KCU News
Kenya: Global Health and Learning
A photo blog of Kansas City University medical students traveling to Mama Pilista Memorial Health Center in Masra, Kenya, to provide health care to local residents.
December 2019: From the Desk of the President
In this month's newsletter, Dr. Hahn shares recent KCU successes including promotions, fellowships, diversity competency and STEM Fair.
BioNexus KC: KCU Professor’s Research Focuses on Aging and Cancer for Boomer Generation
By 2030 the baby boomer generation will all be of retirement age, expanding the size of the older population to one of every five people in our country. Dr. Ehab Sarsour, has accepted the challenge of this staggering demographic change. His research focuses on the role of aging on cancer behavior, progression and its response to therapy.
KCU graduate wins award for work in medical informatics
Center for Medical Education Innovation Redefines Learning
KCU Announces Key Faculty Promotions
Dr. John Paulson named AACOM Osteopathic Health Policy Fellow
U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II talks healthcare concerns with KCU students, administrators
KCU College of Dental Medicine Nears $30M in Fundraising
Major gifts from Kansas City and Joplin donors bring university a big step closer to breaking ground.
October 2019: From the Desk of the President
In October's newsletter, Dr. Hahn shares about KCU's 2019 Homecoming and Update in Medicine CME, the KCU Scholarship Match, the AOA-OMED cruise ship reception, successes in fundraising for the KCU College of Dental Medicine, Score 1, alumni Dr. Karen Nichols news, a KCUR interview about the need for mental health professionals of color, a student article published in Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, the Joplin Health Fair, and KCU's recognition as a top employer in higher education.
Bench to Clinic: First Year Med Student Gaining Additional Doctorate Degree Impacts Breast Cancer Research
What does a scientist do when he has a heart for treating cancer patients, but wants to conduct research that could cure them? For Andrew Sulaiman, PhD, the answer is simple. Do both.