News and Congratulations
Jeong Min Yu (April) MD, Genna Braverman MD, Candance Alleyne BSN and Erin Mulvey MD (pictured above from left to right).
Congratulations to the Class of 2024 on conferring your Master's Degree! We are so proud of our gradutes who were presented with the Cornell University Seal, following rigorous training and multi-disciplinary mentorship in study design, biostatistics, epidemiology, molecular biology among other subjects through our Clinical Translational Investigation Master’s Degree Program.
We are thrilled to celebrate our graduates! Each of these talented investigators share a unique vision for the future of translational medicine with the Clinical Translational Science Center. Our graduates successfully completed the Master's Degree program while balancing their professional lives as instructors, nurses, research fellows, and assistant professors. We could not be more proud of our graduates listed below:
Candace Marie Alleyne BSN, is a research nurse in the division of infectious diseases at WCM, whose research explored COVID-19 vaccination effectiveness on outcomes among kidney transplant recipients with HIV.
Kristin Berger MD, is an instructor in the division of pulmonary and critical care at WCM, whose research focused on airway dimensions and interstitial lung abnormality.
Genna Braverman MD, a Rheumatology Fellow at Hospital for Special Surgery whose research was on COVID vaccines and disease flares in patients with rheumatic diseases.
Stanley Cooper MD, is an instructor in Medicine, Infectious Diseases at WCM, whose research looked at concordance between computer assisted self-interviews (CASI)-collected and short message service (SMS) - collected sexual behavior reporting.
Erin Mulvey MD, is a KL2 Scholar and an Assistant Professor of Medicine, specializing in Hematology-Oncology at WCM, whose research was a Phase I Trial of Tazemetostat and Venetoclax in relapsed refractory non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
Jeong Min Yu (April) MD, is a Rheumatology Fellow at Hospital for Special Surgery, whose research focused on an initial characterization of skin symptom questionnaire for patients with scleroderma.
Sarah Lieber MD, is a KL2 Scholar and an Assistant Professor specializing in Rheumatology at Hospital for Special Surgery, whose research focused on aging in systemic lupus erythematosus.
For the CTSC, it has been a privilege to see these talented physician-scientists prosper as translational researchers. We wish them all the best in their future endeavors!