Jared Lazarus Photography

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  • Layla Smith, 5, plays with her My Little Pony dolls in her bedroom in Hope Mills, NC. Layla was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Feb. 2015. Now in remission, she is undergoing chemotherapy. People have mistaken Layla for a boy because she's lost her hair as a result of the chemo, but she says this doesn't bother her because she feels pretty.
    010916_smith101.jpg
  • Duke nurse Julie Neboh, DNP student, is the recipient of a School of Nursing annual fund scholarship. Photographed at Duke Clinic.
    054011_neboh002b.jpg
  • Ellahi Meher - Duke University Physician Assistant first-year student, photographed at the Duke PA School.
    portraits022.jpg
  • Ellahi Meher - Duke University Physician Assistant first-year student, photographed at the Duke PA School.
    portraits022.jpg
  • Duke first-year medical students, from left, Taylor Hughes, Kai Seely, Juyoung Kim, and Chelsea Harris learn about the anatomy of the cerebral cortex and the blood vessels that supply blood to the brain during a wet-lab experience with human brain specimens in the Trent Semans Center.
    commeditorial010.jpg
  • Students of the Caribbean Association (SOCA) and classmates celebrate J'ouvert, which kicks off the annual Carnival festivities, at the Baldwin Quad on Duke University's East Campus. Carnival was brought to Trinidad by French settlers in the latter part of the eighteenth century. Originally the celebration was confined to the elite, but it was imitated and adapted by their slaves and, after the abolition of slavery in 1834, the practice spread into the free population.
    commeditorial007.jpg
  • Margaret Bowers, center, faculty coordinator for adult nurse practitioner program in the Duke University School of Nursing, Karol Harshaw-Ellis, right, a geriatric nurse practitioner and clinical nurse specialist at the Duke Heart Center, and Zubin Eapen, MD, left, the clinic’s medical director, launched a new same-day access clinic for congestive heart failure patients. These three met with representatives from the emergency department, inpatient services, ambulatory care services, and the infusion clinic before fashioning the program’s design – offering same-day appointments to newly-discharged CHF patients who experience a recurrence of symptoms, particularly edema and shortness-of-breath.
    commeditorial008.jpg
  • Duke first-year students work on team projects together with oversight and guidance from faculty during a new Engineering Design Pod class. The program is part of a new initiative designed to give all engineering students project- and problem-based experiences right from the start. Some of the projects include a prosthetic arm for nursing students learning to put in IV lines, an automated feeder for the Duke Lemur Center, and a drone that collects water samples for the Duke Marine Lab.
    commeditorial006.jpg
  • Duke students enjoy a warm and sunny February afternoon studying and socializing on the Bryan Center Plaza. From left are Isabella Jimenez, sophomore, Sydney Morrow, sophomore, and Kianna Lawrence, junior.
    007019_plaza017.jpg
  • Duke first-year medical students, from left, Taylor Hughes, Kai Seely, Juyoung Kim, and Chelsea Harris learn about the anatomy of the cerebral cortex and the blood vessels that supply blood to the brain during a wet-lab experience with human brain specimens in the Trent Semans Center.
    001918_brainlab008.JPG
  • Margaret Bowers, center, faculty coordinator for adult nurse practitioner program in the Duke University School of Nursing, Karol Harshaw-Ellis, right, a geriatric nurse practitioner and clinical nurse specialist at the Duke Heart Center, and Zubin Eapen, MD, left, the clinic’s medical director, launched a new same-day access clinic for congestive heart failure patients. These three met with representatives from the emergency department, inpatient services, ambulatory care services, and the infusion clinic before fashioning the program’s design – offering same-day appointments to newly-discharged CHF patients who experience a recurrence of symptoms, particularly edema and shortness-of-breath.
    2014_portfolio007 copy.jpg
  • Students of the Caribbean Association (SOCA) and classmates celebrate J'ouvert, which kicks off the annual Carnival festivities, at the Baldwin Quad on Duke University's East Campus. Carnival was brought to Trinidad by French settlers in the latter part of the eighteenth century. Originally the celebration was confined to the elite, but it was imitated and adapted by their slaves and, after the abolition of slavery in 1834, the practice spread into the free population.
