Hilmers’ career has known no limits

Remarkable is a word that most people would use to describe Dr. David Hilmers’ career. Over the course of Hilmers’ expansive career, he has been a Marine, an astronaut and is now a professor of internal medicine and pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine with a commitment to global health projects.

Ethics Center staff member draws on experiences in new book

Dating is hard. Work, family and social commitments, personal goals and societal pressures to accommodate leave little time to spare. John Antonio, lead project coordinator of graduate medical education in Baylor’s Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy, has spent the last few years examining the most efficient and effective characteristics that drive dating life.

Student Corner: Nancy Shenoi

Nancy Shenoi, a second-year Baylor medical student with an interest in genetics and childhood neurology, took home second place in an essay contest for her reflections on her time learning from a family affected by a rare genetic disorder called spinocerebellar ataxia type 15/29.