Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month: Dr. López Finds Community in Pathology
Giselle Y. López, MD, PhD, was a keynote speaker, along with Gabriela Maradiaga Panayotti, MD, for the inaugural Duke Latino Medical Student Association (LMSA) Hispanic Heritage Month Gala on Sept. 15th at Duke’s Trent Semans Center for Health Education. She has Puerto Rican and Cuban heritage, and spoke about her experiences as a Latina medical professional, emphasizing the importance of community in Latin American cultures.
Duke Health Community Comes Together to Celebrate Durham Pride
The city of Durham held Pride: Durham, NC, on Sept. 24, with many from Duke Health coming together as a community to celebrate inclusion, community, family, pride, and activism.
Engaging the Community: Dr. Susanna Naggie
Dr. Susanna Naggie and her colleagues at Duke University School of Medicine knew that COVID-19 was disproportionately impacting communities of color through higher rates of infection, severity of disease and associated adverse outcomes. Determined to be part of the solution, they set out to understand and address these disparities in real time.
Communicating Truth: Dr. Cameron Wolfe
Dr. Wolfe emerged as a key figure at Duke during the pandemic, patiently explaining the threat to the public while helping shape both the hospital’s efforts to save patients’ lives and the university’s efforts to keep students safe.
Homegrown 'Just Ask' Program Rolls Out Nationally
The official adaptation of "Just ASK: Increasing Diversity in Clinical Research Participation" — a course developed and piloted at Duke Cancer Institute (DCI) five years ago by Nadine Barrett, PhD — has rolled out nationally.
Yi Zeng Selected as One of the Healthy Ageing 50
Yi Zeng, PhD, professor of medicine, has been selected and recognized as one of the “Healthy Ageing 50” by the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing.
Chancellor’s Distinguished Professorship Established; Lefkowitz Named Inaugural Recipient
Duke Health today announced the establishment of the Chancellor’s Distinguished Professorship. The inaugural recipient is Robert Lefkowitz, MD, James B.
Newly Discovered Barrier Prevents Immunity from Reaching Smell-sensing Cells
Duke scientists have identified a previously unknown barrier that separates the bloodstream from smelling cells in the upper airway of mice, likely as a way to protect the brain.
But this barrier also ends up keeping some of the larger molecules of the body’s immune system out, and that may be hindering the effectiveness of vaccines.
Elizabeth Harden MD’78: Investing in the Future of Medicine
At some schools, women applicants were discouraged from pursuing a career in medicine, because it was assumed they couldn’t keep up, or would leave the profession once married.
Harden found no such attitudes at Duke.
Better Maternal Health, Better Infant Health: Growing Up with Project HOPE 1000
The Project HOPE 1000 research initiative lays the groundwork to answer questions about maternal and childhood health such as the impact of obesity during pregnancy or pathological factors underlying pre-term birth.