Medicine

  • Edward Chuong
    Tens of millions of years ago, ancient viruses infected our primate ancestors, leaving flecks of DNA that made their way into the human genome. A new study suggests these “endogenous retroviruses” may not be as harmless as once believed.
  • HAMR-Jr.
    With a $25 million National Science Foundation award, 񱦵 is launching a new quantum science and engineering research center.
  • Marco and Whitney Uribe
    Marco and Whitney Uribe met at CU in 2008. While living in New York City for Marco’s medical residency, he fought COVID-19 head-on.
  • Faliano twins at graduation
    Twins Cara and Amy Faliano have been on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic in the labs of the UCHealth system.
  • Mirela Alistar
    񱦵 computer science assistant professor Mirela Alistar wants to make healthcare more personal. Her work with microfluidic biochips is getting us there.
  • close up at night
    Giordan Thompson (MechEngr’20) was one of 21 񱦵 engineering students enrolled in the Maymester course, "Medicine in Space and Surface Environments," focused on aerospace engineering, human physiology and medicine. For one week of the three-
  • cave for drones
    CU Engineering's latest milestone, campus living by the numbers and CU's new drone challenge.
  • John Warner
    John Warner has climbed mountains, raced mountain bikes and served as a mayor, search-and-rescue volunteer, orchestra backer and dentist.
  • Courtnie Paschall
    For Courtnie Paschall (Neuro, ElEngr’15), working on a drug trial for patients with schizophrenia while applying to 20 MD-PhD programs counts as light duty.
  • Toshiko Luckow
    When Toshiko Luckow graduated in 2010, she was one of the oldest students to earn a medical degree in the history of the University of Colorado.
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