Bohórquez selected as 2017 TED Fellow
Diego Bohórquez, PhD, assistant professor of medicine (Gastroenterology), has been selected as a 2017 TED Fellow.
Funding opp: Chancellor's Discovery Program Research Fund
Don't forget: The Chancellor’s Discovery Program is accepting applications. This unique program is intended to fuel new opportunities for innovative research projects at Duke Health that are focused on new ideas and discovery. The Discovery Program will fund up to five one-year awards of $75,000 in 2017. The deadline for applications is Jan. 20, 2017.
2 from DGIM co-authors of major metformin review
Already the newest systematic review from the Durham VA Evidence Synthesis Program boasts an Altmetrics “attention score” of 140 (as of 1/8/17). Amongst several Duke authors for this publication, two represent DGIM: Dr. Clarissa Diamantidis and senior author, Dr. John Williams.
Internal Medicine Residency News, January 9, 2017
Catch up with the Duke Internal Medicine Residency Program by reading the weekly newsletter for Jan. 9, 2017.
Q&A with Jamy Ard, MD, 2017 Martin Luther King Jr. Distinguished Speaker
Jamy Ard, MD, will return to Duke University on Jan. 13, 2017 as the Minority Recruitment and Retention Committee's Martin Luther King Jr. Distinguished Speaker at Medicine Grand Rounds. Dr. Ard is a professor of medicine and epidemiology and prevention at Wake Forest School of Medicine and co-director of the Weight Management Center at Wake Forest Baptist Health. He attended Duke University School of Medicine and completed residency in internal medicine at Duke, serving as chief resident from 2001-2002.
Dr. Ard will present "A patient with obesity walks into your clinic: Designing effective obesity treatments for key populations." Continue reading for more on his research and his time at Duke.
Meet your chief resident: Alyson McGhan-Johnson, MD
Alyson McGhan-Johnson, MD, is the 2016-17 chief resident for Duke University Hospital. Dr. McGhan-Johnson oversees the internal medicine residents at Duke University Hospital and sees herself as an advocate for the residents and an educator. McGhan-Johnson said one of her goals for the year is to foster the relationship between the chief residents and residents. “I want to be someone they can come to without any concerns or hesitations,” she said.
McGhan-Johnson grew up in Paterson, NJ. She attended Rutgers University-New Brunswick for undergrad and the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania for medical school before coming to Duke University for residency. McGhan-Johnson will complete fellowship in gastroenterology at Duke next year.
Learn more about her approach to teaching, her desire to connect with residents one-on-one and her goals for the year.
2016 Year in Review
One of our favorite things every year is to look back and re-read some of our favorite stories from the past year. And those stories, pictures, and videos never disappoint. So take a minute and revisit some of our most popular stories from the past year. This certainly doesn’t cover every amazing thing that happened in Duke GIM in 2016, but it’s a taste. Enjoy!
Lantos published in Clinical Infectious Diseases
Last month, Paul Lantos, MD, a Duke Medicine hospitalist and Pediatric Infectious Diseases specialist, was lead author of
Farewell Corinne Voils, PhD
Corrine Voils, PhD, has recently accepted a position with University of Wisconsin Madison (UW Madison) and will begin there in January 2017. She will have an appointment at the Madison VAMC with a joint appointment as Professor with tenure in the Division of General Surgery in the Department of Surgery.