Displaying items by tag: Department of Pathology
Thirteen faculty members recently graduated from UAB Medicine’s LEading Advancing Developing (LEAD) Spring 2024 program. The program, presented by UAB Medicine’s Leadership Development Office (LDO), recognized its graduates at a ceremony on March 14, 2024.
- womens health
- department of psychiatry and behavioral neurobiology
- department of obstetrics and gynecology
- department of pathology
- department of infectious disease
- department of family and community medicine
- department of pediatrics
- department of anesthesiology
- department of emergency medicine
- department of urology
After a national search, Cristina Magi-Galluzzi, M.D., Ph.D., has been named chair of the Department of Pathology, effective March 4, 2024. Magi-Galluzzi is a professor and the director of the Division of Anatomic Pathology, and the director of Genitourinary Pathology in the Department of Pathology. She holds the C. Bruce Alexander Endowed Professorship in Pathology.
On Friday, Nov. 17, 2023, students from Heersink School of Medicine gathered to celebrate faculty, courses, and course directors at the annual Argus Awards Ceremony.
- department of medicine
- department of cell, developmental and integrative biology
- department of neurology
- department of neurobiology
- department of psychiatry and behavioral neurobiology
- department of pathology
- department of pharmacology and toxicology
- department of pediatrics
- department of obstetrics and gynecology
- department of surgery
- department of family and community medicine
- leadership
- leadership development
- uab medicine
- department of urology
- department of radiology
- uab hospital
- uab health system
- department of emergency medicine
- department of anesthesiology and perioperative medicine
- department of general internal medicine
- department of medicine
- department of pathology
- department of neurology
- heersink school of medicine
Girish Melkani, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Pathology, is the latest winner of the Heersink School of Medicine's Featured Discovery. This initiative celebrates important research from Heersink faculty members.
Extended research has been conducted to understand how Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) can remain in the body for many years without causing any symptoms of the disease, only to suddenly become active and cause an explosive outbreak of tuberculosis (TB).