All blog items

A resident’s mission to serve beyond the clinic fuels community connections

Victor Ayeni, MD, a resident in Duke’s Internal Medicine Residency Program, is bringing fellow residents closer to Durham — one connection at a time. Since arriving in 2024, he has helped residents engage with the community through hands-on service, creative programming, and meaningful partnerships.

Closing the gap: Duke builds a first-of-its-kind vision rehabilitation training pipeline

Vision loss can have a profound impact on independence, but professionals best positioned to help— like occupational therapists — have historically received little formal training in vision disorders.  The gap has created a critically small workforce at a time when an aging population is driving an urgent need for greater vision rehabilitation services.   

Leadership Transition at the Duke Microbiome Center

After more than a decade of exceptional service, John F. Rawls, PhD, will step down as director of the Duke Microbiome Center effective June 30, 2026, and Julia Oh, PhD, will assume the role beginning July 1, 2026.

Second Year Student Blog: Brian Nguyen

Before my month-long orthopedic surgery rotation at the VA, admittedly, I carried certain preconceived notions of the VA, shaped by things I’d heard, veterans I’d briefly met, or stories of the military told by my family from Vietnam. From these pieces, I’d gather that veterans were hardened, calloused by their experiences, reluctant to seek outside help, and a distrust was built from their injuries, sacrifices, or years of service. I knew my observations were incomplete, but I didn’t fully grasp to what degree until I had the opportunity to care for them directly.  &nbs

Red Flags in a PA Application (and How to Avoid Them)

With CASPA open, our admissions team (A-team) here at DPAP review a large number of applications each day. While each applicant is unique, we still come across a couple of common mistakes and patterns that could negatively impact an application.