DIM accepts insurance to aid patients
By Danielle Muoio | March 15, 2012Duke Integrative Medicine is now accepting insurance in order to increase patient access.
Duke Integrative Medicine is now accepting insurance in order to increase patient access.
After more than one year of working with Duke Children’s Hospital and Health Center, The Monday Life plans to expand its fundraising efforts to five additional hospitals nationwide.
The February opening of the Duke Cancer Center is a simultaneous testament to the future of cancer treatment and the historical evolution of patient care at Duke.
Wherever music therapist Tray Batson and his guitar go, the healing effects follow.
Administrators at Duke Medicine kicked off the New Year by coming together to consider critical issues Duke Medicine will face due to impending national health care reform.
In a world with Words with Friends, some still play Scrabble in person.
As potential budget cuts to the National Institutes of Health funding loom, Duke is planning how to bolster its resources and minimize potential losses.
Duke University Medical Center researchers have received grants totaling $37.2 million to continue work developing an effective HIV vaccine.
Cancer patients at Duke can now draw comfort from two new meditative support groups.
By summer 2014, Duke University Health System will convert to a single, standardized electronic health records system, revolutionizing access to patient history.
Duke Med had its annual check-up, and its outlook is optimistic.
Dean of the School of Nursing Catherine Gilliss delivered the address, which summarized progress over the past year and described the school’s strategic vision for the future.
Although the Duke University Medical Center is consistently ranked as one of the nation’s top 10 hospitals, administrators believe the rankings should be viewed with some reservations.
The recently reorganized Duke Cancer Institute has a new leader.
Although administrators said they are glad Duke remains highly rated, many expressed concerns about the methodology behind the rankings and their role in helping students decide where to attend.
The Chronicle’s Yeshwanth Kandimalla sat down with Dr. Marvin Swartz to discuss the circumstances surrounding the incident and the shooter, Jared Loughner.
Parents of newborns in Durham can count on some help this year.
Recently released documents show that federal researchers had more concerns than previously reported about the now-discredited cancer genomics research conducted by Dr. Anil Potti.
An autopsy released during winter break revealed that a woman who died at Duke University Medical Center was poisoned by a pain reliever and common antihistamine.
The raucous debate over health care legislation in 2009 brought issues of medical care and cost management to the national forefront