Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

December/November 2007   Volume 3 Issue 6

Inside this issue

Cover stories

For patients, research ... and for Yale

‘Thriving survivor’ tells his tale

Opportunities for giving to Smilow Cancer Hospital

Partnerships

Grants & contracts

People

Lifelines: Sukru Emre

Structural biologist wins top science prize

Three faculty members elected to Institute of Medicine

Expert on protein-folding is named Sterling Professor

Surgical oncologist is appointed Lampman Professor of Surgery

Young scientists honored at White House

New AAAS Fellows

Out & about

Science

New building is a ‘place for great science’

Connecticut high schoolers get a taste of real-world research

New NIH program funds scientific ‘innovators’ at Yale

Advances: Does breastfeeding build better brains? | An Akt against heart disease | Of bugs, bivalves and breathing | Adding staying power to brain tumor drugs



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Surgical oncologist is appointed Lampman Professor of Surgery

Ronald Salem

Ronald Salem

The Medical School Historical Library was the setting for a ceremony marking the appointment of Ronald R. Salem, M.D., as Lampman Professor of Surgery. Salem specializes in surgery for esophageal cancer, hepatobiliary and pancreatic surgery, retroperitoneal sarcomas and other intra-abdominal malignancies. His research interests include combined modality therapy for esophageal cancer and the management of benign and malignant liver tumors.

Educated in Zimbabwe, Salem earned degrees in medicine and surgery from the University of Rhodesia. He interned at Harare Hospital in Zimbabwe and was an emergency room physician at Guy’s Hospital in London, England, before completing a residency in general surgery at Hammersmith Hospital there. Salem then completed a surgical oncology fellowship at New England Deaconess Hospital and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Mass.

Salem joined the School of Medicine faculty in 1990 as an assistant professor and became an associate professor in 1996. He was appointed full professor in 2005. He was awarded the annual General Surgery Resident Teaching Award multiple times, as well as the Alvan Feinstein Clinical Teaching Award in 2005. He is a member of the medical school’s Society of Distinguished Teachers.

The Lampman professorship was established from a bequest of Leonard Bronk Lampman of the Yale College Class of 1896.

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