Digital health innovator Mark Sendak named STAT Wunderkind
One of 26 early-career scientists recognized by the Boston publication this year
Astrocytes identified as master 'conductors' of the brain
Star-shaped ‘glue’ cells make it their business to govern connections between neurons
Leadership and faculty from Duke Ob/Gyn meet with Congressional leaders to address Black maternal health
Leadership and faculty from Duke Ob/Gyn met virtually with the office of Rep.
Cholesterol-lowering drugs appear to boost cancer immunotherapies
Animal studies show potential for combining an injectable cholesterol therapy with checkpoint inhibitors
Women with autoimmune lung disease can safely give birth if closely monitored
Women with lung inflammation and scarring caused by an autoimmune disease, called interstitial lung disease, or ILD, have typically been told they should not get pregnant for fear the strain of chi
Alumni Spotlight: Charles Lucore, MD'83
When reports early last winter indicated that a mysterious new infectious disease had broken out of its point of origin in Wuhan, China, Charles Lucore, MD’83, P’17, MBA, began to prepare for its possible arrival in New York. Lucore was one year into his new position as president of St. Francis Hospital, a highly rated hospital and cardiac care center on Long Island. Because New York is a hub of international travel, he anticipated the novel coronavirus would eventually show up.
Alumni Spotlight: Claire Aldridge, PhD’96
Before Claire Aldridge, PhD’96, and her husband, Matt Burnside, took their daughter on a long-planned spring break trip to New York City, she checked travel guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and by the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, where she is associate vice president of commercialization and business development. The focus at the time was on surface transmission of the novel coronavirus: avoid touching doorknobs, wash your hands frequently, and don’t touch your face.
Alumni Spotlight: Eric Dziuban, MD’07
A Long Struggle
Eric Dziuban, MD’07, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s country director for the southwest African nation of Namibia, was enjoying a weekend
GME Trainees Respond to Pandemic
When the COVID-19 pandemic struck last spring and temporarily forced Duke’s clinical operations to be limited to essential personnel only, the more than 1,000 residents and fellows in the Graduate
Adapt and Innovate: Medical Education During a Pandemic
Last spring, when Prince Boadi accepted an offer to attend Duke University School of Medicine starting in the fall of 2020, he knew the experience—leaving his family and friends in Chicago, learning his way around Durham, meeting new people, and taking on the rigors of medical school—would be different from anything else he’d ever done.
He just didn’t expect it to be quite this different.