06Jun

Welcome back to #WeAreGreenKey, where we shine a spotlight on our powerhouse recruiting team.

Last week, we sat down with Lauren Scutero, Staffing Manager on the Pharma National team. Lauren has about 18 years of pharmaceutical recruiting experience, with no end in sight. She elaborated on the strong relationships she has built in the industry, especially with those she has known since the beginning, as well as why pharmaceutical recruiting is so close to her heart.

How did you first get started in staffing?

In 2004, I started working at a staffing agency in Tennessee. About six months in, I realized I wasn’t too happy working there, so I started applying for jobs in Florida where I wanted to relocate. I was eventually recruited for a pharmaceutical staffing agency, where I met Larry [Goodman] and Deloris [Jones]. I got the offer and started working with them in November 2004. Ten years later, I was lucky enough to make the move to their team at Green Key. My team has always felt like family because they are.

What do you love about recruiting for Pharma?

I love that we are making a difference in this field. On a personal level, my son was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes when he was two years old. It made my work so much more real to me knowing there are people, especially children, who our work is helping in the long run. It is so close to my heart at this point. My son’s life is impacted by the people who we place.

What makes your team so successful?

We are a family, but still competitive with each other. We have fun with it, while also building each other up. Our team cares about each other as people, not just coworkers. All the new recruiters know they will have our support from the very beginning.

What is the training like on your team?

They run through the Salesforce training in the first week and then in their second week, they hop on a Teams call with each of the Senior Recruiters. We provide examples of resumes, top positions we recruit for, day-to-day operations, and different types of interviews. Once they really jump into it, we do follow up calls to check-in and answer any questions they may have.

What do you believe sets Green Key apart from other staffing agencies?

It’s family from the top down. Even from upper management, I get messages from the Partners asking how things are going in my personal and professional life. Our agency has grown, but it still feels Iike a family-oriented company. The work-life balance is tremendous and it’s all because of our management team.

What are your goals for yourself and your team in the new year?

Clinical research doesn’t go anywhere. We must continue pushing forward and keep showing our clients that Green Key is one of the top recruiting/staffing agencies around. It is not just the daily grind; we have to remember the bigger picture and the difference we are making in the world.

Jun 6, 2023

Dog Study Could Lead to Help For Humans with Sports Injuries

Osteoarthritis of the knee is a common condition in humans and in their canine companions. An estimated 20% of dogs older than a year and 12% of people between 25 and 74 will develop the condition.

The causes and mechanisms are not well understood, however age and weight are considered major risk factors.

Injuries also lead to developing the disease. In fact one of the most common of all sports injuries in humans as well as dogs – a tear of the anterior cruciate ligament — is the leading cause of post traumatic osteoarthritis.

The mystery is why many, but not all, dogs and people with ACL injuries develop post traumatic osteoarthritis, medically referred to as PTOA. Now, a study of dogs at Cornell University’s veterinary school, published this month in Scientific Reports, offers clues to the potential for developing PTOA.

Researchers led by Dr. Heidi Reesink, assistant professor in equine health at Cornell, found that changes in the production of lubricin, a joint lubricating protein, could be a precursor to developing joint disease.

Lubricin is critical to smooth joint functioning. “We know that if a person or animal doesn’t make that protein, they will develop devastating joint disease affecting all the major weight-bearing joints,” says Reesink.

The prevailing view among veterinarians and physicians is that lubricin production declines after injury, leading to the development of PTOA. “The dogma in this field has been that lubricin decreases in joint disease,” Reesink said.

But the study found that in canine patients with a knee ligament tear lubricin increased and it was correlated with the development of osteoarthritis.

“This indicates that the presence of increased lubricin might actually be a biomarker for predicting future osteoarthritis,” said Reesink. “We also saw increased lubricin in dogs months to years after they injured their ACLs, suggesting that lubricin might be an indicator of ongoing joint instability.”

Increased lubricin could serve as a tipoff to clinicians to intervene with early treatments to ward off or slow the development of osteoarthritis, not just in dogs, but in people, too.

Photo by Alvan Nee on Unsplash

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