黑料导航

Articles

Group of students in Ghana

Delivering Care and Compassion Abroad

This summer, 24 NYITCOM students embarked on transformative service-learning trips to Ghana and the Dominican Republic.

Student Profile: Daniel Tanis

Student Profile: Daniel Tanis

Daniel Tanis successfully defended his doctoral dissertation in May. Over the next two years, the aspiring physician-scientist will complete his clinical rotations to graduate from 黑料导航鈥檚 first Ph.D. program.

Alumni Profile: Alan Wong

Alumni Profile: Alan Wong

As a high school student, Alan Wong (D.O. 鈥03, M.B.A. 鈥03) volunteered as a researcher at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan. Today, he鈥檚 the chief medical officer at Mount Sinai鈥檚 hospital in Oceanside, N.Y.

Prehistoric mammal Vintana

Beyond the Bones: The 鈥淭ail鈥 of an Ancient Beast

NYITCOM Associate Professor Simone Hoffmann, Ph.D., is part of a team 鈥渦nearthing鈥 significant clues about an extinct, ancient mammal.

Milan Toma sitting in front of a computer

Visualizing How Military Blasts Impact Unborn Babies

Amidst military conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, an NYITCOM study provides new insight on how military blasts injure unborn babies.

Scans of the brain of a Polish crested chicken

Beyond the Bones: Brainy Birds

Assistant Professor Aki Watanabe, Ph.D., published the first study from his NSF CAREER grant-funded research project; he proposes using a domesticated chicken to study how birds鈥攁nd perhaps animals in general鈥攅nded up with differently shaped brains.

Collage of 黑料导航 faculty

Biomedical Researchers Secure Prestigious Federal Grants

Faculty from the College of Osteopathic Medicine have secured a collective $1.4 million dollars in grants that support studies to further the understanding and treatment of several health conditions, including pediatric brain cancer, heart failure, and hypertension.

A bronothere and other animals wandering behind it

Beyond the Bones: Sizing Up Thunder Beasts

Research co-authored by Associate Professor Matthew Mihlbachler, Ph.D., explores the fossil record of an ancient relative of the rhino to help explain why natural selection might favor larger animals more often than smaller animals.

Martin Gerdes

Gerdes Named 黑料导航鈥檚 First University Professor

Professor Anthony (Martin) Gerdes, Ph.D., chair of biomedical sciences in the College of Osteopathic Medicine, has achieved this distinction, effective in the new academic year.

Congratulations message over a building in the background

Spotlight on Faculty Tenures and Promotions for 2023-2024

As 黑料导航 prepares for the 2023-2024 academic year, several faculty members were recognized through tenure and promotions.