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You can review the courses in this catalog without becoming a member. Feel free to scroll down to see all 26 courses or use the search box below.

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Information about Limited Enrollment courses 

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Course Catalog

    • January 07, 2026
    • January 28, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    Course Description: We will explore four essential topics: a) Where Am I—Exploring this Stage of Life; b) Body Beautiful/Body Betrayal; c) Relationships & Clutter—including “Swedish Death Cleaning;” and d) Legacy & Stewardship. Journaling of any kind — creative writing, artistic expression — is encouraged. Breakout groups will give each of us opportunities to share each time we meet. While we may discuss mindfulness and spirituality in general, there is no specific religious perspective associated with this course.  

    Location:  Harbor

    Dates/Times:  Wednesdays, 9:30 AM, January 7 to 28

    Instructor: Steffi Aronson Karp

    After many years as Director of Public Relations for an international market research group, Steffi Aronson Karp created LimmudBoston, a volunteer-driven conference which celebrated lifelong learning and community inclusion. While LimmudBoston centered on Jewish identity and learning, it was a community gathering, not a religious event. Each year, the LimmudBoston conference (Limmud means “study” in Hebrew) offered more than 100 courses, each of which was designed to encourage further investigation of personal growth, movement, spiritual and intellectual pursuits. Steffi and her team attracted learners from many different communities. The LimmudBoston conference was renowned for networking opportunities and community spirit.
    • January 07, 2026
    • March 04, 2026
    • 8 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:  The beginnings of modern architecture can be traced back over 150 years. This eight-session course covers the extraordinary buildings that helped move modern architecture forward. We will follow the evolution of modern architecture in a chronological order. Many great designs have been done during its life span. This course will examine the greatest of the great buildings. The course will follow modern architecture from its birth through its many styles until the present. Designs by many notable architects including Frank Lloyd Wright, Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier, Charles Eames, Eero Saarinen, Louis Kahn, Oscar Niemeyer, Paul Rudolph, Robert Venturi, Marcel Breuer, Richard Rogers, Renzo Piano, Frank Gehry, and many other great modern architects will be discussed and shown. Robert Cassway is an award-winning architect who taught at the University of Michigan and Temple University. He was also a visiting lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania. He was in private practice for over 50 years in Philadelphia. He has designed projects throughout the United States, the Bahamas, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Great Britain. He currently also teaches at Ringling School of Art, Life-Long Learning Institute. He has won over two dozen, local, state, and national design awards. His work has been published national and internationally.

    Location:  Pavilion

    Dates/Times: Wednesday, 11AM, January 7 - March 4 (no class February 25).

    Instructor: Robert Cassway

    Robert Cassway is an award-winning architect who taught at the University of Michigan and Temple University. He was also a visiting lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania. He was in private practice for over 50 years in Philadelphia. He has designed projects throughout the United States, the Bahamas, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Great Britain. He currently also teaches at Ringling School of Art, Life-Long Learning Institute. He has won over two dozen, local, state, and national design awards. His work has been published national and internationally.

    • January 08, 2026
    • January 29, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    Course Description:  William Blake was one of the great British romantic poets, and a fine artist in the medium of engraving. He was also an important figure in the British radical egalitarian political tradition. The course will involve: appreciation and interpetation of selected poems; biographical roots of Blake’s thought; political history and philosophy and Blake’s place in it.

    Location:  Harbor

    Dates/Times:  Monday, January 8 - January 28

    Instructor:  Bill Caspary & Jim Smith

    Jim Smith is Professor Emeritus of Psychology at Felician College, New Jersey. He formerly taught literature at Temple University, and wrote a dissertation on William Blake. In between these two professorships, he earned a PhD in psychology, and for many years he was director of the out-patient PTSD program at the Veterans Administration facility in Montrose, NY.

    Bill Caspary continues to teach political theory, at the Gallatin School of Individualized Study, NYU. His specialty is participatory democracy and the thought from which it originated -- John Dewey and American Pragmatism.


    • January 14, 2026
    • March 04, 2026
    • 8 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:  An investigation into how different composers manage to achieve stunningly beautiful sounds in certain portions of their works, illustrated both on the piano and via music videos.

