The Hispanic Student Dental Association chapter at Columbia’s College of Dental Medicine placed third in the 2020 Orgullo (Pride) Competition for its video providing oral hygiene guidance to kids.
A study of more than 1 million patients has found no increased risk of COVID-19 diagnosis, hospitalization, or complications for users of two common anti-hypertensive medications.
Uncertainty about the future has a way of taking over the mind, and a new study from Columbia neuroscientists is starting to reveal what changes take place in the unsure brain.
By Brittany King and Sharon Tregaskis // Portraits by Jörg Meyer
December 16, 2020
As VP&S begins implementing an action plan for anti-racism in medical education, students and faculty share their own perspectives on the intersection of COVID-19 and Black Lives Matter.
Fiorella Bellini, 29, a nurse in the I.C.U. at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, was approached by her manager to see if she would be interested in being among the first to be vaccinated at the hospital.
And the signs can be different for different people, says Madelyn Gould, a professor of epidemiology in the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University who studies suicide and suicide prevention.
Editor's Note: Ersilia M. DeFilippis, the author of this article, is a cardiology fellow at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center.