Promoting faculty research increases the visibility of your work and that of BUSM. Please continue to send all galleys or proofs of accepted, unpublished manuscripts of research studies to the Office of Communications to Maria Ober or Gina DiGravio. Please alert them as well when you are awarded major new grant funding. Work that already […]
BUMC students, faculty and staff marched together in the annual Boston Pride Parade on Saturday, June 11.
Marie-Helene Saint-Hilaire, MD, FRCPC, FAAN, Associate Professor of Neurology, has been appointed Chief of Neurology at Boston Medical Center and Chair of the Department of Neurology at Boston University School of Medicine ad interim effective immediately. Saint-Hilaire, recruited in 1988, directs the BMC Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders Center and the American Parkinson Disease Association […]
Karsten Lunze, MD, DrPH, MPH, a research assistant professor of medicine, was awarded a United Nations (UN) Humanitarian Medal.
Get an inside look and hear what students think about the Medical Student Residence. Watch the video.
Forty members of the department were recognized for their exemplary service. Watch the video!
Please continue to email emc_roomscheduling_bumc@bu.edu when you request a room and remember to include your Instructional Service requirements as well as your Facilities needs. Your initial email starts the process of getting you connected to the appropriate staff. Effective immediately, when you receive the email confirmation for a room with AV equipment/instructional service needs, you […]
Neil J. Ganem, PhD, assistant professor of pharmacology and medicine, section of hematology and medical oncology, received a four-year, $792,000 Research Scholar Grant.
Fifty scientists—from BUSM and BUSPH, the Cleveland Clinic, the Banner Alzheimer’s Institute, the Mayo Clinic, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and other major institutions around the country—launched their landmark study aimed at diagnosing CTE during life.
Professor of Medicine Emelia Benjamin, MD, ScM, provides an alternative point of view about a study that suggests that women with a common heart rhythm abnormality may be at an increased risk of developing cancer.