    Location:  Pavilion

    Dates/Times: Wednesday, 2PM, January 14 - March 4

    Instructor: Jerry Bilik

    Jerry Bilik is a former professor of music at the University of Michigan, an active composer, and the author of several books about music.



    • January 15, 2026
    • January 22, 2026
    • 2 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    Course Description:  Learn firearm safety in a state where firearms will be encountered in homes or on people you meet. Be able to determine if a firearm is loaded or unloaded, how to safely handle a firearm, and how to safely transport a firearm. Learn the difference between pistols, revolvers, rifles and shotguns, as well as the types of ammunition available. This is a course that all Pelican Cove residents should take.

    Location: Harbor

    Dates/Times: 

    Instructor: Tore Knos

    Tore Knos has taught firearm safety and firearm use as a Boy Scout and Navy SEAL. He has extensive firearm experience in the military and civilian worlds.

    • January 20, 2026
    • February 10, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Wilbanks
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 23 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:   How did Shakespeare become Shakespeare? We will look at three genres of his writing: popular songs inserted into the plays, sonnets written for a select audience, and the soliloquy/monologue that he made into an intimate vehicle for the revelation of character. We will read about 10 pages per week. 

    Location: Wilbanks

    Dates/Times:  Tuesday, 9:30AM, January 20 - February 10

    Instructor: Herb Levine

    Herb Levine has been teaching poetry for 50 years, first at the college level and then in adult education settings. He thinks that teaching at  PCU (and to the Rounders) is the best gig he's ever had. It's way more fun to teach grown-ups with all their life experience. And what a joy for him not having to grade papers and for you not to have to write them!

    • January 20, 2026
    • January 27, 2026
    • 2 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:  Mysticism offer us maps of consciousness to help steer our lives with more ease and peace. Kabbalah, in Hebrew, means “to receive”. The mystic path is one of mindful mysticism to our luminous and connected heart, where we can grow our receptivity. With that growing awareness we can release reactivity and strife. Rabbi Sigal will clearly explain complex concepts and share inspirations from Kabbalah and mysticism. She will skillfully guide us in mystical meditations and contemplations. People from all religions, spiritual, and non-religious backgrounds are welcome.

    Location: Pavilion

    Dates/Times: Tuesdays, January 20 and 27, at 11 am.

    Instructor:  Sigal Brier

    Rabbi Sigal Brier, of Congregation Kol HaNeshama, is a scholar, spiritual mentor, inspirational teacher, congregational rabbi, and artist, with training in religion, psychology, art, yoga, and meditation. She has presented at TED, and was featured on CBS Sunday Morning news and NPR: National Public Radio. She is a presenter at the Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health in MA.



    • January 21, 2026
    • February 11, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:  With fast-paced presentations and embedded music clips, we will showcase some of the greatest rock & roll (plus Pop, and Rhythm & Blues) stories on record. We will cover the search for the first "Rock & Roll Record;" mystery tunes: secret performances by famous performers; the impact of Rock, Pop, and Rhythm & Blues on American Society (1940s-2010); Feminist hit singles before their time, and other musical phenomena. 

    Location:  Pavilion

    Dates/Times: Wednesday, 9:30AM, January 21 - February 11

    Instructor: David A. Milberg

    David Milberg is a music historian, who has been broadcasting since 1965, lawyering since 1979 and assembling one of the world’s largest record collections, since forever. As “Radio Dave,” his career “call letters” include WBBM-AM, WLS-AM/FM, WGN-AM (where he was a frequently scheduled featured guest 1988-2023) and WYCC-TV/Chicago; WLW-AM/Cincinnati; WSLR-FM/Sarasota, and WXYZ-AM/WRIF-FM/Detroit, among many others, plus producing the radio play-by-play broadcasts for the Chicago Bears and Chicago White Sox. 

    • January 22, 2026
    • February 12, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Wilbanks
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 23 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:   How did Shakespeare become Shakespeare? We will look at three genres of his writing: popular songs inserted into the plays, sonnets written for a select audience, and the soliloquy/monologue that he made into an intimate vehicle for the revelation of character. We will read about 10 pages per week. 

