He works in
human medicine at Western North Carolina's regional trauma and chest pain center, Mission Memorial Hospital.
After working for many years in
human medicine at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, Dr. Thiergardt was admitted to Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine and earned his Doctorate of Veterinary Medicine in 1988.
My focus was
human medicine at first, but one summer between semesters I began volunteering at an animal hospital.
Eran Andrechek, a physiology professor in the College of
Human Medicine at Michigan State University, has discovered that many of the various models used in breast cancer research can replicate several characteristics of the human disease, especially at the gene level.
Not exact matches
That, after all, is how it created its revolutionary Watson system that beat
humans at Jeopardy and is now assisting professional in fields ranging from
medicine, finance and even music.
David Agus, a professor of
medicine and engineering
at the University of Southern California, said
at the Fortune Global Forum on Monday that he believes that with our current technology
humans have the potential to regularly live into their ninth or tenth decade.
Walter is a graduate of Harvard University and currently serves as an Executive in Residence
at Johns Hopkins
Medicine and an Innovation Fellows Technical Advisor to the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.
Pictured
at previous FORTUNE events (clockwise from top right): Helena Foulkes, Executive Vice President, CVS Health and President, CVS Pharmacy; Craig Venter, Co-founder and CEO,
Human Longevity and Dr. David Agus, Director, USC Center for Applied Molecular
Medicine; Martine Rothblatt, Chair and Co-CEO, United Therapeutics; James Park, CEO of Fitbit.
Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow
at the Discovery Institute's Center on
Human Exceptionalism and author of Culture of Death: The Age of «Do Harm»
Medicine.
Social ethicist Joseph Fletcher — author of Situation Ethics, Morals and
Medicine and The Ethics of Genetic Control — is a visiting professor of medical ethics
at the University of Virginia Medical School and
at the Texas Medical Center's Institute of Religion and
Human Development.
Ian Wilmut is now the professor of reproductive biology
at the Scottish Centre for Regenerative
Medicine at Edinburgh University, and in February 2005 he was granted a licence by the
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority to proceed to make human cl
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority to proceed to make
human cl
human clones.
Whereas
medicine once aimed
at human health, it has been transformed into the medical industry.
«People will be inclined to give their children those skills and traits that align with their own temperaments and lifestyles,» writes Gregory Stock, an apostle of
human genetic engineering who heads the program on
Medicine, Technology and Society
at UCLA.
It found prayer was not effective, and even less effective than the hokey quack
medicine «techniques» which
at least helped people by giving them positive
human attention.
Hugh Montgomery is Professor of Intensive Care
Medicine at UCL, where he also directs the UCL Institute for
Human Health and Performance.
«Basically, anyone who uses these products is a
human lab rat,» says Dr. Arthur Grollman, a professor of pharmacological sciences and
medicine at the State University of New York
at Stony Brook.
«Of all the things out there, certainlysynthetic
human growth hormone is way
at the top of the list,» says Dr.Gary Wadler, a New York University associate professor of
medicine and a WorldAnti - Doping Agency member.
It's probably worth noting
at this stage that spitting has historically had a privileged place in the wider
human imagination, situated
at the blurred boundary between
medicine, magic, and myth.
Dr. Catherine E. Mogil is an assistant clinical professor
at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and
Human Behavior in the David Geffen School of
Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles.
However, «The AAP Section on Breastfeeding, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American Academy of Family Physicians, Academy of Breastfeeding
Medicine, World Health Organization, United Nations Children's Fund, and many other health organizations recommend exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months of life.2, 127 — 130 Exclusive breastfeeding is defined as an infant's consumption of
human milk with no supplementation of any type (no water, no juice, no nonhuman milk, and no foods) except for vitamins, minerals, and medications.131 Exclusive breastfeeding has been shown to provide improved protection against many diseases and to increase the likelihood of continued breastfeeding for
at least the first year of life.
«Stimulating your child's brain during this time and providing situations where they can explore helps them to learn things that get them in touch with their environment,» says child and adolescent psychologist Robert Myers, Ph.D., founder of the Child Development Institute and assistant clinical professor of Psychiatry and
Human Behavior
at the University of California, Irvine School of
Medicine.
Gabrielle Palmer, lecturer in
human nutrition
at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine and author of The Politics of Breastfeeding, finds current attitudes perplexing.
The study has received the approval of the administration of the Souissi Maternity Hospital in Rabat, as well as the approval of the ethics committee for biomedical research
at the Faculty of
Medicine and Pharmacy in Rabat, registered with the Office for
Human Research Protection of the US Health and
Human Services Department (Registration Number: IORG0006594).
In a study to be presented Thursday, Jan. 26, in the oral plenary session
at 1:15 p.m. PST,
at the Society for Maternal - Fetal
Medicine's annual meeting, The Pregnancy Meeting ™, researchers with Baylor College of
Medicine, Houston, Texas and University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, will present their findings on a study titled, Maternal Diet Structures the Breast Milk Microbiome in Association with
Human Milk Oligosaccharides and Gut - Associated Bacteria.
At 3:30 p.m., former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius receives an honorary degree and delivers the keynote address at the Icahn School of Medicine's 47th graduation ceremony, Lincoln Center, Manhatta
At 3:30 p.m., former U.S. Secretary of Health and
Human Services Kathleen Sebelius receives an honorary degree and delivers the keynote address
at the Icahn School of Medicine's 47th graduation ceremony, Lincoln Center, Manhatta
at the Icahn School of
Medicine's 47th graduation ceremony, Lincoln Center, Manhattan.
