We're recruiting for NCI T32 post-doc fellows! Please feel free to reach out to me directly with any questions, and help spread the word. This is a fantastic and important opportunity.
Now accepting applications!
The Biobehavioral Oncology Training (BBOT) Program offers a 2-year #research fellowship for postdocs, focusing on Cancer Disparities from prevention to survivorship.
Apply by April 15, 2025: https://t.co/XgscI9mxBM
We're excited to welcome Jennifer Knight, MD, MS (@jmknight78) as our new Section Editor for Psychosocial Oncology! Dr. Knight's research explores how psychosocial factors impact cancer outcomes, focusing on transplantation and cellular therapy. @MedicalCollege@OncoAlert
Inaugural #BiobehavioralCART Cell Summit, UCLA. Loved being in the sandwich mentoring position (mentor and mentee) with this inspiring, intelligent, AND fun group!
The health risk of social disadvantage is transplantable into a new host | PNAS https://t.co/IAnEQHqmHe
Our provocative findings from Lucie Turcotte et al, shedding light on the profound health impact of social disadvantage. @CIBMTR@PNASNews@theNASciences@MCWCancerCenter
Honored to speak at the 2024 Health Disparities in Hematologic Malignancies conference at #MDAndersonCancerCenter on the transplantability of social disadvantage and what this means for cancer patients.
Grateful for the opportunity to conduct this important work through @CIBMTR, led by @MollyTaylorMD. Social well-being matters to our biology and health!
In a new collaborative study, @MedicalCollege researchers discovered that social well-being may be linked to CTRA, an alarm marker associated with #cancer progression. Their findings, published in @BloodAdvances, may help improve transplant outcomes: https://t.co/U97jOQitU0
Check out: The Biology of Socioeconomic Disparities and Adverse Outcomes Following CAR T Cell Therapy @ 2024 Tandem Meetings | Transplantation & Cellular Therapy Meetings of ASTCT and CIBMTR #Tandem2024 https://t.co/vJhKkXPOLP
Social well-being can affect the immune system in patients who receive #BMT by turning off genes that cause inflammation, new research shows. Learn more about this recent CIBMTR study: https://t.co/WHM4ywnCH1