    Location: Wilbanks

    Dates/Times:  Thursday, 9:30AM, January 22 - February 12

    Instructor: Herb Levine

    Herb Levine has been teaching poetry for 50 years, first at the college level and then in adult education settings. He thinks that teaching at  PCU (and to the Rounders) is the best gig he's ever had. It's way more fun to teach grown-ups with all their life experience. And what a joy for him not having to grade papers and for you not to have to write them!

    • January 23, 2026
    • February 13, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 12 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:  Tennessee Williams wrote "the monosyllable of the clock is Loss, loss, loss, unless you devote your heart to its opposition." We will explore this statement in relation to three of his major plays: The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. What are the losses Amanda, Blanche, Stanley and Brick face and how do they deal with them? What losses did Williams face in his own life and how did writing help him?. Participants are asked to read and/or see the plays (available on YouTube) and be prepared discuss their reactions. A bibliography about Williams and his work will be provided and voluntary extra readings suggested. 

    Location:  Harbor

    Dates/Times:  Fridays, 11AM, January 23-February 13

    Instructor: Dan Jacobs 

    Dan Jacobs M.D. is a psychoanalyst long in love with theater. Among his 45 publications are three essays on Tennessee Williams, a novel, "The Distance from Home," and a play, "It CAN Happen Here," written with his wife Susan Quinn, a noted biographer.





    • January 26, 2026
    • February 09, 2026
    • 3 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 24 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:  This is an action-oriented course designed to identify barriers to aging in place in the public spaces of Pelican Cove. Class 1 will include an overview of design for aging in place, and presentation of a survey form for completing audits of specific sites developed and tested by the instructor. Small groups will be assigned different sites in the community and, using the audit tool, complete evaluations of their assigned sites. In Class 2, the class will review and discuss preliminary findings and potential solutions. Outside of class, the teams will complete their reports. In Class 3 the small groups will present and discuss their final reports. Results will be presented to the HoA Board for deliberation and action.

    Location:  Pavilion

    Dates/Times: 

    Instructor: Edward Steinfeld

    Ed Steinfeld is a registered architect with a special interest in inclusive design, accessibility, and design for aging. He holds a Bachelor of Architecture Degree from Carnegie Mellon University, and a Doctorate in Architecture from the University of Michigan, where he also received a certificate in gerontology. He is a SUNY Distinguished Professor of Architecture and a Fellow in the American Institute of Architects. He was the founding director of the Center for Inclusive Design and Environmental Access (see http://idea.ap.buffalo.edu ). Dr. Steinfeld is internationally known for his research and publications. He has travelled widely to lecture in many countries and is a frequent consultant to government agencies, building developers and attorneys. He has written or edited 10 books including Universal Design: Creating Inclusive Environments, and Inclusive Housing: A Pattern Book.

    • January 26, 2026
    • February 16, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:  Vaccines are an essential part of medical care to prevent or mitigate infectious diseases. We are going to explore these technologies and their effectiveness as well as the future of new and different vaccines.

    Location: Pavilion

    Dates/Times: Monday, 11AM, January 26 - February 16

    Instructor: Brian Gordon

    Dr. Gordon has practiced medicine for over 50 years in internal and occupational medicine. He also was the medical director of the Mahoning County Health District in Ohio.



    • January 26, 2026
    • February 16, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    Course Description: This course will examine the nature of attention, the role of our current political economy in monetizing and politicizing attention, and the commercial colonization of consciousness. Buddhist meditations will be included to train our attention as we free ourselves and others from these economic and political forces. Finally, we will explore the possibilities of developing a social economy of attention, caring and mutual service.

    Location: Harbor

    Dates/Times: Mondays at 11 am from January 26 to February 16

    Instructor: Martin Lowenthal

    Martin Lowenthal is author of 13 books, including, Common Sense Mindfulness, Avatars of Wisdom, Love & Service, To Bless in Challenging Times, Buddha and the Art of Intimacy, Blessings of the Creative Buddha, Opening the Heart of Compassion: Transform Suffering Through Buddhist Psychology, and Alchemy of the Soul.  He was on the faculty of Boston College and Harvard University Extension,and is currently the Senior Teacher with the Dedicated Life Institute.

