UCLA Health faculty member Johnese Spisso honored by health care publication

A UCLA Health faculty member was honored as one of the top women leaders of 2019 on Monday.

Johnese Spisso, CEO of UCLA Hospital System and associate vice chancellor of UCLA Health Sciences, was named one of 2019’s Top 25 Women Leaders by the health care news publication Modern Healthcare. The award is given to 25 women who are leading health care professionals and who have significantly influenced policy and care models on a national scale.

Spisso has over 30 years of experience in the health care field. She also received Seattle Business’ Outstanding Health Care Executive award in 2014 and Puget Sound Business Journal’s Women of Influence award in 2006.

In addition to overseeing over 170 clinics in Southern California, UCLA’s faculty practice group, UCLA Health’s regional outreach strategy and UCLA’s four hospitals, Spisso has also published several articles on health care leadership.

Spisso began her career as a registered nurse in critical care at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Presbyterian and later worked in critical care at UC Davis Medical Center for 12 years.

Spisso was chief health system officer and vice president of medical affairs at University of Washington Medicine for 22 years before beginning her UCLA career in 2016.

Ted Lieu given The Dr. Winston Doby Impact Award for support of higher education

This post was updated Feb. 21 at 2:30 p.m.

Democrat Congressman Ted Lieu received an award for his efforts to improve higher education at an event on campus Tuesday.

Lieu, who represents California’s 33rd Congressional District in the United States House of Representatives, received The Dr. Winston Doby Impact Award for his support of students in higher education and his efforts to secure better funding and address factors that hinder access to education.

The Winston C. Doby Distinguished Lecture Series is an annual event that awards humanitarians and social justice activists with the Winston C. Doby plaque and invites them to give a lecture at UCLA.

The lecture series was created by the Academic Advancement Program at UCLA to honor Winston Doby, the program’s founder, for his work assisting first-generation, low-income and underrepresented students.

Charles Alexander, director of AAP, said he believes Lieu represents Doby’s and UCLA’s shared value of equal access to education, adding Lieu has been a champion of this equal access through his support of education legislation for low-income and disadvantaged students.

Alexander said he believes this event made people aware of some of the challenges students and universities face today, such as student loans, access to higher education and issues of student body diversity.

Lieu said he believes reforming the education, immigration and justice systems at the local, state and federal levels could help strengthen America.

He said he believes lawmakers do not fund public education enough at both the federal and state levels, adding he was very pleased that Democrat Gov. Gavin Newsom’s education budget aims to expand investment in preschool programs and kindergarten in California.

“The single best investment a nation can make is education – not just higher education, but beginning from age zero,” he said.

Lieu said increased government funding will help more students go to college, but added he thinks local, state and federal governments should also take into consideration external factors that affect students’ education.

“The education system has stayed the same for decades and increasing government spending to address non-school factors like students’ eyesight problems can boost student performance and public education,” he said.

Lieu said he wants to make it easier for immigrants to access the same educational opportunities he had.

In addition to advocating for education reform, Lieu added criminal justice reform will protect low-income individuals from unfair incarceration.

Lieu said he was pleased Congress passed a criminal justice reform bill he co-authored to reduce sentences for nonviolent crimes, but added the law did not go as far as he would like.

“It was not huge, but it was a step in the right direction,” he said.

Lieu added he wants to reform the criminal justice system by changing how the bail system works.

“The bail system in the United States is a disaster,” Lieu said.

He said many people have been incarcerated because they can’t afford to pay the fees to get out of jail.

“Your freedom should not depend on how much cash you have,” he said. “Criminality shouldn’t correlate with cash.”

Lieu said these reforms should be a bipartisan issue, citing how the state of Kentucky has implemented similar bail reforms to what he has advocated for.

Nallely Almaguer-Rodriguez, a fourth-year architecture student, said she thinks it was interesting to hear from a congressman who is involved in the legislative process.

“Seeing him in person has demystified the process,” she said. “I liked that he touched on immigration and national security and gave his perspective on the state of the union.”

Rodriguez said she has usually only seen lawmakers on television and that it was great to see one present on campus. She added she was happy to hear that Democrat representatives have a plan to reform the criminal justice system.

Abel Valenzuela, director of UCLA’s Institute for Research on Labor and Employment and moderator for the event, said he thinks Lieu has been a strong voice in fighting misinformation on immigration.

“Congressman Lieu has stood his ground and doubled down on the facts when it comes to representing his constituents,” Valenzuela said.

Valenzuela added Lieu’s personal experience as an immigrant has contributed to his strong advocacy for various policy reforms.

