Orlando’s GRACE Study Moving the Needle on Importance of Family Health History
            November is Family Health History (FHH) awareness month
        
    4 in GIM promoted to Assistant Professor
            Congratulations to four General Internal Medicine faculty who received promotions to Assistant Professor, effective November 1, 2022. 
        
    Comparative Study of Two Heart Failure Drugs Finds No Difference in Outcomes
            Study offers clarity after one of the diuretics had been perceived as more effective
        
    Modeling Compassion: Diabetes Outpatient Clinic Teaches More Than Medicine
            Compassion is a core value for the Duke University medical community. But how does one go about teaching it? Pose the question to longtime medical educator Diana McNeill, MD, director and a co-founder of the interprofessional Diabetes Clinic at Duke Outpatient Clinic (DOC-DM), and she readily responds, “You can’t teach compassion; you role model it.”
        
    Garrett sisters bring expert support to Precision Medicine trials
            Garrett sisters are project managers at Duke, supporting the Precision Medicine Program
        
    Welcome to Medical Alumni Weekend 2022
            Medical Alumni Weekend runs November 3 through November 6, 2022
        
    Internal Medicine Residency News, October 31st, 2022
From the Director
HAPPY HALLOWEEN! And the last day of Doctoberfest/first day of recruitment (preliminary intern interview
Industry payments to physicians and advanced practice clinicians compared
            The study’s first author, Audrey Zhang, M.D., senior assistant resident in the Department of Medicine, said the results raise concerns about the ways industry may be influencing care.
        
    GIM Fellows Spotlight: Harding & Vick
The National Clinician Scholars Program (NCSP) aims to offer unparalleled training for clinicians as change agents driving policy-rel
New Pan-Coronavirus Vaccine Passes Key Experiments, Demonstrates Protection
            Vaccine proved protective against COVID variants, including Omicron, in laboratory and primate studies
        
     
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
            