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He received a T32 NIH Surgical Oncology Fellowship [1] [2] during 1997–1999 [3] and worked in the endocrine oncology laboratory [4] of Drs. Orlo H. Clark and Quan-Yang Duh. After finishing his training in 2002, Kebebew became an assistant professor of surgery at UCSF.
Widemann heads the Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics Section, as Chief of NCI’s Pediatric Oncology Branch, and as a clinical Deputy Director of the Center for Cancer Research (CCR). [1] She is the special advisor to the NCI director for childhood cancer.
He graduated from Loma Linda University, California [2] and his M.D./Ph.D. Medical Scientist Training Program, at National Institutes of Health (NIH) and his dissertation on tumor immunology. [3] Later, Gulley did his residency in internal medicine at Emory University in 1998, followed by a medical oncology fellowship at the NCI. [4]
In 2019, Shah was appointed as an NIH Lasker Investigator. She is a member of multiple societies, including the American Society of Hematology, the American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy, the Children’s Oncology Group, the Therapeutic Advances in Childhood Leukemia & Lymphoma consortium and the Pediatric Blood and Marrow Transplant Consortium.
After completing her M.D., Fitzhugh completed a joint residency in internal medicine and pediatrics at Duke University Medical Center, and in 2005 she did a combined adult hematology and pediatric hematology-oncology fellowship at the NIH and Johns Hopkins Hospital. [2]
Her surgical training included a surgery residency at Maine Medical Center and a surgical oncology fellowship at the National Cancer Institutes, NIH. She spent six years with the navy as a General Medical Officer, Commander and Surgeon in San Diego, Hawaii and Washington, D.C before joining academia. [2]
In 1976, after his fellowship ended, he was appointed to work at NIH as an investigator in pediatric oncology in the US Public Health Service. [8] In 1980 he was named head of the infectious disease section of the pediatric branch of NCI, and he was named NCI's chief of pediatrics in 1982. [9]
[1] [2] Evans received postgraduate training in internal medicine at Emory University School of Medicine and fellowship training in medical oncology within the Medicine Branch of the Clinical Oncology Program at the National Cancer Institute. [3]