Forbes: 30 in the medical and health field in 2015, under the age of 30 (21-30)
This year, Forbes selected the "30 heroes under 30 years old in 2015" which is different from previous years: the characters on the list are all handsome men and women, who not only have excellent professional knowledge, but also have good eloquence and speech skills. This paper takes stock of 30 heroes under the age of 30 (21-30) in the medical and health field in 2015.
Researchers under the age of 30 have played a key role in some of the major scientific discoveries of the past few years, such as exploring the causes of rare cancers, linking genetic testing to disease diagnosis, and analyzing the pros and cons of the US health system.
Even more striking is the fact that young researchers are turning into entrepreneurs. They are creating companies that will potentially change the way in which drug testing is induced by pluripotent stem cells, genetic engineering techniques that may change the way biological research is done, and the commercialization of technologies that may save countless newborns in Africa.
This year is the fourth year of Forbes magazine's selection of 30 outstanding young people under the age of 30. The biggest feature of this year's selection is that more and more programmers and other IT practitioners are turning to the medical and health field, and the trend of medical data is becoming more and more. On the other hand, the characters on the list are handsome and prostitutes. They not only have excellent professional knowledge, but also have good eloquence and speech skills.
The following is the “2015 30-year-old hero under the age of 30 in the medical and health field†(21-30) selected by Forbes magazine.
Mahiben Maruthappu, 26-year-old NHS CEO directly affiliated with senior researcher
Maruthappu has published more than 60 forward-looking studies ranging from reducing unemployment to how the public sector can reduce breast cancer mortality by increasing fiscal spending. He was appointed the youngest senior researcher at the National Health Service (NHS) in England, where he managed $160 billion in funding to draft a medical roadmap for the next five years.
Nicole McNeer, 27-year-old pediatric resident at Yale University
McNeer has been working in science laboratories since he was 4 years old. She focuses on using nanoparticle gene therapy to edit the patient's DNA. Her focus is on childhood diseases, including pediatric cancer, cystic fibrosis, and congenital anemia.
Eric Oermann, 29-year-old resident at Mount Sinai Hospital
It is now generally accepted that many cancer patients receive almost the same dose of radiation during radiotherapy. In fact, due to the different individuals, they are subject to different doses. If an artificial intelligence can personalize the radiation dose, it is enough to kill cancer cells but not too much. This is a question that Oermann is also working on as a doctor and mathematician.
Dot Connected Disposable Tourniquet Type A
Best Tourniquet,Tourniquet Online,Disposable Tourniquet,Tourniquet For Blood Draw
GUANGDONG JIANGMEN RONGHAI MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY CO.,LTD , https://www.kimaomedical.com