“We can rest assured that Congressman Lieu, as an immigrant and who comes from an immigrant family, is fighting for his constituents from the bottom of his heart,” Valenzuela said.

USAC votes in support of The Agora, citing potential to bring down housing costs

Student government endorsed a high-rise housing project in Westwood on Tuesday.

The Undergraduate Students Association Council voted unanimously, with four abstentions, to support The Agora, a proposed 16-story high-rise project on Hilgard Avenue. The project has been met with both support and opposition from different neighborhood councils and community groups.

USAC heard presentations by opponents and supporters of the project during their meeting Feb. 12, but was unable to vote because it did not have a quorum.

Esther Chung and Esther Magna, advocates of the Save Hilgard Avenue group, spoke in opposition to the project. They said the project would cost too much, according to an estimation they got from an outside consultant.

Aaron Green, a spokesperson for The Agora, said he objected to the validity of the estimation because he thinks an accurate estimation could not be done this early into the development.

Magna added that the Westwood PodShare, a hostel-style living community that offers 90 beds at the current location of the proposed high-rise project, already provides affordable housing in the area.

Chung also said she thinks professors and young families who live in the area would be disrupted by noise, pollution and trash during construction.

Green and Eraj Basseri, co-principal developer of The Agora, spoke in support of the development and said the project would provide students with more access to housing.

The Agora would offer 462 beds priced at $1,000 to $1,200 a month. The developers also plan to provide more affordable housing by including 52 beds priced at less than $500 a month, in accordance with Measure JJJ. This means the beds would be priced less than the proposed standard rent range for Westwood.

Green said the pricing of the 52 beds is contingent on Los Angeles’ process for approving low-income units, which is different for private housing compared to university housing.

Basseri added the complex will be constructed in a communal style, with areas to hold meetings and have lectures, and the building will promote healthy eating and living.

Robert Blake Watson, the internal vice president of USAC, said he supports the project because he thinks students should have more access to housing and the project will be provide affordable housing.

“The commitment to having low-income housing available there, specifically $500 beds, is something that is really beneficial,” Watson said.

Jamie Kennerk, external vice president of USAC, said this project could help bring down costs of future housing.

“It’s important that we set a precedent that students want more housing to come to Westwood because that is the only way that prices are going to start to go down,” Kennerk said.

Kennerk said she also strongly supports the plan because the developers have committed to integrating the affordable housing units with the other regularly priced units, so students in the low-income units are not segregated from the rest.

Kennerk added the project has set a precedent that proponents of future housing projects must keep an open dialogue with students.

UCLA resident physicians continue negotiations over salary and housing stipend

Resident physicians at UCLA will continue bargaining with the university over their salaries, an incomplete housing stipend and other benefits after more than four months of negotiation.

The Committee of Interns and Residents, the union representing over 1,200 residents and fellows at the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, will negotiate with UCLA on Thursday for a new three-year contract.

Gregory Gabrellas, a psychiatry resident and member of the CIR bargaining committee, said the union wants a 7 percent annual increase in salary for the next three years.

UCLA has proposed a 2.5 percent annual increase for the next three years, Gabrellas said. However, inflation in the Los Angeles area was at an average of 2.47 percent from 2000 2018, essentially canceling out the salary increase.

“Basically, they’re saying that they’re willing to entertain keeping the salaries the way that they are,” Gabrellas said.

Gabrellas added the union wants a salary that keeps up with the rising cost of living in Los Angeles and is comparable to similar institutions like Stanford and Yale.

Marguerite Thorp, a pediatrics resident and co-chair of the CIR bargaining committee, said CIR requested a annual housing stipend that is comparable to the $12,100 UC San Francisco offers its residents.

UCLA has proposed a $7,000 stipend for next year with $1,000 consecutive increases the following two years, Thorp said.

Danielle Smith, a then-spokesperson for the UC Office of the President, said in an October statement the housing stipends offered at different UC campuses are negotiated based on their local housing markets.

The average rent in San Francisco is $3,609 while the average rent in Westwood is $3,416. Westwood’s average rent is 44 percent higher than the Los Angeles average of $2,371.

Phil Hampton, a UCLA Health spokesperson, said the university is working to reach a contract that addresses resident concerns.

“UCLA Health and the David Geffen School of Medicine recognize concerns about the cost of living in the Los Angeles area, and we remain committed to addressing this and other important topics in a fair and equitable contract,” Hampton said. “We believe a contract agreement is best negotiated at the bargaining table.”

