Structural racism is real — on the job, in educational circumstances and in interactions with the criminal justice system.
New study raises awareness that pregnancy complications may be the first indication of an increased risk for heart disease
This study highlights the need to center the voices of historically marginalized and minoritized patients when designing research aimed at addressing racism in medicine
This relative predisposition to AV graft failure represents a disparity in care and adverse outcomes in a largely understudied population
Legal intervention may help mitigate barriers immigrants face in getting their health care needs met
These three-year grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation fund study in henipaviruses – bat-borne viruses that cause severe and often fatal illness in humans and have the potential to emerge as a pandemic threat.
The award recognizes physician-scientists who are early in their first faculty appointment and have made notable achievements in their research.
According to the researchers, despite global efforts to find CTE in the absence of contact sport participation or RHI exposure, it appears to be extraordinarily rare, if it exists at all.
Wendy Kuohung, MD, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology, received the grant valued at nearly $100,000.
Congratulations to Bang-Bon Koo, PhD, assistant professor of anatomy & neurobiology.