Search
Book Signing with Rachel Brem, MD, and Christine Teal, MD, for their new book No Longer Radical: Understanding Mastectomies and Choosing the Breast Cancer Care That’s Right For You
The George Washington University community is invited to attend the Fall 2023 component of the 9th Annual Diversity Summit, Defining Revolutionary: A Call for Justice, Liberation & Empathy.
Annual GW Safety and Security Fair | Oct. 25
On Wednesday, June 22, the George Washington University (GW) School of Medicine and Health Sciences received the formal report from the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) conveying that the medical education program leading to the M.D. degree will continue with full accreditation for an…
The October 7 terrorist attacks in Israel carried out by Hamas have plunged the region into renewed crisis. Join Elliott School faculty and alumni for a discussion of the regional policy implications, implications for the United States, and what lies ahead from a policy and practitioner perspective…
Dr. Nesbitt will be discussing GW's roadmap for preparing future clinicians, delivering high-quality and equitable care in a high-performing health system, and creating and disseminating community-led population health research within our world class academic medical enterprise.
Increasing the number of student scholarships is a top priority for the school. The School of Medicine and Health Sciences (SMHS) Student Support Fund ensures that qualified students, regardless of financial resources, can take full advantage of a GW education.
The GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences is proud to present the Annual Irene Tamagna Lecture in Hypertension: New Biology of Pheochromocrtoma in the Era of Precision Medicine: Implications for its Pathogenesis, Genetics, Diagnosis, and Treatment. Speaker: Karel Pacak, MD, PhD, DSc, FACE
Every day in the nearly 20 years she practiced medicine at George Washington University, Seema P. Kakar, saw the impact of unhealthy eating in her patients living with diabetes, high blood pressure, kidney disease and other chronic diseases.
When you make a contribution to SMHS, you help a physician-in-training come closer to her dream of treating underserved children.