     


    • January 28, 2026
    • March 04, 2026
    • 6 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:   Advances in immunology, in genetic engineering, and in diagnostic techniques, all coupled with new insights into the biology of cell dynamics, have led to remarkable progress in the fight to overcome some of our most feared diseases such as Cancer, Dementia, Parkinsons, Cardio-Vascular Disease, and Auto-Immune Disease. In this series, we will explore in detail how these advances have changed our understanding, and our approach to treatment of these most challenging diseases, and give some hope that cures are in sight.

    Location: Pavilion

    Dates/Times:  Wednesday, January 28 - March 4

    Instructor: Reuben Mezrich

     Initially trained as an Electrical Engineer,  Reuben Mezrich obtained a Ph.D. and worked for 14 years in research, mostly at RCA labs in Princeton. He then went to medical school and completed an internship in medicine and residency in radiology at the University of Pennsylvania. After 11 years of private practice, he returned to the University of Pennsylvania, where he taught and was appointed Interim Chair of Radiology. He later joined the Boston and Cambridge faculties of Brigham and Women's Hospital and MIT.  He was then recruited to become Chairman of Radiology at the University of Maryland. Dr. Mezrich has published 75 papers and received 25 patents. 

    • February 03, 2026
    • February 10, 2026
    • 2 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    Course Description:  Human rights are being challenged in so many ways. We will spend one day on basic human rights documents, and the organizations that uphold them. Our second session will be focused on issues around the death penalty.

    Location:  Harbor

    Dates/Times: Tuesday, 2PM, February 3-February 10

    Instructor: Connie Johnson

    Connie Johnson has a BA in History from Oberlin College and an MA in Chinese History from U. of Pennsylvania. She has been an Amnesty International activist for over 20 years.



    • February 04, 2026
    • March 25, 2026
    • 8 sessions
    • Harbor Club
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 12-15 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:   Open to intermediate and advanced recorder players, the class will focus on small group consort playing. There will also be a short weekly lecture touching on technique, alternate fingerings, and ornamentation in renaissance and baroque music.

    Location: Harbor Club

    Dates/Times:  Wednesdays at 11 am, February 4 to March 25

    Instructor:  Brooke Jaron

     Brooke Jaron was Music Director of the   Philadelphia Recorder Society for 11 years and   performed with Philomel, Orfeo Ensemble and The   Folger Consort. She was a student of Marian   Verbruggen, the Dutch recorder virtuoso, in   Amsterdam, Holland, and also studied with the   noted recorder player, Bernard Krainis, in Great   Barrington, MA. Jaron has been teaching and performing on the recorder for over 40 years, privately and in workshops. She was on the faculty of George Washington University, University of Rhode Island and Settlement Music School in Philadelphia. 

    • February 04, 2026
    • February 25, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 26 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:  I love physics! For those who enjoyed science and math courses in high school or college, this course will cover highlights of physics, as discussed in my book, such as the Big Bang Theory, Black Holes, and Albert Einstein’s singular work in modern physics.

    Location: Harbor

    Dates/Times: Wednesdays, February 4-25, at 2 pm

    Instructor: Jeffrey Borenstein

    Jeffrey Borenstein was educated at Harvard AB 1968 with 3 degrees (AB in 1968), AM in 1965 PhD in 1975 in physics. He taught a popular course, Physics for Nonscientists, at Harvard Extension for 13 years. His book is titled, "Physics for Nonscientists, from Bang to Elementary Particles to Black Holes."



    • February 09, 2026
    • March 16, 2026
    • 6 sessions
    • Wilbanks Ivy Room
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 12 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:  Each week we will discuss one story from the anthology, The Best American Short Stories 2025, edited by Celeste Ng, which is available from Amazon. Students must read the text three times, think about the questions sent in advance, and participate in discussions. Priority will be given to those who have not taken my short story class before.

    Location: Wilbanks Ivy Room

    Dates/Times: Mondays at 9:30 am, February 9 to March 16

    Instructor: Laura Shulman

    Laura Shulman has a Ph.D. in English literature and has taught seniors for many years, including courses for PCU.



