All blog items

Newest Data Shows Childhood Obesity Continues to Increase

Despite reports in recent years suggesting childhood obesity could be reaching a plateau in some groups, the big picture on obesity rates for children ages 2 to 19 remains unfavorable.   [video:https://youtu.be/GBVHMV-yPnQ] Three decades of rising childhood obesity continued their upward trend in 2016 according to a new analysis from Duke Health researchers.

OnCore Go Live Stop Light Evaluation

In preparation for the OnCore Go Live, we conducted a Stop Light Evaluation to review the workflows and system use.  This evaluation is open to all Duke Health research faculty and staff. Title: OnCore Go Live Stop Light Evaluation Date: Thursday, March 8, 2018 Location: Hock Plaza Auditorium (2424 Erwin Road) Time: 1:30 PM - 4:30 PM

Animal Study Shows How to Retrain the Immune System to Ease Food Allergies

Treating food allergies might be a simple matter of teaching the immune system a new trick, researchers at Duke Health have found.   In a study using mice bred to have peanut allergies, the Duke researchers were able to reprogram the animals’ immune systems using a nanoparticle delivery of molecules to the lymph nodes that switched off the life-threatening reactions to peanut exposures.    

PCLT Student Research Spotlight

As a medical student, you spend a great deal of time learning to deliver care to an individual patient. You gather a history and perform a physical exam, then formulate a diagnosis and select the appropriate course of treatment to remedy the patient’s illness or complaint. Longitudinal therapeutic relationships are incredibly meaningful, and are a major reason why I plan to pursue a career as a Family Physician practicing in a primary care setting.  

With New Center, DCI Tackles Brain Metastasis Head-On

Nearly 150,000 Americans annually are diagnosed with cancer that has metastasized, or traveled, to the brain. The number is projected to rise. Because of a larger aging population, combined with improvements in cancer screening and care, up to 30 percent of patients with solid tumor cancers (mainly lung cancer, breast cancer, melanoma, genitourinary cancers, and renal cell carcinoma) can expect their cancer to spread to the brain.

Alzheimer's Drug Repairs Brain Damage After Alcohol Binges In Rodents

Drug appears to reverse structural and genetic brain changes that affect memory, learning   A drug used to slow cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease could offer clues on how drugs might one day be able to reverse brain changes that affect learning and memory in teens and young adults who binge drink.

Clinical Research Update - February 2018

OnCore Community News Research Community News DOCR News Did You Know? Training Opportunities Clinical Research Employee Highlights Partner Resources

Estate Gift Extends Rauch Scholarships in Perpetuity

Robert Gramer, MD’19, learned how much a skilled and compassionate physician can influence someone’s life after he suffered a series of catastrophic knee injuries and a juvenile form of macular degeneration during high school. Those setbacks crushed his lifelong dream of playing college basketball, but a pair of extraordinary doctors not only tended his medical challenges but also helped him defeat despair and redirect his dreams.

The Duke Narrative Medicine Colloquium

The Department of Medicine will present another staging of Voices of Medicine, a live show featuring true stories from our faculty, trainees, and staff, on February 28, 2018. Voices of Medicine is a collaboration between the Department of Medicine and The Monti, a local storytelling organization. We gather together to hear true stories from health care professionals sharing the experiences that inspired them to a life in medicine, or the interactions that give meaning to their careers in science and health.