Funding opp: 2017 Coulter Award for Biomedical Engineers and Clinicians
The Wallace H. Coulter Endowment at Duke University provides funding to support collaborative translational research projects that involve co-investigators from the Department of Biomedical Engineering and a clinical department in the School of Medicine. Full applications are due by March 9, 2017, but applicants are strongly encouraged to submit a brief summary by January 2017.
Rockman and Lefkowitz discuss their careers in biomedical research
Robert Lefkowitz, MD, and Howard Rockman, MD, are colleagues and collaborators. They recently sat down to talk about what they've learned in their long careers in biomedical research. Hear more from Dr. Lefkowitz at noon on Fri., Jan. 27, at Medicine Research Seminar.
DGIM group in Annals of IM
This week the main results of a large NIH-funded trial on primary care-based interventions for osteoarthritis (OA), led by multiple GIM investigators, was published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Q&A with Matthew Crowley: Systematic Review of Clinical Outcomes for Metformin
Endocrinologist Matthew Crowley and the Durham Veteran Affairs Evidence-based Synthesis Program (ESP) team spent roughly a year researching metformin’s benefits and its FDA “black box” warnings to publish a systematic literature review on whether the drug had any significant clinical trends related to their topic’s research questions.
Chief Residents for 2018-19 announced
Jenny Van Kirk, MD; Kara Wegermann, MD; and Winn Seay, MD, have been chosen as the chief residents for the Duke Internal Medicine Residency Program 2018-19 academic year.
Duke study finds UV light can aid hospitals' fight to wipe out drug-resistant superbugs
A large randomized trial led by Deverick J. Anderson, MD, associate professor of medicine (Infectious Diseases), and published in The Lancet finds use of UVC machines can cut transmission of four major superbugs by a cumulative 30 percent.
Lantos' radio segment on recent influenza study
Paul Lantos, MD, was recently interviewed about his study on influenza illness in North Carolina on Living on Earth, the weekly environmental news and information program distributed by Public Radio International.
Internal Medicine Residency News, January 17, 2017
Catch up with the Duke Internal Medicine Residency Program by reading the weekly newsletter for Jan. 17, 2017.
Williams contributes to national marijuana report
This week saw release of a comprehensive report about the health impacts of marijuana, a massive consensus study delivered by a U.S. federal advisory panel. Of the 16 committee experts on this panel, Professor John Williams, MD, of Duke General Internal Medicine participated.
Funding opp: Gilead Sciences Research Scholars Program in HIV
Don't forget: The Gilead Sciences Research Scholars Program in HIV is accepting applications for its current funding cycle. The HIV program's mission is to support innovative scientific research that will advance knowledge in the field of HIV and provide support for research career development. The deadline for online application submission is midnight, EST, Fri. Jan. 13, 2017.