Kenneth Walsh (medical researcher)

Kenneth Walsh is an American medical researcher specializing in the study of cardiovascular medicine. He is a Professor of Medicine at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. He was formerly a professor at Tufts University.[1]

Kenneth Walsh
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
Scientific career
FieldsCardiovascular medicine
Cardiovascular biology
InstitutionsUniversity of Virginia School of Medicine
Boston University School of Medicine
Tufts University
ThesisRegulation of flux through metabolic cycles (1984)
Notable studentsDavid Gorski
Websitewww.kwalshlab.org

Honors and awards

Walsh has received an Established Investigator Award from the American Heart Association and the Irwin F. Page Investigator Award from the Council on Arteriosclerosis.[2] In 2011, he was one of five researchers named as Distinguished Scientists that year by the American Heart Association.[3]

gollark: You can't because they don't allow you to ship runtime-loadable code.
gollark: But what if my app needs 85TB of RAM to work?
gollark: Which is probably because of consumer apioidness and its origins in the telecoms world rather than the computing one.
gollark: Which is ultimately because the phone market is terrible and merges software and hardware too much.
gollark: Yes, one of its greatest flaws is that OEMs don't know when to stop idiotically changing things.

References

  1. Robins, Mark (2000-09-02). "Double benefit". New Scientist. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
  2. "Basic Sciences Investigators". www.bumc.bu.edu. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
  3. "BUSM professor selected as American Heart Association Distinguished Scientist" (Press release). Boston University Medical Center. 2011-07-12.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.