Thorp added the union requested a $2,000 pretax payment for all residents as a remedy for receiving a smaller housing stipend this year.

“They’ve proven that it’s too complicated for them to promise us after-tax amounts, (so) we proposed the $2,000 payment to all residents, regardless of the tax rate,” Thorp said.

Kate Perkins, associate dean for Graduate Medical Education at the school of medicine, informed residents they would receive a $5,000 housing stipend as a post-tax amount, according to an email she sent to residents in February 2018.

However, when residents received the stipend in September, many said they received only a fraction of the $5,000, with several receiving $1,200 less than what they were promised.

The Daily Bruin obtained a series of emails from UCLA Health administration through a records request, further detailing what happened with the incomplete housing stipend distributed in September.

Perkins said in the email chain she wished she had announced the stipend as a gross amount of $6,250, instead of the take home amount of $5,000.

“It probably goes without saying, but I certainly didn’t anticipate that the tax cut for the housing allowance would be as high as it was,” Perkins said in the chain.

Administration had allotted an extra $1,250 in order to cover taxes for each resident, according to the email chain. Some residents, Perkins said in the chain, received less than the expected $5,000 due to their individual tax brackets.

Psychiatry resident Annika Burnett said in the email chain she would like leaders at the institutional level to be transparent about how they calculated the $6,250 figure. She said it seems like the majority of the residents received less than $5,000 for their take-home pay.

Psychiatry resident Michael Mensah said in the email chain he consulted an experienced payroll manager and concluded the $1,250 cushion was nowhere near the amount needed to cover his taxes.

Their calculations suggested a gross stipend of $8,457.37 would be needed to provide a $5,000 take-home amount, not the $6,250 gross amount that was provided.

Jacob Lentz, a emergency medicine resident who advocated for the housing stipend, said in the email chain he was surprised institutional leadership attempted to carry out a post-tax housing stipend because he and colleagues never advocated for a post-tax amount. When trying to persuade UCLA Health to implement the stipend, he said he and colleagues presumed they were discussing pretax dollars.

Lentz added UCLA invested over $9 million for the housing stipends but was not contractually obligated to offer any housing stipend in the first place.

Gabrellas said UCLA negotiators do not want to provide a remedy for the fragmented housing stipend. However, he said the union is considering legal action if negotiators do not offer a solution.

USAC recap – Feb. 19

The Undergraduate Students Association Council is the official student government representing the undergraduate student body at UCLA. Council meetings take place every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Bruin Viewpoint Room and are open to all students. Watch a livestream of the meetings on the USAC Live! channel on YouTube.

Public Comment:

  • Oscar Macias, chairperson of the USAC Student Initiated Outreach Committee, said his committee’s Beyond the Score campaign will host a town hall to discuss the use of SAT scores in University of California admissions Feb. 20 at 6 p.m. in the Student Activities Center.
  • Nico Gist, California Public Interest Research Group student chair for UCLA, said CALPIRG will lobby in Sacramento for banning bee-killing pesticides, requiring cleaner cars and buses, reaching zero waste and ending food insecurity.

Special Presentations:

  • USAC Election Board Chair Richard White presented on the election code, the election calendar and new penalty guidelines. Changes to the calendar include extending student voting hours on MyUCLA to begin at 7 a.m. during election week.

Agenda:

  • The council allocated $19,143.93 from the Contingency Programming Fund to USAC and non-USAC groups.
  • The council allocated $4,349.63 to the Supplemental Fund for Service.
  • The council appointed Eduardo Velasquez to the UCLA Community Programs Office’s Campus Retention Committee; Justin Suarez and Michelle Fausto to the Undergraduate Council of the Academic Senate; Cori Mallory and Soo Hyon Lee to the Academic Senate Committee on Undergraduate Admissions and Relations with Schools; and Emily Simson and Zeyna Faucette to the Academic Senate Committee on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.
  • The council allocated $9,870 to the judicial board budget from the USAC Daily Bruin advertising budget and $3,130 from council discretionary funds.
  • The council voted to distribute $10,000 from discretionary funds evenly among the office of the president, the internal vice president’s office, the general representatives’ offices, the financial supports commission and the facilities commission, for staff compensation and other purposes.
  • The council allocated $17,361 from the USAC endowment to CPO.
  • The council allocated $1,030 from discretionary funds to the Academic Affairs Commission’s Travel Grant Mini Fund.
  • The council allocated $23,673.95 to the Arts Restoring Community Fund under the Cultural Affairs Commission to fund arts and cultural groups for winter quarter.
  • The council approved changes to the guidelines of The Green Initiative Fund.
  • The council allocated $2,500 from discretionary funds to the Office of the Internal Vice President for tables and chairs for the spring Enormous Activities Fair.
  • The council agreed to draft a resolution responding to a recent hate crime against the LGBTQ community on campus to bring to the upcoming UC Regents meeting March 13-14.

