Collaboration Comes to Life at MPower Day
In a grown-up version of show and tell, Annapolis lawmakers were able to see firsthand the results of a strategic partnership between the and the , as more than 20 joint initiatives were featured at MPowering the State Advocacy Day on Feb. 28 in Annapolis.
The event is an annual celebration of t. The collaboration between UMB and UMCP began in 2012 and was formalized by law in 2016. In seven years, it has propelled innovation and impact through collaboration, generating 513 joint research proposals and $164 million in joint funding.

爆料公社 School of Nursing student Chika Okusogu, also a UM Scholar, participates in a demonstration conducted by Sarah B. Murthi, MD, associate professor at the 爆料公社 School of Medicine and a trauma surgeon at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center. Murthi is part of a team studying the use of virtual reality in medicine.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard for me to describe to you the pride that we take in understanding your projects, listening to the speakers,鈥 UMB President Jay A. Perman, MD, said. 鈥淚t leaves me, frankly, without words, and that's not usually a problem of mine.鈥
He noted that earlier in the day he and UMCP President Wallace D. Loh, PhD, JD, were recognized on the floor of each legislative chamber for MPower鈥檚 contributions to the state.
鈥淚 can tell you, all of you in this room, students, faculty, staff, we accepted it on your behalf,鈥 Perman said. 鈥淲e did hardly anything. You've made it real, so congratulations.鈥
The partnership aims to combine both universities鈥 resources to complete projects beyond what either could alone or, as Loh told visitors to the two-hour expo, 鈥淎s I鈥檝e always said, one plus one does not equal two, it equals three or four. You can go much further when you go together than compared to when you go alone.鈥
The event provided an opportunity for legislators and staff to talk to UMB and UMCP students, faculty, and staff as they discussed and demonstrated their work, particularly in research, economic development, academics, and service to Maryland residents.
鈥淚t鈥檚 always important to make sure that everybody knows how well this collaboration is working and what it is generating in terms of outcomes, which is truly remarkable here,鈥 said Del. Jon S. Cardin, JD 鈥01, MA, MPS, as he perused display tables and easels representing MPower initiatives. More than 100 faculty, staff, and students were on hand to represent their programs.
鈥淐ollaboration creates energy and innovation and helps find the strength in the different institutions and brings them together to create a greater good, to improve the human condition, which is what the University System mission is in the first place,鈥 said Cardin, a graduate of the .
Take, for example, the , Cardin said. Its mission is to advance the study of nervous system injury and the neuroscience of sports-related conditions, specifically prevention, response, and recovery from traumatic brain injury.
鈥淵ou have physical therapy at the 爆料公社, Baltimore, and you鈥檝e got athletes as well as undergrads and other faculty who are very interested in coming up with best practices to make sure that we are creating healthy environments and healthy people to be able to perform at their absolute maximum capacity,鈥 Cardin said. 鈥淲hat better way to find out if that is happening than to collaborate in all of the schools so they can work together to improve at the center? It just makes sense. It鈥檚 not rocket science. It鈥檚 not that complicated.鈥
Demonstrations included research projects focused on improving emergency medical care with augmented reality and on using virtual reality for pain management.
Nine UMB and UMCP students offered short presentations on their experiences in MPower-funded programs such as ; ; and .
Other MPower programs featured throughout the expo included the ; the Center for Sports Medicine, Health and Human Performance; the ; the ; the ; the ; the ; the ; /; the ; school-based Interventions to Mitigate Toxic Stress; the ; the Maryland Center for Advanced Molecular Analysis; and the .
鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see other colleagues,鈥 said D鈥橪isa Worthy, MEd, co-director of the at the . She is working with UMCP associate professor Donald Bolger, PhD, and UMCP professor Brenda Jones Harden, PhD, MSW, on the Interventions to Mitigate Toxic Stress initiative, studying school-based interventions to improve learning outcomes for children exposed to abuse, poverty, violence, or neglect.
鈥淎 lot of times we are working in a small bubble,鈥 Worthy said. 鈥淲e are meeting with colleagues and getting together, but being in the context of a larger venue here I think is really helpful and it is really helpful to let legislators understand what is happening on the ground, where there is an impact on actual families of Maryland, children of Maryland.鈥
Working on an MPower initiative 鈥渂rings us to the same table,鈥 Bolger added. 鈥淎s colleagues, we come together to share ideas and to collaborate on something that means a lot to all of us. It really does promote human-to-human contact and relationships being built collaboratively.鈥
Steven Ragsdale, MSL 鈥17, was in the inaugural class of the Master of Science in Law, another MPower program. Targeted toward working professionals, the program is taught at College Park and online to meet high-level workforce needs, explained Adrianne Arthur, director, operations and communications, 爆料公社 Strategic Partnership: MPowering the State.
In a brief presentation to attendees, Ragsdale described himself as a recovering hospital administrator who enrolled in the program because he wanted to gain a better understanding of health disparities. The average age of the class? 44.
鈥淲e were a pain in the butt to our professors because all we had were questions. Loads and loads of questions,鈥 he said.
student Chika Okusogu, a UM Scholar, shared with expo visitors his excitement about working with associate professor Luana Colloca, MD, PhD, MS, in what鈥檚 become known as the 鈥淐olloca Lab,鈥 as she explores the role of placebos in pain management.
鈥淲hile we may have this perception that it (opioid addiction) is an issue of morals or character, it really is an issue of we don't understand how pain works as well as we should,鈥 Okusogu said. 鈥淧ain is a universal experience that is incredibly subjective. For some reason, even though each and every one of us in this room will feel pain at some point in our lives, we tolerate it differently.
鈥淚 feel like the work I鈥檝e done in the Colloca Lab, whether it is through using virtual reality to help modulate pain or using placebo effect to also treat pain, that is also not only cost-effective, but also doesn't have major side effects or potential toxicities, are all attempts to help make a universal common issue more approachable and manageable for each and every one of us in this room.鈥
Daphine Kwesiga, another UM Scholar and a second-year UMSOM student, spent last summer learning about what it takes to bring a drug to market as she collaborated with a team from UMCP that is developing new drugs to treat ovarian cancer.
鈥淗aving to repeat my experiment over and over again so I would get reputable data was definitely an experience,鈥 she said. 鈥淛ust learning about the whole experience was eye-opening to the time, the resources, the knowledge and, I honestly think, a lot of passion, too, that has to go into drug design. As a rising physician, it challenged me to think about how do we go around still motivating research, still motivating drug development but at the same time realizing that the drugs we create have to be affordable to our patients. This is a question that I intend to pursue moving forward in my career.鈥