- August 5, 2025
Can the Best Electrolyte Drinks Really Help With Hydration?
- July 30, 2025
Will Trump’s Bill Reverse Health Improvements for College Students?
- August 13, 2025
Congratulations to the tenured and promoted faculty, whose dedication to the college has furthered our mission of building healthier futures through interprofessional education and innovative research.
Dr. Teenu Xavier’s research focuses on using artificial intelligence and machine learning to enhance healthcare communication and improve patient outcomes, with a special focus on identifying and reducing biased language in electronic health records. She examines EHR text-based data to uncover meaningful patterns, language features, and contextual cues that can shape the care patients receive. Her work also explores the use of natural language processing in a variety of sources, including clinical notes, social media, and blogs, to study sentiments, emotions, and health-related conversations, with a commitment to addressing health disparities. Drawing on her expertise in nursing informatics, big data analytics, health promotion and health equity, she investigates how Artificial intelligence can be integrated into healthcare systems to support empathetic, patient-centered documentation and address social determinants of health
Dr. Yikuan Li is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Administration and Policy. His research integrates multimodal machine learning, reinforcement learning, and large language models to advance clinical prediction, decision support, and health data interoperability.
- July 18, 2025
Germanna nursing professor inspires students with her example
- July 23, 2025
Dr. Omolayo Joy Anjorin awarded prestigious Presidential Scholarship for groundbreaking public health research
- July 21, 2025
Cannabis is ‘an effective treatment’ for chronic pain, study suggests
- July 26, 2025
Top 10 Best Nursing Schools in Virginia
- July 29, 2025
People who lived near Bucks, Montco military bases had higher level of toxic compounds in blood than U.S. average.