It is almost like they want us to be safe or something. Earlier in the week Joe and I took multiple online classes about safety procedures, and today we continued to learn by having a discussion with the safety administrator regarding rudimentary sensors we would use as our canaries. I have included a rudimentary sketch of our plans.
Month: May 2016
Day 5
Today I researched different types of dietitians for my presentation. I am also putting together a small project for the college counseling office to have for future reference of those interested in pursuing nutrition as a major or career. I have been speaking with different dietitians all week, so I will incorporate all of their different perspectives.
Day 5- Ankle day
Today I was back with my normal PT. We saw a lot of patients today since there is going to be a long weekend and they arnt open on Monday. A few patients that I saw today have had ankle surgery. They were coming for physical therapy in order to strengthen the muscles in there ankles. They worked on a lot of different exercises for the ankle such as balancing on it and also using the stretching bands to stretch there ankles and help to get there full range of motion back.
Day 4- Autism in the Media
Camp counselors were arriving at Camp Royall today, which meant that they were doing mostly “get to know everyone” type of activities. Instead of driving out, my day was devoted to learning as much about Autism as I could. I went to the library and picked up these books to use as resources which I spent most of the morning reading in the CA library.

Dr. Mac also sent me a link to “Autism: The Musical” which follows the lives of 5 autistic children and their parents as they organize a musical production. This movie was available on YouTube, so I watched this to learn more about the varying types of autism each of these children has. I also found a book in the CA library titled “Born on a Blue Day: Inside of the Mind of an Autistic Savant”, which was the autobiography of Daniel Tammet a man with savant syndrome which means he is not only autistic, but has mental capabilities far beyond the norm. In Tammet’s case, he is able to perform complex mathematical problem in a matter of seconds and associates shapes and colors with numbers. He references the classic movie “Rain Main” in the book which led me to do some research on the movie. Although I was unable to watch it, I read the plot and watched the trailer to find it is a story of an autistic man and his brother. These movies and books are all great example of how the media is an amazing way to raise awareness for individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
-Fiona
Day 5 – What Does This Button Do? (WNCN)
Day 5 was an early one. I was scheduled to arrive at
SEVEN in the morning! It was a little rough at first, but totally worth it. When I arrived I met John Lindsey, a news director at WNCN. He gave me a quick tour of the building before we started doing anything else. After the tour I sat with John in the control room as he explained how they do the cut ins. Cut ins are, well, when the station cuts into the national programming to do local new and/or news. These happen at specific times in the program which are broadcasted to the local stations. The director of the cut ins will code the program they use before they begin. The director, the sound editor, and the camera operator all work together to produce the cut ins. I sat with John during the first cut in. Funny enough as he was trying to code the show he coded the wrong one so he pretty much winged it. It was a bit sloppy but it seemed to turn out okay. For the next cut
in I sat with the sound editor. He control the levels of all the different sound inputs, such as microphones, any music, and sound from videos. He makes sure that nothing is too loud or too soft and that all the needed pieces can or cannot be heard at a given time. While they weren’t doing cut ins myself and an intern got to mess around with the sound board and coding the show a little bit. For the next cut it I sat with the camera operator in the studio. She controls where the cameras are facing and makes sure that they are in the right places at the right times. Earlier in the morning she also sets up all the camera angles for most of the day. She is the one who cues the reporters or meteorologists as well. She makes sure they know how much time is left in the spot which is fed to her by the director in the control room. She was a very funny woman who was almost always singing into the coms. For the last cut in I sat with the director in the control room again, only this time it was the intern who was doing the directing. She did a very good job, everything went according to plan.
Once I had spent about two hours in the control room/studio, I sat in on a news meeting. The reporters that were there along with the producers of the news shows that day were discussing what stories they had or expected to get that day. After the meeting was over I sat with the producer of the 12 o’clock show. He was setting out what was going to go when and picking out clips from footage for the editor to edit together for the packages he needed. I asked him a lot of random questions about things I saw int he room. I asked him about things such as the analytics system they use, it’s the same as the N&O, in what circumstances do they like using live shots vs. pre-recorded shots, what he does on a standard day, and others.
After that I sat with an editor for a while. He was the one who was working with the producer of the 12 o’clock to edit all the packages he n
eeded together. The editor had a tv in his edit bay that I ended up watching a bit, then suddenly the feed went down. For some reason, I never found out why, the channel began to experience technical difficulties. When the station first sort of came back online I was told that it was showing their old logos and color schemes. They were recently partnered with CBS locally and so they changed their look. The editor told me that the corporates probably wouldn’t be fans of the fact that 1) The station went down, and 2) That they were showing older logos. After about 15-20 minutes the station came back on.
Then just before 12 I went back to the
control room to observe the 12 o’clock news from behind the scenes. Coolest part was I got a mini job. I was tasked with pressing play on a live streamed view of the beach just before it was supposed to be shown live, so that we wouldn’t run into ad problems after the original feed broke down. The show itself was pretty standard, but really cool getting the back stage look at what goes down.
Day 5- Making my own gif !