Reports:

  • USAC President Claire Fieldman said her office will host the South Campus Research Fair Feb. 25 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in the Bruin Reception Room. She added her office and the Bruin Consent Coalition will host a town hall on Title IX on Wednesday to discuss issues related to sexual violence.
  • Internal Vice President Robert Blake Watson said his office will host the True Bruin RAISE project scholarship dinner Feb. 28. He said the 10 winning students will receive $75 each in awards, but added all nominees for the scholarship will be invited. He added his office will host a spring Enormous Activities Fair April 9.
  • General Representative 1 Ayesha Haleem said her office will host a international student town hall Friday to draft the bylaws for the USAC international student representative office. The office was established during the 2018 USAC election.
  • General Representative 3 Eduardo Solis said his office launched a campaign called “We Love You, Undocu” to raise money for tuition and supplies for undocumented students on campus.
  • Academic Affairs Commissioner Nidirah Stephens said her office is working on the Beyond the Score campaign. She added her office is making progress on establishing the “For the People” scholarship.
  • Community Service Commissioner Bethanie Atinuke Sonola said her office will offer the Robert S. Michaels Leadership in Service Award.
  • Student Wellness Commissioner George Louis Faour said his office will be holding the Stress Less Fair on Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Bruin Plaza.

Hike of GPA, MCAT requirements in medical school admissions prevents diversity

The David Geffen School of Medicine is considered one of the most diverse medical schools in the country.

Not for long, though.

UCLA’s school of medicine raised its math and science GPA and MCAT cutoff scores to 3.4 and 512, respectively. This policy change will go into effect in the 2019 admissions evaluations.

This decision has been wrought with controversy. While administrators argue the new cutoffs merely simplify the application process and decrease the likelihood of losing qualified students to other schools, others view this as excluding underprivileged applicants.

According to Kaplan, an MCAT score of 512 is just two points shy of being in the top 10 percent of all tests. According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, a science GPA of 3.4 is actually slightly below the average of 3.47 for 2018-2019 U.S. medical school applicants. This is significant because GPAs and MCAT scores are intimately tied with socioeconomic background – more affluent students historically have had higher grades and test scores.

Therefore, a hike in cutoff scores could prevent a large majority of disadvantaged students from being considered for admission by UCLA.

UCLA’s school of medicine is ranked No. 8 in the country in research by U.S. News & World Report, a standing that merits and demands stringent admissions guidelines. And while applicants’ merits might primarily be based on their GPAs and MCAT scores for the sake of time and resources, raising the medical school’s already sky-high standards in these areas is dangerous. Raising the cutoff requirements would further ostracize already disadvantaged students and homogenize future school of medicine classes – a result incompatible with the university’s core values of diversity and inclusion.

“We (at the admissions office) recognize that lack of opportunity during formative years can negatively affect performance on standardized tests,” said Phil Hampton, a spokesperson for UCLA Health and the school of medicine, in an email statement.

However, the administration’s hike in cutoff scores seems to contrast this.

In response to the cutoff changes, students at the school of medicine crafted the Student DGSOM Admissions Policy Proposal. The document explains, using AAMC data, that applicants who receive fee assistance or whose parental education is less than a bachelor’s degree – two indicators of a lower socioeconomic background – on average have lower MCAT scores and GPAs than their more advantaged counterparts. In fact, only the top 5 percent of these socioeconomically disadvantaged students would even be considered with the new admissions thresholds.

Students also believe the administration does not effectively consider the entirety of underprivileged students’ applications. The school of medicine employs professionally trained third-party screeners to read applications. But according to the student policy proposal, these screeners are unequipped to properly dissect them.

Abhinaya Narayanan, a medical student, said she is most troubled by the lack of transparency regarding the qualifications and experiences of the school’s application screeners.

“We have not been given any details to the extent that these screeners have either the lived experiences or the specific education and training around understanding the barriers that disadvantaged students have faced,” Narayanan said.

The problem is that the roads students travel to medical school are far from the same. Affluent students can have many advantages along the way – such as private tutors, expensive preparatory classes or access to mentors – that their counterparts from underprivileged backgrounds do not. Inevitably, these disparities manifest in their GPAs and MCAT scores.

