Displaying items by tag: division of transplantation
Sixteen remarkable faculty members have been named winners of the 2023 Dean’s Excellence Awards for Faculty.
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- department of medicine
- division of hematology and oncology
- division of general internal medicine
- department of surgery
- division of transplantation
- department of pediatrics
- division of pediatric emergency medicine
- division of pulmonary, allergy and critical care medicine
- department of pathology
- division of molecular and cellular pathology
- division of trauma and acute care surgery
- department of physical medicine and rehabilitation
- division of pediatric infectious diseases
- department of otolaryngology
- division of head and neck surgery
- department of obstetrics and gynecology
- division of women's reproductive healthcare
- department of radiology
After providing UAB's School of Medicine with HIV-positive deceased donor transplant protocols, UAB aims to return the favor to Groote Schuur Hospital in South Africa by providing paired exchange transplant training.
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Devin Eckhoff, M.D., the Arnold G. Diethelm Endowed Chair in Transplantation Surgery, has been named interim chair of the Comprehensive Transplant Institute, effective Oct. 30.
UAB employees spearheaded an effort that led to the university’s adopting the paid leave benefits policy earlier this year — and then they carried their initiative to the state level.
Surgeon Mark Deierhoi has performed more than 2,200 kidney transplants in his career and trained hundreds of students who say his patience as a teacher has had a tremendous impact.
With her 2-year-old granddaughter’s life in peril, 62-year-old Carol Graydon came to UAB to be tested as a living kidney donor — and was a perfect match.
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A record year for deceased organ donors included more than doubling the number of lungs donated at UAB.
UAB surgeons performed a record 385 transplants in 2016, and more than 33,600 transplants were performed nationwide.
A meeting for advice on a business matter turned into “a moment of divine intervention,” leading one Birmingham man to become a living donor.
Divyank Saini is one of 17 employees who interpret lab samples to determine whether living- and deceased-donor transplants are possible. Now he is a donor in the world’s longest kidney transplant chain.