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Neil Schluger Follow

Professor; Columbia Univ. Medical Center; Columbia Mailman School of Public Health

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    Personal Genomics and Public Health

    Neil Schluger

    Public health, Schluger says, deals with populations, not individuals. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

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    How is modern medicine changing the way humans evolve?

    Neil Schluger

    What will we look like in 100 years? Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

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    How much medicine is too much medicine?

    Neil Schluger

    With the global population exploding, is there a limit to how much effort we should put into keeping everyone alive as long as possible? Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

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    Are allergies on the rise in America?

    Neil Schluger

    An allergy specialist, Schluger discusses why we seem to have more allergies than ever. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

  • Vid_6857_111x84

    Tuberculosis and the Immigration Question

    Neil Schluger

    Tuberculosis should not be a reason to keep people from immigrating to the United States, Schluger says. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

  • Vid_6856_111x84

    The Threat of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis

    Neil Schluger

    How did tuberculosis become so drug-resistant? Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

  • Vid_6855_111x84

    The Problems of Diagnosing Tuberculosis

    Neil Schluger

    The oldest test still in use. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

  • Vid_6846_111x84

    Cultural Barriers to Treating Tuberculosis in America

    Neil Schluger

    Over half of tuberculosis patients in America were abroad, Schluger says. Many are suspicious of modern medicine. How does a doctor deal? Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

  • Vid_6844_111x84

    The Tuberculosis Vaccine

    Neil Schluger

    It’s the most widely used vaccine in the world, yet tuberculosis is still the 8th leading cause of death, says Schluger. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

  • Vid_6843_111x84

    Have doctors forgotten about infectious diseases?

    Neil Schluger

    When tuberculosis became uncommon in the U.S., the number of specialists declined, too, Schluger says. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

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    Why is TB research not as sexy as HIV/AIDS research?

    Neil Schluger

    People with tuberculosis live in the shadows and can’t organize as well as educated women and gay men, says Schluger. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

  • Vid_6841_111x84

    The Gates Foundation and the Fight Against Tuberculosis

    Neil Schluger

    Bringing money where the pharmaceutical industry doesn’t want to go. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

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    Which do you enjoy more, research or clinical work?

    Neil Schluger

    Interpersonal relationships are just as important as the intellectual challenges of research, says Schluger. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

  • Vid_6839_111x84

    Why Tuberculosis Is Still Important

    Neil Schluger

    It’s no longer a threat in the developed world, but tuberculosis is the 8th leading cause of death in much of the world, Schluger says. Read More

    June 5, 2008   |  In Health & Medicine, Science & Tech

User_rwvs_4bfbff6e6 Dr. Neil W. Schluger's  main area of academic interest has been in tuberculosis, including clinical trials, molecular epidemiology, development and evaluation of diagnostics, and human host immune responses. He is the principal investigator at Columbia University for the Tuberculosis Trials Consortium, a CDC-funded collaboration in clinical trials in which patients are enrolled in trials of treatment of latent tuberculosis infection and active tuberculosis disease. In addition, Dr. Schluger has led studies examining the transmission dynamics of tuberculosis in New York City, using tools of molecular epidemiology. He has a long standing interest in the development and evaluation of new tools for the diagnosis of tuberculosis. More recently, in addition to his studies in tuberculosis, he has led clinical trials for the use of retinoids in the treatment of emphysema and for the use of interferon gamma in the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.

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