Geoffrey Steven Ginsburg
Professor of Medicine
Campus mail:
101 Science Dr, Rm 2111, CIEMAS Bldg, Durham, NC 27708
Phone:
(919) 668-6210
Dr. Geoffrey S. Ginsburg's research interests are in the development of novel paradigms for developing and translating genomic information into medical practice and the integration of personalized medicine into health care.
Education and Training
- Boston University, M.D. 1984
- Boston University, Ph.D. 1984
- Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Medical Resident, Medicine
- Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Fellow in Cardiology, Medicine
- Children's Hospital Boston, Research Fellow in Cardiology, Medicine
Selected Grants and Awards
- Duke University Program in Environmental Health
- Transplant Infectious Diseases Interdisciplinary Research Training Grant (TIDIRTG)
- Building and Deploying a Genomic-Medicine Risk Assessment Model for Diverse Primary Care Populations.
- The IGNITE II CC: Engagement, Coordination, Demonstration, and Dissemination
- Abbott Diagnostics Collaborative Sponsored Research Agreement
- Preparing Genetic Counselors for Genomic Medicine Research
- Medical Scientist Training Program
- The Role of Junctophilin Type 2 in Cardiac Node Automaticity
- One-Carbon Metabolism Genetics Data Analyses
- Mapping Epigenetic Memory of Exposure New To Observe (MEMENTO)
- Predicting prebiotic effects on human microbiota, behavior, and cognition.
- Interdisciplinary Training Program in Lung Disease
- Transfusion Medicine and Hematology
- Postdoctoral Training in Genomic Medicine Research
- Multidisciplinary Heart and Vascular Diseases
- Resilience Prediction to RSV Infection
- Study of Prognostic Biomarkers of Severe Systemic Bacterial Infection
- MicroRNA Profiling to Characterize and Predict Posttraumatic Epilepsy following Traumatic Brain Injury
- PREdicting contagion using Systems And GEnomic analysis (PRESAGE)
- Human-Based Sensor System for Presymptomatic Biological Exposure Detection
- Novel host-based diagnostics of febrile illness in the warfighter
- Implementation, Adoption, and Utility of Family History in Diverse Care Settings
- Duke University Program in Environmental Health
- Duke-UNC Clinical Hematology and Transfusion Research Career Development Program
- Development of Prognostic Platelet RNA Biomarkers To Tailor Antiplatelet Therapy
- Development and Application of Mathematical Methods for Tracking Biochronicity and Baseline Variation
- Impact of Personal Genomic Testing on Primary Care Physician Knowledge and Attitudes
- Novel Dialysis-Like Therapeutics in Sepsis-induced Shock and Organ Failure
- Genetics of Normal Human Variation: Implications for Disease
- Genetic Risk Testing & Health Coaching for T2D and CHD
- Feasibility for Predicting Warfighter Health Using Transcriptional Markers on the MAP Platform
- Baseline Bio-molecular Models to Predict Infectious Disease Susceptibility
- The Duke Multidisciplinary Training Program in Pediatric Lung Disease
- Plasmonics-Active SERS Nanoplatforms for In Vivo Diagnostics
- Validation of the host transcription diagnostic for prediction of incipient respiratory viral infection
- Pharmacogenetic Testing: Challenges of Clinical Integration
- Multidisciplinary Neonatal Training Grant
- Implications of Health and Genetic Literacy for Genomic Medicine
- CTSA UL
- Phase I Clinical Trial Describing the Pharmacogenomics of Aspirin
- Programs in Clinical Effectiveness of Cancer Pharmacogenomics
- Enabling Personalized Medicine through Clinical Decision Support
- Duke Clinical and Translational Science Institute