Stephanie Hu – Yale Daily News https://yaledailynews.com The Oldest College Daily Wed, 05 Apr 2023 04:18:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 181338879 Filmmaker Emily May Jampel discusses queer Asian short film at the AACC https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2023/04/05/filmmaker-emily-may-jampel-discusses-queer-asian-short-film-at-the-aacc/ Wed, 05 Apr 2023 04:18:05 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=182474 Jampel speaks about how her award-winning short film explores the intersection of queer and Asian identities.

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At a screening and talkback on Thursday, filmmaker Emily May Jampel reflected on how moments of queer joy inspired her to approach her short “Lucky Fish” with an optimistic tone.

The Asian American Cultural Center and Queer & Asian at Yale invited Jampel to discuss her award-winning short film about a queer coming-of-age moment between two Asian American teenagers. “Lucky Fish” has been screened at film festivals around the world including the Palm Springs International Film Festival, Outfest Los Angeles and the Hong Kong Lesbian and Gay Film Festival 2022. The screening and discussion with Jampel were in celebration of Pan Asian American Heritage Month.

“My shorts are all about, in different ways, exploring identity,” Jampel said at the event. “I’m not the type of filmmaker who knows how to write something entirely outside of myself.”

The themes of intersectionality and identity feature strongly in the short. It tells the story of an unexpected encounter between two queer Asian-American teenagers while eating with their families at a Chinese restaurant. While discussing their respective struggles with identity, they share an important coming-of-age moment.

This representation of queer Asian identities in media is rare, according to both attendees and the filmmaker herself. Jampel did not recall seeing many films she could reference when coming up with the idea for “Lucky Fish.” 

“I think it’s a very new concept to me because I’m so used to seeing these two spaces apart and divided,” Mandy Zhang ’26, who attended the screening, said. “It was kind of the way I approached navigating my identity up until I found spaces like this.”

Jampel shared how similar feelings and experiences affected her own filmmaking journey. 

She recounted a memory of queer joy when she met a photographer she admired, Ren Hang, while coming to terms with her own identity. Her experience conducting a photoshoot with other Asian-American young adults brought her a sense of connectedness she tries to replicate in her own filmmaking.

“‘Queer’ can mean so many different things to each person and Asian can mean so many different things to each person, but there’s also a common thread in there that feels very special,” Jampel said. “I remember how special it felt to be with people that had that sense of commonality for a purpose, and when I was putting together a cast, I was looking to create that feeling.”

For the organizers of this event, creating a space to simultaneously embrace both queer and Asian identities was equally important.

Diza Hendrawan ’25, one of the organizers of the event, told the News that the film’s focus on queerness tied into the theme of this year’s PAAMH, which was “Pride, Power, and Possibilities.”

Hendrawan recalled watching “Lucky Fish” for the first time at the Asian American International Film Festival’s queer shorts showcase. Among all the shorts in the showcase, it stuck out to her the most, so she was excited to have an opportunity to bring the film screening to Yale.

“This short is played in a lot of queer festivals and a lot of Asian festivals, but there’s no festival that has both of those, and they’re both very core parts of the short.” Jampel said. “So it felt like you were the perfect audience for it.”

The month of May is federally designated as Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month.

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Yale researchers discover loophole in FDA medical device regulation https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2023/01/26/yale-researchers-discover-loophole-in-fda-medical-device-regulation/ Thu, 26 Jan 2023 06:50:26 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=181009 Researchers at the Yale School of Medicine and Harvard Medical School found that a loophole in existing regulation has allowed manufacturers to acquire U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for unsafe medical devices.

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A recent study led by researchers at the Yale School of Medicine and Harvard Medical School found that a loophole in existing regulation has allowed manufacturers to acquire U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for unsafe medical devices. 

This work was led by Kushal Kadakia, first author and M.D. candidate at Harvard Medical School, and Harlan Krumholz ’80, senior author, Harold H. Hines, Jr. Professor of Medicine and director of the Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation. Their study found empirical evidence that medical devices approved based on a previously-recalled device through the 510(k) regulatory pathway were significantly more likely to be subject to a Class I Recall, the FDA’s most severe designation for recalls.

“The 510(k) pathway does not require medical devices to undergo new testing as long as they can show they are substantially related to previous approved devices, known as predicates,” Kadakia said.

This pathway expedites the approval of medical devices that may only have minor changes from previously approved iterations and are being used for the same purpose. In fact, over 95 percent of new devices are cleared by the FDA through this pathway.

But due to a loophole in the regulation, the predicates themselves may not actually be safe for human use. 

“The way the law is written, if the FDA pulled it off the market, it can’t be used as a predicate, but if the company pulled it off the market, you retain the ability to reintroduce a new one that is substantially equivalent and still be used for that unsafe purpose,” Krumholz said. 

The study focused on medical devices that were subject to a Class I Recall. This sort of recall is issued when a medical device has a reasonable probability of causing severe adverse health consequences up to and including death.

Previous studies had provided case studies showing harm caused by devices approved using recalled predicates. Kadakia worked on two such studies of a catheter and sleep apnea device that were later subject to Class I Recalls. This new study is unique, however, in its scope.

“We were able to go across several years and identify all the devices that had these recalls, instead of picking out one or two,” Krumholz said. “We were able to look at a comprehensive group and give a more representative view.” 

This approach was made possible by recent advances in machine learning and data science. Because the FDA’s database only contains decision letters, which list the reasoning behind an authorization, it can be difficult to figure out what devices have been authorized using a specific device as a predicate. Without the use of new computational tools, it would have been time-consuming to map the lineages of medical devices. However, the researchers were able to construct these lineages in partnership with an AI company and then manually confirm the AI database’s results.

The researchers found a 6.4 times increase in recall rates for medical devices approved using recalled predicates when compared to non-recalled predicates. Given that each device can have tens of thousands of units and are used throughout the medical process, these recalls can have widespread effects.

The Safety of Untested and New Devices Act of 2012 was a previous attempt to rectify this issue, but failed to secure enough votes. The researchers hope this novel study may reinvigorate the United States Congress to at least begin discussion of the 510(k) pathway again.

“The recalled predicate loophole is not an unknown quantity in Washington,” Kadakia said. “We have now provided empirical evidence in a systematic way of how this loophole is being used to cause harm.” 

The study authors also acknowledge that more work can be done using these new computational methods. 

“We limited it to a one generation analysis, but it would be interesting to look at the children of children of recalled predicates and so on,” said César Caraballo, a postdoctoral associate at Yale School of Medicine. 

Krumholz hopes that more evidence would strengthen Congress’s ability to enact wise and empirically sound legislation. This is especially critical as medical devices receive far less research attention than drugs because they are embedded throughout the medical process instead of at the point of care, Kadakia explained. 

“If we were able to add unique device identifiers to claim forms, we could quantify the amount of spending that was authorized through the predicate recall loophole,” Kadakia said. “We could also determine if the reasons for the new recalls and the recalls of the predicates are similar.”

In the fiscal year 2022, 149 medical device products were subject to Class I recalls.

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