Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

July/August 2006  Volume 2 Issue 4

Inside this issue

Cover stories

A love of Yale, a vision for its future

A faster pipeline speeds new treatments from lab to patient

“Teacher’s teacher” to oversee curriculum as education dean

Partnerships

Biology, medicine unite in new grad initiative

Grants & contracts

People

Pioneer of antiviral therapies is awarded the Parker Medal, school’s highest honor

Expert on autism is named new director of Child Study Center

Blood cell researcher is named new chair of Laboratory Medicine

Yale biochemist is elected to the world’s oldest scientific society

Lifelines: Rebel with a cause

Out & about

Awards & honors

Education

Superb teaching is rewarded at graduation

Science

New protein chips are a window on the womb

An eye for science

Advances: Trading life and limb in pursuit of being thin | How immunity is MIFfed by malaria | Placenta may hold autism's earliest mark| Curbing the scourge of deadly diarrhea



image pdf icon

Download this whole issue as a PDF file

Blood cell researcher is named new chair of Laboratory Medicine

Brian Smith photo.

Brian Smith

Brian R. Smith, M.D., a physician-scientist who joined the Yale faculty in 1989, has been named chair of the Department of Laboratory Medicine and chief of laboratory medicine at Yale-New Haven Hospital for a three-year term that began on July 1.

Members of the Department of Laboratory Medicine study the molecular and cellular constituents of blood and other body fluids to improve the diagnosis and treatment of disease, and to gain further insights into the causes of disease. The department also oversees the School of Medicine’s clinical laboratories, in which nearly five million tests are performed each year for Yale-New Haven Hospital and other national and regional health care centers. The faculty also teach the core courses in Blood cell researcher is named new chair of Laboratory Medicine laboratory medicine and microbiology taught to medical students.

Smith, professor of laboratory medicine, medicine and pediatrics, received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School and completed his internship and residency in internal medicine at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. He completed fellowships in hematology, oncology and research pathology at the Brigham, the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Children’s Hospital in Boston. He has served as vice chair of the Department of Laboratory Medicine since 1997.

Smith’s research has focused on how blood platelets and white blood cells, which adhere to one another during inflammation and blood coagulation, interact in health and disease. In approximately 150 journal articles he has explored how the combined actions of these cells may contribute to disorders of the blood and cardiovascular system, metastatic cancer, and complications of blood transfusion and circulatory bypass during cardiac surgery.

Smith succeeds Peter I. Jatlow, M.D., professor of laboratory medicine and psychiatry, who has headed the department since 1984. During Jatlow’s tenure, the department’s research funding increased almost 20-fold. Jatlow, an expert on drugs of abuse, will continue to direct the department’s clinical chemistry laboratory. image


Jump to top.

 

Jump to top.

Copyright 2006, Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved. Email comments or suggestions to: editor@info.med.yale.edu