Yale School of Medicine

Internal Medicine

Hematology

Hematology

Hematology, Internal Medicine
333 Cedar Street
WWW-403
P.O. Box 208021
New Haven, CT 06520-8021
Tel: 203.785.4144
Fax: 203.785.7232

About Us

The mission of the Section of Hematology in the Department of Internal Medicine at Yale University School of Medicine is to provide the highest possible level of quality in the clinical care of patients with hematologic disorders, in an academic setting where there is an ongoing basic research program related to these diseases, as well as a teaching program for the training of physicians in the subspecialty of Hematology.

Clinical Care

The Section provides state-of-the-art diagnostic and therapeutic care with an emphasis on molecular explanations and solutions to disease. Clinical disorders of particular interest include: disorders of red blood cell production including hemoglobinopathies, bleeding and clotting disorders, hematologic malignancies such as leukemia, lymphoma and multiple myeloma, myeloproliferative / myelodysplastic syndromes, dysproteinemias, and hematologic disorders associated with various systemic diseases. Comprehensive services available from Laboratory Medicine and Hematopathology complement the clinical service and insure a multidisplinary approach to diagnosis. Faculty members are board certified in Hematology and actively participate in the clinical programs of the Yale Cancer Center. more…

Training

The major goal of the Yale Hematology Fellowship Training Program is to provide combined clinical and research training in order to prepare trainees for careers as physician-scientists in academic medicine. The ACGME-approved program in Hematology is for two years, but trainees are encouraged to stay for at least a third year to pursue and consolidate their research experience. A combined program to satisfy the training requirements for ABIM subspecialty certification in both Hematology and Oncology is also available. more…

Research

The research activities of the Hematology Section include both clinical and laboratory research. Details of research interests of each faculty are noted in their individual pages. Current areas of laboratory research programs include immunobiology of plasma cell diseases (Madhav Dhodapkar), and cellular and molecular biology of blood cell production (Bernard Forget). Areas of clinical research interest include Leukemia (Peter Marks), Mast Cell disease (Thomas Duffy), Myeloma and related plasma cell disorders (Dhodapkar), Coagulopathies and non-malignant hematology (Peter McPhedran), sickle cell disease and palliative care (Lawrence Solomon). Other faculty affiliated with the section (Brian Smith, Harvey Rinder) also carry out basic and clinical research related to hematology. Research programs in hematologic malignancies are in close collaboration with colleagues in Leukemia, Lymphoma and Myeloma program at the Yale Cancer Center. In addition to the individual research programs of primary faculty members of the Hematology Section, collaborative research projects are ongoing with faculty members of several other departments, such as Laboratory Medicine, Pathology, Immunobiology and Genetics, who have common research interests. more…