How Three Physician Scientists Are Taking Strides to Improve Our Health

Brain injuries, cancer, infections, and wound healing are some of the complex and pressing health concerns we face today. Understanding the basic science behind these diseases and biological processes is the key to developing new treatments and improving patient outcomes. Physician scientists—medical doctors who also conduct laboratory research—are essential to turning knowledge gained in the lab into innovative treatments, surgical advances, and new diagnostic tools. In this blog, we highlight the work and impact of three trauma surgeon scientists funded by NIGMS at different stages in their careers: Dr. Nicole Gibran (current grantee), Dr. Rebecca Minter (former grantee), and Dr. Carrie Sims (former grantee). Their work, despite the historical underrepresentation of women in the physician scientist training community, has led to revolutionary surgical treatments, new therapeutics, better screening, and improved quality of life for patients. Dr. Nicole Gibran: Transforming Burn Recovery Dr. Nicole Gibran, director of University of Washington’s Regional Burn Center at Harborview and University of Washington’s David and Nancy Auth-Washington Research Foundation Endowed Chair for Restorative Burn Surgery. Credit: University of Washington Medicine. Dr. Nicole Gibran  has built an impressive career treating burn victims and helping them regain their function, strength, mobility, and quality of life. As the director of the University of Washington’s Regional Burn Cen...
Source: Biomedical Beat Blog - National Institute of General Medical Sciences - Category: Research Authors: Tags: Being a Scientist Physical Trauma and Sepsis scientist profiles Training Wound Healing Source Type: blogs