Type: Upload file
Dr. Jo Jackson, family medicine, teaches UW residents about childhood development.
Credit: Clare McLean
06/23/2017
Type: Upload file
Dr. Cat Pittack, Biological Structure, teaches anatomy class to an interdisclipinary group of students in Kane Hall.
Credit: Clare McLean
06/23/2017
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Dr. Randy Curtis, a UW Medicine palliative care specialist, leads rounds at Harborview Medical Center's intensive care unit.
Credit: Clare McLean
06/23/2017
Type: Upload file
Medical students work on an infant mannequin at the WWAMI Institute for Simulation in Healthcare at UW Medical Center in Seattle.
Credit: Clare McLean
06/23/2017
Type: Upload file
UW School of Medicine students celebrate after the White Coat ceremony at Meany Hall. Event marks medical students transition from classroom learning to clinical-study phase.
Credit: Clare McLean
01/31/2018
Type: MediaAMP
Alzheimer’s is a slow-progressing disease that can be latent for 15 years before developing into cognitive impairment and dementia. And evidence suggests that healthy behaviors can delay the...
01/23/2018
Type: MediaAMP
Recent studies indicate that infants born prematurely have a higher risk of developing heart disease later in life. Now, researchers at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle have...
12/14/2017
Type: MediaAMP
At the Seattle bar Alchemy, activated charcoal is stirred into a signature cocktail called the Black and White. Salty Caramel Ash -- again with charcoal -- is a customer favorite at an ice cream...
12/11/2017
Type: MediaAMP
Paying attention to what you eat and what your baby eats during the first 1,000 days of life – preconception through 2 years old – has been gaining stature in the medical community for several years...
11/15/2017
Type: MediaAMP
Picky eating among toddlers is almost universal, says UW Medicine pediatrician Molly Grow. Children play with food as a means to get more comfortable with it, she says.