The school of medicine needs to revert to its previous cutoff scores to increase, or at least maintain, the diversity of its student body. The path to medical school is unforgiving as it is, especially for socioeconomically underprivileged students. An increase in the threshold of scores only adds more obstacles to that.

Screeners should also come from disadvantaged backgrounds or have extensive training working with students from underprivileged communities. This, according to the student policy proposal, would better equip screeners to analyze those students’ applications because they would better understand what to look for and how these particular experiences can shape the test scores and GPAs they see.

[Editorial: Lack of diversity in Geffen hiring process leads to lack of excellence]

Some might argue the change in application scores is a necessary way to raise the bar for incoming medical students. After all, GPAs and MCAT scores have to be considered in the application process – each year, the school of medicine has roughly 14,000 applicants, of which only 175 are accepted. The admissions staff simply can’t afford to meticulously examine every application; there must be some hard qualifications, that, if not met, eliminate an applicant from further consideration.

But when these hard standards come in the form of stellar MCAT scores and GPAs, a large demographic of students inevitably gets left behind. This is because while these numbers, in part, quantify a student’s aptitude, they are also largely reflective of the resources they had to help them succeed.

A diverse class is crucial: It fosters learning beyond the classroom and provides a wide range of backgrounds and ideas. Furthermore, providing quality patient care requires understanding the experiences of the nation’s many communities. The population of up-and-coming doctors should aim to mirror the population they hope to serve.

UCLA’s school of medicine is considered one of the most diverse medical schools in the country. While maintaining the prestige of the university is paramount, that shouldn’t come at the cost of homogenizing the nation’s topmost doctors.

Hybrid dance performance to subvert ‘stuckness’ with humor, self-reflection

Pearl Marill will break out a life-size puppet of herself on stage as a symbol of self-reflection.

Marill, an artist well-acquainted with San Francisco’s performance scene, will present her show “You Self Help Me” at Glorya Kaufman Hall on Friday and Saturday. Marill said her performance – a meditation on her personal struggles – will play with the concept of “stuckness” as a means of generating insight into how stagnancy manifests. Through a combination of dance, improvisation and comedy, the show will delve into Marill’s continually shifting perspectives regarding her own sense of stuckness, asking her audience to reflect along with her.

“For me, comedy is a vehicle to get into the heart of things. We’re able to performatively get empathy from an audience through humor because we laugh when we see things we recognize or that go against our understanding of the way things should be,” Marill said. “There’s an incongruence to what we’re seeing, so it’s surprising and we laugh.”

The interdisciplinary show will be divided into two parts: Marill will perform solo for the first portion and will be joined onstage by other performers for the second. Coupling leaps and kicks with simpler, more pedestrian movements, Marill will explore what it means to be stuck in the physical sense as well as in metaphorical sense, said Susan Foster, Marill’s MFA committee advisor.

“Her dance styles are used to illustrate how to move around, beneath or alongside stuckness,” Foster said. “It reflects back onto itself, allowing everyone to delve into their own personal stuckness.”

While Marill does not relegate self-help to the realm of uselessness, she satirizes the genre with tongue-in-cheek humor, said Dan Froot, another of Marill’s MFA advisors. He said she disarms the audience through humor as a way to give them some distance from themselves and their foibles while simultaneously reflecting on her own.

“The show has a feel that it’s out of control at times, but in a way that’s very calibrated and carefully choreographed,” Froot said. “As you experience it, you realize that there’s a steady hand behind all of it.”

The performance will also include outlandish stage elements such as nonhuman dancers and a life-size puppet of Marill, Foster said. In one scene, an ode to her outrageous humor, Marill will create a character out of her own upside-down face lip-syncing a song, Froot said. The life-size puppet will be used as a metaphor for her evolving perception of herself, Marill said.

“With the life-size doll, I’m tackling a larger issue of self-love metaphorically and thinking how in moments of darkness we are the people who have our own back,” Marill said. “The question posed here is how we can have a duet with ourselves.”

Marill said she plans to use her performance to delve into her own vulnerability, in which she feels like she is repeating patterns and routines, unable to let go of them. She said she hopes the audience will be able to reflect on similar situations in their own lives.

Drawing the audience into her own experiences, Marill said her performance can almost be taken like an instruction manual for her audience, providing methods to overcome being stuck that they themselves can employ. She said that she herself uses performing as a method for forging through the unpredictability of life.

“Performing is how I work on being totally in the moment and not judging myself prior to making a move,” Marill said. “You just have to be there and ready for anything, which feels like a metaphor for life because ultimately we never know what’s going to happen.”