GW Hospital
At the seventh annual GW Hospital Trauma Survivors' Day event, patients shared stories of strength and survival and reunited with some of the people who helped save their lives.
Thanks to the help of advanced brain imaging software, the George Washington University (GW) Hospital is making better, faster care decisions for patients suffering from stroke.
GW Hospital is the first and only in D.C. to have RAPID CT Perfusion software.
To improve health equity and health care access and to bring research and technology to Wards 7 and 8 in Washington, D.C., GW Hospital signed a letter of intent to oversee the opening of a new hospital and health complex in Southeast D.C.
Babak Sarani, MD, professor of surgery and of emergency medicine, spoke to Washington Business Journal for an article about the recent approval for a helipad at GW Hospital.
Walter Jean, MD, professor of neurological surgery, spoke to NBC4 about the Precision Virtual Reality technology in use at GW Hospital.
Liliane Willens had lived a life unmoored before; as a child, she and her family experienced World War II as stateless citizens in Shanghai. Decades later, after immigrating to the United States and earning her PhD, Willens found herself lost again – this time cast adrift by a disease
GW Hospital's stroke team is among the nation's leaders in acute care.
The GW Center for Healthcare Innovation and Policy Research announced the winners of the 2018 GW Hospital Leadership in Practice Innovation Award.
Mary Elizabeth Schroeder, MD, assistant professor of surgery, spoke to WJLA-ABC7 for a segment about GW Hospital's Trauma Survivors Day.