aid Office. Overall, the committee has proposed a $2.16 per credit hour increase, which would amount to an extra $32.40 per semester for a student with a 15 credit-hour course load. Though the next committee meeting will be its last of the semester, SG President Jean Cocco said he is willing to meet with any student who is concerned with student fee increases. Half of the committee consists of student representatives and the other half is comprised of faculty appointed by President Genshaft. The faculty representatives include the Assistant Vice President for Academic
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