«Our future in
medicine and in health depends on understanding the information contained in the
human genome, so it's a great topic for Science Week,» said Dr. Norma J. Nowak, Director of Science and Technology
at UB's New York State Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences.
A study by researchers
at the University of Chicago
Medicine shows that when mice that are genetically susceptible to developing inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) were given antibiotics during late pregnancy and the early nursing period, their offspring were more likely to develop an inflammatory condition of the colon that resembles
human IBD.
Randolph Nesse and Kent Berridge, psychiatric investigators with the Institute for Social Research
at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, reported in Science that
medicine may never win the war against drug addiction because «it is rooted in the fundamental design of the
human nervous system.»
An attempt to fill this gap was made by introducing a «
Medicine and
Human Rights» special study module into the undergraduate programme
at Dundee.
Suggestions regarding the listings for
medicine and
human rights may be sent to Liljana Stevceva
at [email protected].
Using a mouse model that expresses an altered form of the normal
human prion protein, researchers
at University of California, San Diego School of
Medicine have determined why the
human proteins aren't corrupted when exposed to the elk prions.
«We are in a scenario where we can collect massive amounts of genetic data using GWAS, but are realizing that does not provide the biological context we need in order to understand the results,» says Andy McCallion, Ph.D., assistant director of the
human genetics graduate program and associate professor of molecular and comparative pathobiology
at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine.
A few years ago scientists
at the Johns Hopkins School of
Medicine inserted the gene for the
human L - type photopigment into mice.
«We've lost a year,» says Frank Rühli, a paleopathologist from the Centre for Evolutionary
Medicine at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, who was scheduled to start work in February on
human remains
at the pyramids of Saqqara, near Cairo, and in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor.
The experience inspired young Dr. Ostrer's decision to specialize in medical genetics; he went on to become the director of the
Human Genetics Program
at the New York University School of
Medicine, where he championed DNA testing for Jews» genetic disorders.
Working with Skeletal Biologists
at Southampton General Hospital, Catarina is investigating new optical techniques to monitor the development of the cells, used in new regenerative
medicine approaches — in this case, to create and grow cartilage from
human stem cells.
Stahelin and co-investigator Smita Soni, a postdoctoral researcher
at the Indiana University School of
Medicine, found that VP40 is able to assemble in vitro (i.e., in a test tube), without any
human cells present and mediate formation of virus - like particles when the
human lipid phosphatidylserine is found in solution with VP40, but not other control lipids.
As the infection was unlikely to have been caused by direct gorilla - to -
human transmission, «it would be surprising if there aren't more
human cases», says David Robertson, a bioinformaticist
at the University of Manchester, UK, who was part of the team that analysed the virus (Nature
Medicine, DOI: 10.1038 / nm.2016).
A team of researchers
at the Stanford University School of
Medicine has used a gene - editing tool known as CRISPR to repair the gene that causes sickle cell disease in
human stem cells, which they say is a key step toward developing a gene therapy for the disorder.
«Before our work in rhesus monkeys, it has not been possible to detect or observe some of these symptoms in other HD animal models, especially emotional dysregulation,» says senior author Chan, associate professor of
human genetics
at Yerkes National Primate Research Center and Emory University School of
Medicine.
We don't study the
human pathogenic bacterium in our lab, but use a less pathogenic surrogate called Francisella novicida,» explained Dr. Aria Eshraghi, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Microbiology
at the University of Washington School of
Medicine.
«We feel it's critical that the scientific community consider the potential hazards of all off - target mutations caused by CRISPR, including single nucleotide mutations and mutations in non-coding regions of the genome,» says co-author Stephen Tsang, MD, PhD, the Laszlo T. Bito Associate Professor of Ophthalmology and associate professor of pathology and cell biology
at Columbia University Medical Center, and in Columbia's Institute of Genomic
Medicine and the Institute of
Human Nutrition.
«Finding these similarities and studying the aspects of mouse biology that may reflect
human biology, allows us to approach the study of
human illnesses in a better way,» affirms Bing Ren, one of the principal authors from the ENCODE Consortium and a lecturer in molecular and cellular
medicine at the University of California — San Diego.
The study, published online in Developmental Psychobiology, was conducted by Marguerite O'Haire, Ph.D., from the Center for the
Human - Animal Bond in the College of Veterinary
Medicine of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, and colleagues in the School of Psychology
at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.
The researchers headed up by Claudia Vigano and Abigail Bouwman of the
human aDNA laboratory
at the Institute of Evolutionary
Medicine — the only laboratory of its kind in Switzerland — studied a thalassemia allele called cod39?
«The stringent application of medical device standards to our laboratory research means that these sensors will be qualified
at the highest level for
human use and translatable between sports science and
medicine.
A 2 - year fellowship from the
Human Science Frontier Program financed a postdoc
at Yale University School of
Medicine on the role of so - called «toll - like receptors» in immune responses.
If norovirus also targets tuft cells in
humans, «maybe that's the cell type we need to be treating,» says study coauthor Craig Wilen, a physician scientist
at the Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis.
A panel of small molecules that inhibit Zika virus infection, including one that stands out as a potent inhibitor of Zika viral entry into relevant
human cell types, was discovered by researchers from the Perelman School of
Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
Molecular geneticist Cheng Chi Lee, developmental biologist Gregor Eichele, and their co-workers
at the Baylor College of
Medicine in Houston have isolated a gene in mice and
humans that shares 44 % of the amino acid sequence of the period (per) gene of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster.