A high-risk, high-reward approach to ALS
Multidisciplinary group of U-M researchers will investigate environmental exposures, chosen as one of the first projects in a new NIH amyotrophic lateral sclerosis initiative.
Multidisciplinary group of U-M researchers will investigate environmental exposures, chosen as one of the first projects in a new NIH amyotrophic lateral sclerosis initiative.
Michigan Medicine and Saint Joseph Mercy Health System, a member of Trinity Health, today announce a partnership with Lansing-based Physicians Health Plan (PHP) to bring a new choice in Medicare Advantage plans to Livingston and Washtenaw counties this fall.
A team of partners will launch a Health Equity Project in five Michigan counties, using a Medicaid match to help them reduce health disparities associated with pressing social needs such as housing instability, food insecurity, transportation, health system complexity and other socioeconomic factors.
Families will have a chance to ask three pediatric experts from University of Michigan Health C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital their top questions about COVID vaccination for kids during a live Q & A session at 11 a.m. Friday, Sept. 17.
Two Michigan Medicine leaders are among the statewide health care executives signing a new letter urging Michiganders to get vacinated against COVID-19.
The drive, with online and in-person drop-off options for giving, continues through Sept. 26
Michigan Medicine reported projected positive fiscal year-end results today, with an anticipated 6.5 percent ($339.8 million) operating margin on forecasted operating revenues of $5.2 billion.
The Pavilion at University of Michigan Health will be the name of the new Michigan Medicine hospital currently under construction. Work on the project resumed this spring after a pause in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The new adult inpatient facility is scheduled to open for patient care in the fall of 2025.
Physician assistants represented by the United Physician Assistants of Michigan Medicine/AFT 5297 (UPAMM) have ratified a three-year contract with Michigan Medicine,
U-M will launch a new Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention to generate knowledge and advance innovative solutions that reduce firearm injury, a public health crisis that leads to more than 100 deaths per day across the United States.
With infection rates and hospitalizations for COVID-19 dropping, Michigan Medicine will lift some visitor restrictions for adult patients that had been required during the most recent surge of patients.
After serving two years as interim chair, Michelle S. Caird, M.D., was named chair of Michigan Medicine's Department of Orthopaedic Surgery. The department's first female chair, Caird has served on the faculty since 2004. She is a leading expert in multiple pediatric orthopaedic conditions and directs the U-M osteogenesis imperfecta multidisciplinary clinic.
The newly established United Physician Assistants at Michigan Medicine / AFT Local 5297 (UPAMM) has reached a tentative agreement with the University on a three-year contract.
As families prepare for the COVID vaccine rollout for adolescents and teens ages 12-15, Michigan Medicine experts will help answer parents’ top questions during a live Q & A.
Researchers at Michigan Medicine are helping lead the first national study of how highly allergic people react to mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. The trial, co-led by a U-M immunologist, will cover over 3,000 participants receiving the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines at up to 35 academic allergy research centers across the United States.
A collaboration to expand cardiovascular services in west Michigan has taken a big step forward with state regulators giving the go-ahead to launch a second open-heart surgery program for the Grand Rapids area – the largest market in the state with a single open-heart program.
As COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations rise across Michigan, beginning Friday April 2, Michigan Medicine will move to a more restrictive visitor policy similar to earlier in the pandemic.
Marschall S. Runge, MD, PhD, signs a letter in solidarity with the six University of Michigan women deans who authored a note of protest to Regent Ron Weiser.
The University of Michigan Board of Regents has approved the renaming of the U-M Depression Center for Frances and Kenneth Eisenberg and their family, in recognition of their transformational $30 million total giving to depression research and scholarship.
Technology developed at Michigan Medicine will help health care providers detect signs that a patient will become unstable and allow them to intervene faster than they would using traditional methods of recording vital signs. After receiving a special classification from the FDA, the U-M spinoff company can market the device to U.S. hospitals.
Nearly 20 years ago, the University of Michigan made history by establishing the nation’s first Depression Center, focused on advancing research, improving care and reducing stigma for some of the most common, costly and disabling health conditions. Today, the U-M Depression Center’s leadership passed to a new generation.
Experts at Michigan Medicine C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital will answer some of families’ top questions about returning to in-person learning and virtual learning during a live Q & A at noon EST on Thursday, Jan. 28.
Four innovative programs designed to continue high-quality care at home after a hospitalization or emergency visit have launched since 2020.
Michigan Medicine is moving into the next priority phase of vaccinations, with plans to begin vaccinating established patients who are age 65 or older against COVID-19 during the week of Jan. 11.
Forced to close its gates to fans during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Big House will reopen to play a critical role in the efforts to quickly vaccinate as many people as possible.
As part of the celebration of the 150th anniversary of U-M's academic medical center, a look back at the origins and construction of today's University Hospital and Taubman Center