Adam Wright, PhD, Director of the Vanderbilt Clinical Informatics Center (VCLIC) and Professor of Biomedical Informatics, will be presenting a talk on "Clinical Informatics and Personalized Medicine" for the Genomic and Personalize Medicine Seminar. The talk will take place on Tuesday, March 1 from 2:00 to 3:00 pm CT.
The Department of Biomedical Informatics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center is hiring! We have many open staff positions ranging from staff scientist to application developers and more!
Specifically, we are hiring the following:
The Vanderbilt Biomedical Informatics Summer Program (VBISP) is designed to provide students from diverse backgrounds with a high quality Biomedical Informatics research experience; thereby encouraging students to consider pursuing PhDs and research careers in the field. This paid, 10-week summer internship opportunity is open to high school, community college, undergraduate, medical, and graduate students.
An important paper published by Xingyi Guo, PhD, associate professor of Medicine and Biomedical Informatics, colleagues in Vanderbilt's Department of Epidemiology, Department of Medicine, the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, shows distinct genomic landscapes in early-onset and late-onset.
The study was published in JCO Precision Oncology. Read the full study here.
To assist health care in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), Martin Were, MD, MS, associate professor of Biomedical Informatics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and a member of the Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health, devised a smartphone application called mUzima. Uzima is Swahili for life and mUzima’s slogan is “mobile for life.”
With sonograms, genetic tests and other diagnostic technology standing by to examine babies in utero, developmental abnormalities are often detected early in the gestation process.
But an advanced diagnosis does little to enhance the course of treatment after birth if the findings fail to make their way from the mother’s medical record to the specialists who take on the baby’s care immediately after delivery.
Models for predicting preterm birth have historically focused on babies considered very preterm, born at 28 to 32 weeks, or moderate to late preterm, born at 32 to 37 weeks. Only a few studies have looked at those born extremely preterm, before 28 weeks of development, yet these early fetuses account for the vast majority of newborn deaths.