    • February 10, 2026
    • 2:00 PM - 3:15 PM
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:  Rainforest activist Bruce Segal will present footage of plants and animals from his trips. His focus will include foods and medicines that we use from this habitat, and dealing with global climate change.

    Location:  Pavilion

    Dates/Times: Tuesday, 2:00 PM, February 10 

    Instructor: Bruce Segal

    In the last 30 years, Bruce Segal has visited rainforests all over the world. Over the last 30 years, Bruce has taught adults and children about strategies to protect rainforests, the harvesting of rainforest products, addressing the disaster of global climate change, and winning confrontations with global corporations.

    • February 12, 2026
    • March 12, 2026
    • 5 sessions
    • Wilbanks Blue Wave
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 30 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:  Aging comes with inevitable limitations and loss, but with a positive attitude, supportive friends, meaningful activities, and an enhanced capacity for gratitude, we can make our later years a time for flourishing. We may even be able to transform this period into the best years of our lives. The five sessions include assigned readings and selected TED talks. We will cover a variety of approaches to aging wisely. We will present research from positive psychology about the negativity bias, as well as the benefits of gratitude, optimism, generosity, and meaning-making and awe. We will also engage in exercises to access our implicit wisdom. The format will include brief lectures, large and small group discussions. and prompts for personal journaling on the above topics. Class limited to 30 participants.

    Location:  Wilbanks Blue Wave

    Dates/Times: Thursday, 9:30AM, February 12 - March 12 

    Instructor: Joan Klagsbrun & Julian Miller

    Joan Klagsbrun, PhD, is a psychologist, and psychotherapist who has been practicing for the past 40 years. Joan has also been a longstanding Adjunct Professor at Lesley University, where she integrated her interest in the intersection of spirituality and psychology in the courses she taught. Joan has been teaching positive psychology to the public and to mental health professionals for over a decade. Her publications include articles in professional journals and chapters in several books. Her most recent chapter, co-written with Julian Miller, is Acknowledging the Dark and Embracing the Light. Julian Miller is a writer, poet, artist, swimmer, and tai chi practitioner. For many years he has taught classes abroad and at home on writing stories from your life, where participants use prompts to share important moments from their lives. He is the author of three books, Breaking Through, Freeing Yourself from Fear, Helplessness and Depression; Lifespan Plus, The Definitive Guide to Health and Wellbeing, and I Should Praise, a book of poetry.


    • February 16, 2026
    • March 09, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    Course Description:  The eye, ear, nose and tongue are elaborately designed detection systems that provide the first steps in resolving our world. These classes will explore some of their unique features.

    Location:  Harbor

    Dates/Times: Monday, 2PM, February 16 - March 9

    Instructor: Malcolm Slaughter

    Retired Professor of Physiology and Biophysics at University at Buffalo with research focus on retina and neuroscience



    • February 17, 2026
    • February 24, 2026
    • 2 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    Course Description:  A brief history of New York Harbor from the time of the indigenous peoples, to the present day. This course will include an analysis of the history of NYC's port, a look at the politics of the port, and why today's NYC waterfront is mostly residential and parks.

    Location:  Harbor

    Dates/Times:  Tuesday, 2PM, February 17 - February 24

    Instructor:  Ed Weinstein

    Ed Weinstein is an architect and urban planner whose primary focus has been on the industrial, commercial, residential, and recreational waterfront. He served as Director of Waterfront Development and Assistant Commissioner of the New York City Department of Ports and Terminals. Since 1987, he has been principal of his own architecture and planning firm.





    • February 19, 2026
    • March 12, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Harbor
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 18 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:  Have you ever thought about what happens to you after you die? Every culture and every religion ask the same question. The various responses found within the multitude of Jewish traditions do have a consistent pattern. In this course, participants will review selected excerpts from primary sources from Jewish spiritual, religious, philosophic and personal writings. Interpretations of and opinions about the readings will be developed through group discussion. While an essential goal is to appreciate the variety of sentiments from these Jewish sources, a primary concern will be how these are relevant to our own individual beliefs, conclusions and questions.

