Skip to main content

Utility

  • Faculty Directory
  • Contact Us
  • Give
Home

Main navigation

  • About Us
    • Leadership and Administration
    • Facts & Figures
    • History
    • Named Professorships
    • Faculty Resources
    • Staff Resources
    • Duke In Durham
    • Alumni
    • Giving
    • Anatomical Gifts Program
    • Calendar of Events
    • Contact Us
  • Education
    • Health Professions Education Programs
    • Biomedical Graduate Education Programs
    • Biomedical PhD Programs
    • Certificate and Training Programs
    • International Experiences
    • Graduate Medical Education
    • Continuing Medical Education
    • Duke AHEC Program
    • SOM Bulletin
    • Duke Medical Center Library & Archives
  • Research
    • Basic Science Research
    • Clinical and Translational Research
    • Duke Research and Discovery @RTP
    • Core Facilities & Service Centers
    • Funding Opportunities
    • Research Initiatives
    • Research Support
    • Nobel Laureates
    • Summer Undergraduate Research Opportunities
  • Patient Care
  • Community Partnership
  • Departments, Centers & Institutes
  • Newsroom
    • News
    • Magnify Magazine
    • DukeMed Alumni News
    • Magazines and Annual Reports
    • Podcasts
    • Video Highlights

Utility

  • Faculty Directory
  • Contact Us
  • Give
  1. Home
  2. Newsroom
  3. News

News

Image for new NC Children's hospital announcement

UNC Health, Duke Health Partner to Build NC’s First Stand-alone Children’s Hospital

January 28, 2025
UNC Health and Duke Health are uniting to create a new children’s health system in North Carolina, featuring the state’s first freestanding hospital dedicated to caring for kids.
Mathew Bao

What Comes Next: The Future of Biomedical Science and Health Care

Technological advances such as artificial intelligence, big data, and gene editing have dramatically accelerated the pace of biomedical research and health care. It can be hard to predict what new developments will arise next week, much less in the next 10, 50, or 100 years.
Nicole Calakos

What Comes Next: Neuroscience

Nicole Calakos, MD, PhD, is the Lincoln Financial Group Distinguished Professor of Neurobiology and specializes in synaptic physiology research and Parkinson’s disease and other movement disorders. She highlights the transformative impact of big data, AI, and cell modeling on neuroscience research, emphasizing the potential for advances in regenerative therapies and neural prostheses.
Aditee Narayan

What Comes Next: Medical Education

Dr. Aditee Narayan, a leader in medical education at Duke, spearheaded the Patient First curriculum, emphasizing modern, patient-centered care and interdisciplinary collaboration. She envisions future physicians as change agents, equipped with clinical skills and the ability to innovate and address health care disparities.
Kevin Saunders

What Comes Next: Vaccines

Dr. Kevin Saunders, a leader at the Duke Human Vaccine Institute, highlights the advancements in vaccine research, emphasizing the use of computational design, AI, and mRNA technology. Duke is at the forefront with significant progress in HIV, coronavirus, and cancer vaccines, and is developing pan-coronavirus and pan-influenza vaccines.
Heather Whitson

What Comes Next: Geriatric Medicine

Geriatrician Heather Whitson, MD, is the Duke School of Medicine Distinguished Professor in Neuroscience, the director of the Duke Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development, and the co-director of the Duke-UNC Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center. “For me, the true north is to help people maintain function, independence, quality of life, and resilience,” she says.
Kimberly Johnson

What Comes Next: Health Equity

Kimberly Johnson, MD, MHS’05, HS’00-’02, is the Brenda E. Armstrong, MD Distinguished Professor in medicine and geriatrics. She emphasizes the need to shift health care disparities research from documenting disparities to developing interventions that improve equity, particularly in serious illness care for African Americans.
Raphael Valdivia

What Comes Next: Integrative Immunobiology

Dr. Raphael Valdivia, the Nanaline H. Duke Distinguished Professor of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, emphasizes the need to understand the human immune system to address diseases like cancer and neurodegenerative disorders. His research focuses on leveraging AI and genetic engineering to guide immunity, highlighting Duke's strengths in transplant immunology and infectious disease research.
Tomi Akinyemiju

What Comes Next: Cancer Epidemiology and Population Health

Tomi Akinyemiju, PhD, is a professor in the Department of Population Health Sciences. She emphasizes the importance of prevention and health equity in epidemiology and advocates for personalized approaches, leveraging big data and AI for risk prediction, and ensuring equitable access to medical and policy solutions to address health disparities.
Svati Shah

What Comes Next: Genomics and Precision Health

Dr. Svati Shah, a leader in cardiovascular genetics at Duke, directs the OneDukeGen program, aiming to sequence 150,000 patients to identify actionable genetic variants. Her vision is a future where genetic sequencing at birth enables precise, equitable healthcare, potentially preventing diseases through advanced gene editing and personalized medical care.

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page

Sidebar navigation

  • News
  • Magnify Magazine
  • DukeMed Alumni News
  • Magazines and Annual Reports
  • Podcasts
  • Video Highlights
Communications Contacts

Contact a team member in the Office of Strategic Communications.

Contacts for News and Press Releases

For general communications questions or story ideas, please email SOM-Communications@duke.edu.

Duke University School of Medicine logo

Main navigation

  • About Us
  • Education
  • Research
  • Patient Care
  • Community Partnership
  • Departments, Centers & Institutes
  • Newsroom

Footer

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Accessibility
  • Contact Us
Twitter Instagram YouTube LinkedIn RSS feed

Give

medschool.duke.edu duke.edu dukehealth.org

@2025 Duke University and Duke University Health System. All rights reserved.