I know I continuously rave about how fascinating everything I’ve done each day is, but I honestly cant help it- it just gets better and better! On Friday I spent the day with Mike, a motion picture designer and art director. I shadowed him as he went to a team meeting and also went to oversee a rough edit of one of the videos an editor had put together. He provided his own critique to the editor and gave suggestions on where to keep the artistic focus and message as well as how to tweak the edit on certain moments. Later, as I mentioned to him that I loved film, he showed me videos on the filming process and some of the work that a motion picture designer would add to a film. It was shocking to me just how much of a clip or even movie as a whole, is actually animated. We talked about certain elements of film such as color correction, music and timing and watched various videos that showed the importance of each element. After talking for a couple of hours about pretty much everything you can imagine involving film, Mike kindly offered to show me how to animate a gif! Seriously guys- I can not even begin to tell you how excited I was in that moment. Although the process was complex and probably took me ten times the amount of time it would take Mike, we ended up creating a pretty cool little clip. What a fun opportunity!
Evie 
Mexican and Aerosol
If you find this title confusing you should. The two do not go together, but somehow at RTI the most seemingly separate of things come together in a beautiful synthesis. Each person, each member of the team, each sector of RTI, is filled to the brim with professionals that facilitate the marriage of outlandish theories in the most innovative of ways. My day was not any different. It started a little slower than normal (it was a Friday after all), but what I’ve learned about RTI is when things pick up they never quite stop. I did some light reading in Science News, a weekly press release that covers interesting journal articles from a variety of science fields. Then Phil taught me about the tuberculosis project they are currently working on. Basically some drugs referred to as POA and PAE (one is an ester and one is an oil) were made into uniform powders using a complicated processes that I will not go too in depth into. This process is preformed in several meticulous stages to “purify” these solutions into fine powders. The drugs work by binding to an enzyme present in some strands of TB, which allows it to be absorbed into the think layers of the TB bacteria. The drug changes into its -OH form to target the TB in the lungs. The peculiar part is that, although the drug greatly reduces TB in the lungs, (where it is dispersed) it completely eradicates the disease from the spleen. How curious. Almost immediately after this explanation (which was accompanied by data and a pretty nifty slideshow), I sat in on a conference call with both Phil and an aerosol specialist named Tony. The conference call was with a representative from an video journal. There used to be a device on the market used to administer aerosol drugs for animal testing. Recently, however the company has ceased production and there is no longer anything available for this administration. RTI has created a sterile device akin to the originally manufactured to be released soon. Because the production of it is best understood with pictures and diagrams a traditional journal format would not be ideal, so they are interested in using this new video journal formatting. The conference call never ceased to be interesting, but I found myself even more enthralled in Tony, himself. I got to talk to him in length after the call and it was really interesting to hear about how he became involved in aerosols and what his prospective on modern day innovation is (plus he has written a ton of books and papers that are beyond cool). Around lunch, Dr.Rothrock, Cameron, Michelle, Phil, and I went to a Mexican restaurateur to eat lunch, where Dr.Rothrock shared her own story and described her job. Of course, the day could not go on without some final lab tests (I’m getting pretty fast with it by now) amidst some new funky tune Phil has found on Spotify! What a day! What a week!
(I apologize for the lack of pictures today, but a good portion was confidential and could not be photographed)
Day 5 – “Are we too efficient?”
Hello friends!
Not much to talk about today, sadly. Due to the phenomenal (if I do say so myself) work ethics of Mrs. Michelle and myself, we finished a lot of work during the first four days of this week. Unfortunately, our enthusiasm was not successfully mimicked by he rest of the department, so the last major project was delayed since we didn’t have the neccessary devices yet.
However, despite this tragic set back (absolutely tragic, I tell you), we were able to plow forward and make progress on the set back project, and we also aided other groups, which included work on a new inlet for the ECMs, to testing the optical density of some data Dr. Thornburg sent back from India.
In addition to our work, Emily and I also met with Mrs. Ginger Rothrock, one of the more senior workers at RTI. To those of you wondering, yes, this is the wife to our beloved sixth grade science teacher, who left some years ago.
Since there were no new projects or experiments today, I didn’t manage to get any attention grabbing photos. However, we should have the neccessary requirements to begin testing on a new project next week, so tune in for some awesome experiments on Tuesday!
Have a wonderful weekend!
–Cameron
Day 4: The Prescription
I apologize for how late this post is, it is meant to be for Thursday May 26. Due to cross country travel and the busyness of a speech and debate tournament, I was slightly delayed posting.
This morning Ms. Allen payed us a visit at the Eye Center. We got to talk to her about the experience and finally gave her a tour of the center. After that I continued to shadow Dr. Besharat and I watched her conduct some tests she did conduct previously. She used a dye on the eyes of her patients to check for abrasions and other imperfections on the surface of the eye. Afterwards she conducted an exam on me and went through all of the standard procedures from checking the strength of my eye muscles to checking the health of my eye. Everything checked out! She also tested my prescription and I learned that I needed a new prescription which I was given. Finally, I was able to see Dr. Besharat check patients for potential tumors on their eyes. The below image is of the many bottles of dyes and solutions the doctor’s use on a daily basis. Some are lubricating drops, others are to control allergies, and others are for contact lenses. One of the bottles contains the dye in it.

