News & Events
Displaying 33 - 48 of 69
Displaying 33 - 48 of 69
Morgan Crow Winner of the UCSF 2017 Excellence in Ambulatory Nursing Award
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
May 12, 2017
Morgan is a CN in the Pediatric Surgical Specialties Ambulatory Practices at Mission Bay. This award is presented to recognize a professional nurse who is actively engaged in the practice of ambulatory nursing, whose contributions to the care of pediatric surgical and retinoblastoma patients demonstrate such...
New Collaboration Launched to Advance Technology for Children’s Health
Department of Surgery, Surgical Innovations Program
March 02, 2017
On January 12, clinicians, engineers, scientists, and administrators from UCSF, UC Berkeley. UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospitals, and Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute (CHORI) convened at the Mission Bay campus for the inaugural Engineering for Children’s Health Symposium. The event, reported in UCSF...
Clinical Engineers at UCSF Hack The Operating Room
UCSF Surgical Innovations Program
November 01, 2016
The UCSF Department of Surgery’s longstanding partnership with engineers to invent new medical technologies in response to patient needs was featured in a recent story by UC Berkeley journalism student Alex Orlando. The article profiles Richard Fechter, Principal Development Engineer at U CSF Medical Center and...
Fetal Surgery Stands To Advance From New Glues Inspired By Mussels
Department of Surgery, Surgical Innovations
July 08, 2016
Pediatric surgeon Michael R. Harrison, M.D. and UC Berkeley engineer Phillip Messersmith, Ph.D. are collaborating on an NIH-Funded research project to improve glues used in fetal surgery procedures, notably those used to treat twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome. Dr. Harrision, widely acknolwedged as the "father of...
UCSF Researchers Reappraise Treatment for Gastroschisis, Shining Light on Role of Immune System
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
May 24, 2016
UCSF News reports on the work of a UCSF research team investigating the causes and potential treatments for gastroschisis, a rare disorder in which developing intestines protrude outside of the body through a hole alongside the belly button. Led by pediatric surgeon Tippi MacKenzie, MD, Associate Professor of...
Inside Surgery Winter-Spring 2016
UCSF Department of Surgery
April 07, 2016
The Winter-Spring 2016 issue of Inside Surgery focuses on how the new Mission Bay hospitals are enhancing surgical care. New surgical suites, for example, feature advanced technologies and resources that are optimal for patients. The move is also fostering research collaborations as our surgeons work in close...
UCSF Fetal Treatment Center Launches New Mobile App for Referring Physicians
UCSF Fetal Treatment Center
January 29, 2016
The Fetal Treatment Center (FTC) has just launched a new mobile app *, now available for download in the Apple app store and soon to be available on Android devices. O ne of the best ways to develop a good relationship with our patients is to have a quality connection with our referring physicians — which is why...
How Tiny Sensors Are Driving Innovation in Medicine
UCSF Surgical Innovations Program
September 22, 2015
KQED Science for Personalized Medicine reports on a multitude of new sensor technologies that are being used to monitor medical issues, which would otherwise be time-consuming for hospital staff to manage. Hanmin Lee, M.D., Professor and Chief of the Division of Pediatric Surgery at UCSF as well as Medical...
Best Candidates for Fetal Spina Bifida Surgery May Be Identified Through Brain Scans
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
September 17, 2015
UCSF News reports on the discovery by researchers at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital San Francisco that fetuses with enlarged ventricles, the fluid-filled cavities inside the brain, may be less likely than other fetuses to benefit from surgery in the womb to treat spina bifida. These findings were based on data...
‘Smart Bandage’ Detects Bedsores Before They Are Visible To Doctors
UCSF Surgical Innovations Program
March 17, 2015
UC Berkeley News reports on the "smart bandage," a device in development by a team of surgeons and scientists at UCSF and UC Berkeley that uses electrical currents to detect early tissue damage from pressure ulcers, or bedsores, well before they are visible to the human eye. The technology offers the possibility...
Immune System Drives Pregnancy Complications after Fetal Surgery in Mice
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
January 24, 2014
UCSF News report on how the immune system drives pregnancy complications after fetal surgery in mice. As a fetal surgeon at UC San Francisco, Tippi MacKenzie, MD, has long known that conducting surgery on a fetus to correct a problems such as spina bifida often results in preterm labor and premature birth. Now...
Medical Devices Fall Short for Children
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
May 06, 2013
"Innovation in medicine is driven by need, but also by the market," said Dr. Michael R. Harrison, the director emeritus of the Fetal Treatment Center and the director of the Pediatric Device Consortium, both at the University of California, San Francisco. "Big markets have lots of folks developing devices, but...
Maternal Liver Grafts More Tolerable for Children with Rare Disease
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
November 16, 2012
UCSF News reports that on a study that suggests maternal liver grafts more tolerable for children with biliary atresia, a rare, life-threatening disease, results that may have important implications for counseling parents on organ donation Children with a rare, life-threatening disease that is the most common...
Ronald McDonald House Charities Honor UCSF’s Michael Harrison
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
November 02, 2012
Michael R. Harrison, MD, founder and director emeritus of the Fetal Treatment Center at the UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital, was recognized last week for his contributions to life-saving fetal surgery with the Ronald McDonald House Charities Medical Award of Excellence.
Magnet trial an attractive option for kids with sunken chest
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
August 19, 2012
Surgeons at the UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital in San Francisco are using magnets to reshape the breastbones of children who suffer from Sunken Chest Syndrome. The technique is undergoing phase 3 clinical trials, but the doctors hope to prove that long term magnetic force is as effective and less painful than...
UCSF Recognized for Trial of the Year
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
August 16, 2012
The Society of Clinical Trials has named UCSF's Management of Myelomeningocele Study (MOMS), a review of prenatal versus postnatal surgery for myelomengingocele (spina bifida), as its Trial of the Year. The study earned recognition as an important clinical trial that overcame difficulties and produced remarkable...