Adeola Coker (PhD ’98) and Fred Doloresco (MS ’08) are the latest School of Pharmacy alumni chosen for the AACP’s prestigious Academic Leadership Fellowship.
Pharmaceutical Sciences
From Reverse Engineer to Formulation Innovator
Alum Rattavut Teerakapibal (PhD ’18) uses his passion and wealth of technical knowledge for formulation and process development to improve HIV therapies.
Pushing the Boundaries of Biological Mass Spectrometry
For the third year, School of Pharmacy Professor Lingjun Li is named one of the world’s most influential analytical scientists.
Media Gallery: 2021 & 2020 Citations of Merit
After a year of social distancing and virtual events, the University of Wisconsin Madison School of Pharmacy gathered once more the celebrate the recipients of the School’s highest annual honor: the Citation of Merit.
New Technique, Effective in Mice, Could Help Advance the Use of Probiotics
Assistant Professor Quanyin Hu and his CIPT Lab team addresses one of the biggest limitations of treating disease with probiotics By Eric Hamilton This article originally appeared on UW–Madison’s news page. Scientists studying probiotics, beneficial bacteria that show …
School of Pharmacy Announces Master’s Program Scholarships to Address Inequities
New Scholarships Offered for Graduate Students in Applied Drug Development or Psychoactive Pharmaceutical Investigation By Lisa Bauer This article originally appeared on UW–Madison’s news page. Graduate students committed to tackling challenges in growing areas of the pharmaceutical …
A Year of Discovery
In the 2020–21 Fiscal Year, School of Pharmacy researchers received six patents to improve drug delivery and discovery.
School Makes Progress Toward Enhanced Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
Faculty, staff, and students of the School of Pharmacy work together to build an inclusive learning environment.
2021 Citations of Merit Honor Four Alumni Innovators
Equity in Psychedelic Therapies
As psychoactive substances gain therapeutic evidence, Assistant Professor Cody Wenthur aims to reverse underrepresentation of minorities in clinical studies.