The new report highlights the need for more research on new technologies, said Dr. Guohua Li, a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health in New York City.
Leaders from top U.S. nursing schools, nursing organizations, and the National Institutes of Health met to discuss a national health action plan to raise awareness of and improve LGBTQ health.
Researchers hoped treatment of HIV-infected infants within hours of birth would increase remission, but a new study finds that starting treatment within the first two weeks leads to similar outcomes.
The way electric fish locate their prey reveals how brain circuits can process information and learn at the same time, a feat that is still difficult for computers to accomplish.
Perhaps the most interesting is Kelli Harding’s THE RABBIT EFFECT: Live Longer, Happier and Healthier With the Groundbreaking Science of Kindness (Atria, 272 pp., $27).
The fall/winter 2019 issue of Columbia Medicine magazine explores the epidemic of suicide, which is the 10th leading cause of death in the United States.
In the final weeks of January, extra preparation can go a long way to ensuring a successful launch of Epic, Columbia's new electronic medical record and business platform.
Additional uniformed public safety officers will be patrolling Columbia's medical campus and nearby residential areas during evening and overnight hours.
If your New Year’s resolution is to exercise more in 2020, you are not alone. Getting fit is one of the most common resolutions people make—and with good reason, according to CUIMC experts.
Hundreds of clinical trials are in progress every year at CUIMC, and the main hub to help patients and healthy volunteers find trials of interest is only a click away on the RecruitMe website.