GIM Educator Café - Building a Path as an Educator
Submitted by Daniella Zipkin, MD, associate professor of medicine
Vice Chief for Education, Duke General Internal Medicine
Dr. Syed, new associate director of Primary Care Leadership Tract
Dr. Fatima Syed, assistant professor of medicine, takes over for Dr.
Call for Applications: ALICE Program - Academic Leadership, Innovation, and Collaborative Engagement for Mid-Career Women Faculty
The School of Medicine Office for Faculty is now accepting applications for the ALICE program – a leadership development program for mid-career women faculty in the School of Medicine. ALICE provides in-depth opportunities for leadership skill development, personal reflection and goal setting, peer-mentoring, and structured 360 feedback. The program aims to address the widely recognized gap in the number of women in senior leadership positions in academic medicine by providing a tailored leadership development opportunity for women. Applications are due Nov. 20, 2020.
New funding awards - September 2020
The following faculty received funding awards in September 2020.
Internal Medicine Residency News, Oct. 19, 2020
Catch up with the Duke Internal Medicine Residency Program by reading the weekly newsletter for Oct. 19, 2020.
GIM Funding Awards - 2nd and 3rd quarter 2020
Congratulations to these general internal medicine faculty members who are recipients of research funding for the second and third quarter of 2020.
Welcome Ytina Mangum - GIM Division Administrator
Ytina Mangum, MS, joined the Duke community in 2006 and worked as the Department of Surgery’s medical student coordinator. She recently transitioned from the Center of Applied G
Duke Hospital Medicine - Mentors at Work
Three of the top-five finalists in the recent poster competition, sponsored by the Triangle Chapter of the Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM), were submissions from Duke Hospital Medicine.
Passing of Joseph Greenfield, professor and chair emeritus
Joseph Greenfield, MD, James B. Duke Distinguished Professor of Medicine and chair of the Department of Medicine from 1983 to 1995, died on Wed., Oct. 14, 2020. He was 89. Dr. Greenfield was passionately committed to the professional development of faculty and trainees and will be remembered as great mentor.