Editor's Note: Center for Radiological Research director David Brenner describes the experiment that showed the promise of far-UVC light as a potential coronavirus killer.
Patients who experienced delirium were more likely to be cognitively impaired three or more months after the delirium episode, a new study from Columbia researchers has found.
David Buchholz, MD, discusses patients’ concerns about returning for regular care and the measures Columbia practices are taking to keep patients and providers safe.
“I don’t anticipate that New York will have a second wave like what we have in Texas and Florida,” said Ian Lipkin, director of the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University.
The project began when surgeons at Columbia paid a visit to Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic, who directs the university’s stem cell and tissue engineering lab, to talk about lung transplant patients.
Multiple neurons in the brain must fire in synchrony to create persistent memories tied to intense emotions, new research from Columbia neuroscientists has found.
The health of donated human lungs judged too poor for transplantation can be recovered using a cross-circulation technique designed by biomedical engineers at Columbia University.
Based on their experience treating COVID-19, Columbia physicians have assembled critical information about the coronavirus’s effects on organs outside the lungs.
Editor's Note: Director of global health in emergency medicine Craig Spencer sees a pattern of a deliberate undermining of science and public health by the Trump administration.
A video that chronicles the medical school’s response to COVID-19 illustrates how the entire Columbia community came together to confront the most challenging health crisis of our time.