Tag Archive for: DU

The start of the school year is often a time for reflection and renewal. It’s a time when many people think about their future prospects—the perfect opportunity to explore continuing education options! To mark this occasion, we’d like to introduce you to one of our 198 university diplomas (DU) and inter-university diplomas (DIU): the DU in “From Normal Cells to Tumor Cells.” To do so, we sat down with the two co-directors of this program, Ms. Szablewski and Mr. Ramirez. Here’s the interview.

 

Ms. Szablewski, Mr. Ramirez, good morning. Could you please briefly introduce yourselves?

VS: I am Dr. Vanessa Szablewski, MCU-PH in Pathological Anatomy and Cytology at the Montpellier University Hospital. I specialize in hematopathology and ENT pathology. For my research, I am affiliated withINSERM UMR 1058, “Pathogenesis and Control of Chronic and Emerging Infections.” My research focuses on the role of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) in cancers of the head and neck region.

JMR: I have held a Ph.D. in Biological Sciences for Health since 2005. After completing my dissertation, I conducted several postdoctoral fellowships abroad—in Washington, D.C., in the United States; at the Geneva University Hospital in Switzerland; and at the CIC (Centro de Investigación contra el Cáncer) in Spain—before finally returning to France to join the IRMB in Montpellier. In 2015, I was hired as an associate professor at the Montpellier-Nîmes Faculty of Medicine in Professor Thierry Lavabre-Bertrand’s department, where I teach histology and cell biology. In 2019, Vanessa and I created the first website featuring virtual slides that combines three disciplines: anatomy, pathological anatomy, and histology.

 

You are both in charge of the university certificate program “From Normal Cells to Tumor Cells.” What motivated you to create this program?

JMR: Histology and pathological anatomy are two closely related disciplines; it seemed to me that it is essential for a researcher in the field of health to be familiar not only with histology (the study of tissues) but also with pathological tissues.

 

Who is this training primarily intended for? How long does it last?

VS: This program is intended for all researchers working in the field of oncology, as well as those who wish to learn about human tissues and the diseases associated with them. It is also intended for physicians who wish to pursue a career in research or for oncologists who wish to acquire a solid foundation in scientific oncology. The program spans one academic year, but classes are held between February and June. The curriculum includes 52 hours of instruction, divided into 6 modules.

 

What added value will future graduates gain from this program? Does it open up new career paths for enrolled students?

JMR: The primary benefits are, first and foremost, the acquisition of new fundamental skills that will better equip future physicians or researchers in the field of oncology to perform their duties. Second, for all future physicians, the ability to better interpret medical findings provided by a physician specializing in pathological anatomy.