    2017slideshow017.jpg
  • Duke first-year students work on team projects together with oversight and guidance from faculty during a new Engineering Design Pod class. The program is part of a new initiative designed to give all engineering students project- and problem-based experiences right from the start. Some of the projects include a prosthetic arm for nursing students learning to put in IV lines, an automated feeder for the Duke Lemur Center, and a drone that collects water samples for the Duke Marine Lab.
    149817_edpod007.JPG
  • Duke students enjoy a warm and sunny February afternoon studying and socializing on the Bryan Center Plaza. From left are Isabella Jimenez, sophomore, Sydney Morrow, sophomore, and Kianna Lawrence, junior.
    007019_plaza017.jpg
  • Layla Smith, 5, plays with her My Little Pony dolls in her bedroom in Hope Mills, NC. Layla was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Feb. 2015. Now in remission, she is undergoing chemotherapy. People have mistaken Layla for a boy because she's lost her hair as a result of the chemo, but she says this doesn't bother her because she feels pretty.
    portraits001.jpg
  • Layla Smith, 5, plays with her My Little Pony dolls in her bedroom in Hope Mills, NC. Layla was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Feb. 2015. Now in remission, she is undergoing chemotherapy. People have mistaken Layla for a boy because she's lost her hair as a result of the chemo, but she says this doesn't bother her because she feels pretty.
    portraits001.jpg
  • Duke students enjoy a warm and sunny February afternoon studying and socializing on the Bryan Center Plaza. From left are Isabella Jimenez, sophomore, Sydney Morrow, sophomore, and Kianna Lawrence, junior.
    commeditorial015.jpg
  • Duke first-year students work on team projects together with oversight and guidance from faculty during a new Engineering Design Pod class. The program is part of a new initiative designed to give all engineering students project- and problem-based experiences right from the start. Some of the projects include a prosthetic arm for nursing students learning to put in IV lines, an automated feeder for the Duke Lemur Center, and a drone that collects water samples for the Duke Marine Lab.
    149817_edpod007.JPG
  • Students of the Caribbean Association (SOCA) and classmates celebrate J'ouvert, which kicks off the annual Carnival festivities, at the Baldwin Quad on Duke University's East Campus. Carnival was brought to Trinidad by French settlers in the latter part of the eighteenth century. Originally the celebration was confined to the elite, but it was imitated and adapted by their slaves and, after the abolition of slavery in 1834, the practice spread into the free population.
    2017slideshow017.jpg
  • Margaret Bowers, center, faculty coordinator for adult nurse practitioner program in the Duke University School of Nursing, Karol Harshaw-Ellis, right, a geriatric nurse practitioner and clinical nurse specialist at the Duke Heart Center, and Zubin Eapen, MD, left, the clinic’s medical director, launched a new same-day access clinic for congestive heart failure patients. These three met with representatives from the emergency department, inpatient services, ambulatory care services, and the infusion clinic before fashioning the program’s design – offering same-day appointments to newly-discharged CHF patients who experience a recurrence of symptoms, particularly edema and shortness-of-breath.
    2014_portfolio007 copy.jpg
  • Duke first-year medical students, from left, Taylor Hughes, Kai Seely, Juyoung Kim, and Chelsea Harris learn about the anatomy of the cerebral cortex and the blood vessels that supply blood to the brain during a wet-lab experience with human brain specimens in the Trent Semans Center.
    001918_brainlab008.JPG
  • Ellahi Meher - Duke University Physician Assistant first-year student, photographed at the Duke PA School.
    139416a_meher011t.jpg
  • Layla Smith, 5, plays with her My Little Pony dolls in her bedroom in Hope Mills, NC. Layla was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Feb. 2015. Now in remission, she is undergoing chemotherapy. People have mistaken Layla for a boy because she's lost her hair as a result of the chemo, but she says this doesn't bother her because she feels pretty.
    010916_smith101.jpg
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