News
Faculty at YSM, Yale School of Public Health, and Yale Institute for Global Health have been contributing to the public's knowledge about what coronavirus or COVID-19 is, and how to approach the growing crisis.
The changing ways in which women have been included and studied at Yale School of Medicine over the years is a useful gauge of progress.
Advances in diagnosis technology such as point-of-care ultrasound, or POCUS, have brought diagnostic capabilities closer to patients than ever before—and may help revolutionize treatment for previously under-served communities worldwide.
Patriarchal cultures are tougher on women doctors.
YSM students and residents traveled to Mulago Hospital in February for a week-long project that included two full days of travel in addition to the three-day workshop that covered operative dissection and use of ultrasound in a trauma setting. Their team was the latest from Yale to travel to Kampala since 2006, when the Department of Medicine and the medical faculty at Makarere University launched their collaboration on clinical care and training.
Global warming, Jonathan Patz, MD, MPH, told an audience at internal medicine grand rounds in March, is real and it is affecting health around the world.
Much of the emphasis on resilience research and therapy centers on the individual—
Since the days of Peter Parker, alumni have brought health care to underserved regions of the world.
Even as a medical student, Kinari Webb knew where she wanted to practice medicine. Now, she and her ecologist husband are working to bring health care to Borneo—while preserving the rain forest.
In December 1995, Elizabeth H. Bradley, M.B.A., Ph.D. ’96, professor of public health, received a call