    Location:  Harbor

    Dates/Times: Thursday, 11 am, February 19-March 12

    Instructor: Aaron Koplin

    Rabbi Aaron Koplin is an ordained rabbi of Hebrew Union College, the seminary of Reform Judaism. Most of his rabbinic activity has been communal; in the areas of race relations, community development and interfaith activity. While living on and off in Sarasota for over thirty years, he was an adjunct teacher in 'Jewish Studies' at [the old, real] New College. At the same time he was also engaged in private business. Since 1984 he did have congregational experience, primarily in Richmond, VA and Portland, OR.
    • February 23, 2026
    • March 30, 2026
    • 6 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:  Between 1969 and 1974, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young was the most successful, influential, and politically active rock band in America. Using their music as a roadmap, this course will review how the supergroup came together, their flawless harmonies, and how their music reflected the politics and counterculture of the time. Finally, we'll see how drug and alcohol abuse, creative tension, and bickering over women threatened to tear them apart.

    Location:  Pavilion

    Dates/Times: Monday, 11AM, February 23 - March 30 (session 3 will be on 3/10 instead of 3/9) 

    Instructor: John Scibak

    With a Ph.D. in Psychology , John Scibak worked in health care and human services as a researcher and hospital administrator and held academic positions at Indiana University, UMass-Amherst and Westfield State University. John ran mid-career for elective office, won a state legislative seat as a write-in candidate, and served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 2003 through 2019, when he retired and moved to Pelican Cove with his wife, Pat.

    • March 05, 2026
    • March 26, 2026
    • 4 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    This class has a limited enrollment of 25 students.  For more information see: Limited Enrollment Classes

    Course Description:  In this course, we will read short stories or poems to discover the philosophical ideas they contain, and discuss them in relation to central questions in both general philosophy, and in the philosophy of literature: Do we learn from literature? If we do, are works better as literature if they contain original ideas? Should literary works make us both feel and think? What is the nature of the emotions these works elicit? 

    Location:  Pavilion

    Dates/Times: Thursday, 11AM, March 5 - March 26

    Instructor:  Robert Stecker

    Robert Stecker received a Ph.D. in Philosophy from MIT. He is Professor Emeritus at Central Michigan University and the author of five books on the philosophy of art and aesthetics.

    • March 11, 2026
    • March 18, 2026
    • 2 sessions
    • Pavilion
    Register

    Course Description:  The recent federal government shutdown brought the cost of U.S. health care to the fore. But both parties squandered this opportunity for a national discussion about why we are spending in excess of $2 trillion per year on health care (more than our annual federal budget deficit) to achieve disastrously inferior and rapidly deteriorating health for Americans in comparison to the citizens of other wealthy nations. To what extent does the relentlessly growing commercial control of medical research play a role? Three examples recently in the news will be discussed: What does the scientific evidence (and lack thereof) really show about who should receive annual Covid boosters? Do people without heart disease benefit from super LDL-cholesterol lowering with a PCSK-9 inhibitor (Repatha)? And do weight-loss drugs like Mounjaro and Zepbound decrease the risk of people with prediabetes developing full-blown diabetes?

    Location:  Pavilion

    Dates/Times:  Wednesday, 2:00pm - 3:15pm , March 11 - March 18

    Instructor:  Dr. John Abramson

    After completing a Family Medicine residency, serving in the Public Health Service, and completing a 2-year Robert Wood Johnson Research Fellowship, John Abramson practiced family medicine for 20 years near Boston and chaired the department at Lahey Clinic for 7 years. In 2002 his focus shifted from clinical practice to researching the quality of the medical information doctors must rely on. Since 2005, he has served as an expert witness in pharmaceutical litigation and consulted for the FBI and Department of Justice, including on a case that led to the then largest criminal fine in U.S. history. Dr. Abramson was on the faculty of Harvard Medical School for 25 years, the last 15 of which he served as a Lecturer in the Dept. of Health Care Policy. He has published numerous academic articles and op-ed pieces, as well as two books that examine the commercial distortion of medical knowledge and patient care.

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