Medical students at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons shared their research accomplishments and received awards at recent events.
Doctoral students from VP&S and Mailman participated in a university-wide competition designed to help students develop communication skills for future careers. Two shared top honors.
Nia Josiah, who will receive her DNP from the School of Nursing, believes wider access to mental health care would lead to better mental health outcomes.
With the help of a Columbia neurologist, a support group of Black Parkinson's patients has created a book for Black patients and their families written by the true experts: themselves.
Columbia medical students are dedicated to thinking deeply about the role of medicine in society, and some students choose Columbia because of the way the medical school promotes social justice.
Columbia physician Eric Burnett, MD, turned to TikTok for distraction at the height of the COVID pandemic, but it only drove him to take on rampant medical misinformation.
Nearly 200 accepted applicants visited Washington Heights last week for “Life at VP&S,” a two-day event offering applicants a window into what they can expect if they select VP&S for medical school.
Students from the College of Dental Medicine traveled to the Columbia Global Center in Paris to discuss issues in health care with students from around the world.
On March 17, 135 medical students at the Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons received life-changing news: the results of their residency match.
A group of medical students from VP&S spent a day in Albany, meeting with legislators and other policymakers to lobby on issues of importance to the future physicians.
Through the Columbia-Harlem Homeless Medical Partnership, dental students from Columbia University and other CUIMC community members provide medical care for underserved people in West Harlem.