Day 5 – Painful Farewell
Today I started my day early. Today was a busy day because they’re closed on Monday (for Memorial Day). I got to see a lot of different patients. I recognized a lot of patients from earlier this week. It was nice to see them again and see their progress. One lady just had ACL surgery yesterday! I was suprised she was already at her first PT session today.
A bunch of paid athletes came in today for PT. They’re so fast and they have done multiple half iron mans! After hearing about all of their hard training, I was not surprised that they had so much pain. For example, one woman had a tight hip and hamstring, and will have to get an MRI next week to check up on it.
There was more dry needling today. The dry needling was used on the calves, hips and shoulders today.

I continued to wipe off tables after each patient left. I sprayed the table with disinfectanct and then changed the pillowcase. Once the table and pillowcase are clean, I turn the pillow parallel to the table (like in the picture above).
A patient from earlier in the week was here again today. He used the total gym to do leg presses to strengthen his knee.

The Total Gym was used on a patient that had ACL surgery. The Total Gym is a great way to strengthen the knees and quads.
One patient has been going to physical therapy for a while now, so he is able to run again. He had shin splints, but after weeks of physical therapy, he was able to run a few minutes on the treadmill.

Treadmill that patients can start running on.
It was tough to say goodbye today. Since I am going to the West Point leadership camp tomorrow, today was my final day at Raleigh Orthopedics. I learned so many exercises and I am so glad I had this experience. This week helped me decide with what I want to do in the future. Also, this week has made me so thankful that I haven’t been injured (knock on wood!) and I am able to live my daily life pain-free. If I do come across an injury down the road, I know that Mr. Meszler is an incredible PT and he will get me back on the road quickly.