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Geoffrey Steven Ginsburg

Adjunct Professor in the Department of Medicine
Medicine, Cardiology
Duke Box 3382, Durham, NC 27710
101 Science Dr, Rm 2111, CIEMAS Bldg, Durham, NC 27708

Overview


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.

Current Appointments & Affiliations


Adjunct Professor in the Department of Medicine · 2022 - Present Medicine, Cardiology, Medicine

In the News


Published March 16, 2021
A Combination of Family History and Genomic Screening Provides Best Method of Assessing Cancer Risk
Published August 25, 2020
Early Detection of COVID-19: How Your Smartwatch Could Help
Published January 9, 2020
A Crystal Ball for the Decade Ahead

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Recent Publications


A Model for Rapid Innovation for Engagement, Enrollment, and Data and Sample Collection in a Diverse Cohort Study: Insights from All of Us Participant Labs

Journal Article Mayo Clinic Proceedings Digital Health · September 1, 2025 Objective: To improve engagement and retention of a cohort that reflects the US population within the All of Us Research Program, we created and implemented an innovation infrastructure and initiatives. Participants and Methods: All of Us participant labor ... Full text Cite

A call to action to scale up research and clinical genomic data sharing.

Journal Article Nat Rev Genet · February 2025 Genomic data from millions of individuals have been generated worldwide to drive discovery and clinical impact in precision medicine. Lowering the barriers to using these data collectively is needed to equitably realize the benefits of the diversity and sc ... Full text Link to item Cite

A Rapid Host Response Blood Test for Bacterial/Viral Infection Discrimination Using a Portable Molecular Diagnostic Platform.

Journal Article Open Forum Infect Dis · January 2025 BACKGROUND: Difficulty discriminating bacterial versus viral etiologies of infection drives unwarranted antibacterial prescriptions and, therefore, antibacterial resistance. METHODS: Utilizing a rapid portable test that measures peripheral blood host gene ... Full text Link to item Cite
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Recent Grants


Hematology & Transfusion Medicine (T32)

Inst. Training Prgm or CMEPreceptor · Awarded by National Institutes of Health · 1975 - 2026

Mapping Epigenetic Memory of Exposure New To Observe (MEMENTO)

ResearchCo Investigator · Awarded by Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency · 2019 - 2024

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Education, Training & Certifications


Boston University · 1984 Ph.D.
Boston University · 1984 M.D.

External Links


Google Scholar