Internal Medicine Residency News, Jan. 28, 2019
Catch up with the Duke Internal Medicine Residency Program by reading the weekly newsletter for Jan. 28, 2019.
Registration is open for SOM spring Financial Boot Camp series
Registration is now open for the next School of Medicine Financial Boot Camp, a multi-part series designed to help faculty understand core finance issues with a focus on medical school economics.
Chief Residents for 2020-2021 announced
Kathleen Cooney, MD, chair of the department, Aimee Zaas, MD, MHS, program director of the Internal Medicine Residency Program, and David Simel, MD, vice chair for Veterans Affairs, have announced the Chief Residents for the 2020-2021 academic year.
GIM Faculty Leading + Teaching ACP NC Chapter Session
We are excited to announce that our Division has an especially large presence as leaders and educators for the upcoming 2019 Annual Scientific Session of the North Carolina Chapter of the American
Two faculty join Department of Medicine as Translating Duke Health Scholars
Two new faculty in the Department of Medicine are among 12 in the School of Medicine who were recruited within the last year as part of the Translating Duke Health (TDH) initiative. These new faculty members—representing a spectrum of career stages—were recruited to Duke because of their expertise in numerous fields including transplantation, neurosurgery, gene therapy, HIV, and more.
Internal Medicine Residency News, Jan. 22, 2019
Catch up with the Duke Internal Medicine Residency Program by reading the weekly newsletter for Jan. 22, 2019.
Ryanne Wu, MD, tells about Singapore experience
We are especially honored to hear from Dr. Ryanne Wu, a GIM faculty member who recently returned to Duke after three years in Singapore.
Two Duke Internal Medicine Residents selected for new NHLBI and NIAID R38 grant funding
Duke internal medicine residents Jessica Regan, MD, and Sonali Bracken, MD, PhD, have been selected for the Duke Stimulating Access to Research in Residency Program (StARR), a new program that is funded by two R38 grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Internal Medicine Residency News, Jan. 14, 2019
Catch up with the Duke Internal Medicine Residency Program by reading the weekly newsletter for Jan. 14, 2019.
Our DGIM office is moving!
We are moving this week, effective January 16, 2019! We are very excited about the new setting. Won't you come visit us?