Featured News

Sir Michael Marmot discussed empowerment as a powerful factor for eliminating health inequity.
The GW Ron and Joy Paul Kidney Center will promote education and outreach on kidney disease and transplantation in Washington, D.C.
$2.5 million gift from the Ron & Joy Paul Family Foundation addresses kidney disease and organ donation process.
Jonas discussed his experiences as an SMHS student during the civil rights movement and his career as a successful OB/GYN during Alumni Reunion Weekend 2015.
The Oct. 23 event featured spinal cord injury rehabilitation expert Edelle Field-Fote, Ph.D., an awards ceremony, and first-year physical therapy students’ donning of the white coat.
GW physicians presented on pancreatic, breast, and colon cancers at the Oct. 14 event.
Many of the 205 returning members of the M.D. program classes from 2005, 1995, ’90, ’85, ’80, ’75, ’70, and ’65 and their guests took time out from reminiscing with classmates and exploring the many changes around Ross Hall to listen as Jeffrey S. Akman, M.D.
When Elad I. Levy, M.D. ’97, M.B.A., FACS, FAHA, was a student at the George Washington University (GW) School of Medicine and Health Sciences (SMHS), his mentors taught him to challenge dogma and to make the world of medical knowledge better than how he found it.
Lindsay Marsh Warren, M.D. ’02, RESD ’06, B.A. ’98, was among the recipients of the 10th annual GW Black Alumni Association’s 2015 IMPACT Award on Sept. 26, 2015. A native of Shaker Heights, Ohio, Marsh Warren is a practicing anesthesiologist in the Washington, D.C. area.
Each year during Alumni Weekend, the George Washington University’s School of Medicine and Health Sciences (SMHS) honors the class celebrating its 50th medical school reunion with a luncheon hosted by the dean and a ceremony inducting them into the H Street Society.