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News

Charles Johnson, MD, Professor Emeritus of Medicine

Duke School of Medicine Pioneer Charles Johnson, MD, Dies at 94

December 16, 2021
Charles Johnson, MD, Professor Emeritus of Medicine, passed away on December 14, 2021, at the age of 94. Dr. Johnson joined Duke in 1970 as the first Black faculty member in the School of Medicine and first Black physician on the faculty of Duke University.
Wilton Williams, PhD

Discovery of I-Shaped Antibody Opens New Avenue to HIV Vaccine

December 15, 2021
About 38 million people worldwide are living with AIDS. Pharmaceutical treatments can keep the disease in check, but a vaccine remains elusive despite decades of concerted effort. However, a recent discovery at the Duke Human Vaccine Institute (DHVI) brings the goal of an effective vaccine within reach.
Trent Semans Center with "2022 LEADER Cohort" title

Announcing 2022 LEADER Program Cohort

December 14, 2021
The Leadership Development for Researchers (LEADER) Program is designed for junior faculty who are leading a research group and driving their own research agenda.
Researcher in total PPE (suite, gloves, mask & goggles) holds a capped flask up to the viewr

Duke Institute Lands Federal Contract to Make Vaccine Candidates

December 14, 2021
The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases awarded researchers at the Duke Human Vaccine Institute a contract that enables it to compete for projects advancing investigational vaccines to production for use in early clinical trials.
an inflamed appendix in the body cavity.

Antibiotics Can Be First-Line Therapy for Uncomplicated Appendicitis Cases

December 14, 2021
With numerous recent studies demonstrating that antibiotics work as well as surgery for most uncomplicated appendicitis cases, the non-surgical approach can now be considered a routine option, according to a review article in JAMA
Erica Taylor, MD

Erica Taylor, MD, SoM Alumna and Duke's First Black Female Orthopedic Surgeon, and Chief of Surgery at Duke Raleigh Hospital, Featured in STAT News

December 13, 2021
A STAT News investigation into Orthopaedic Surgery, deeming it "the whitest specialty."
"2022 ADVANCE-UP Scholars" on Trent Semans Building Image

Announcing 2022 ADVANCE-UP Scholars

December 9, 2021
ADVANCE-UP (Academic DeVelopment Advocacy Networking, Coaching and Education for Underrepresented Populations) is a year-long program that provides in-depth opportunities for academic development, mentoring, and networking for faculty from underrepresented racial and ethnic backgrounds.
Duke Science and Technology: Challenge Accepted

Challenge Accepted: Duke Science and Technology

December 9, 2021
Duke launches an ambitious new effort to elevate and sustain excellence in science and technology.
Chantell Evans

Chantell Evans, PhD: Examining the Links Between Damaged Mitochondria and Brain Diseases

December 8, 2021
Humans are born with all the nerve cells they will ever have, and in each of those nerve cells live about two million mitochondria. As mitochondria age or become dysfunctional, the cell systematically removes them and replaces them with newer models. Neurobiologist Chantell Evans, PhD, wants to know more about this complex process.
Zhao Zhang

Zhao Zhang, PhD: Follow the Jumping Genes

December 8, 2021
Zhao Zhang, PhD — ZZ to just about everyone — is a bit of a scientific outlier. While most of his bioscience colleagues around the world are studying the 23,000 protein-coding genes that make us human, the assistant professor of pharmacology and cancer biology is looking at the other part of the genome and asking what it does.

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