On March 27, the symposium will include lectures about oncology and translational medicine, as well as a panel discussion on workforce development, microscopy, cell signaling, kidney and pathogens. UMaine students and others will present posters highlighting their undergraduate and graduate research in biomedical sciences.
Sessions for March 28 will include clinical research, rural/public health, artificial intelligence applications in medicine, engineering approaches, cellular mechanisms with disease states and age-related disease states. The Maine Rural Graduate Medical Education (MERGE) Collaborative’s first Rural GME Conference will also take place on March 28, and explore various topics to support physicians, interprofessional educators and clinicians, administrators and others from across the state who are interested in improving, supporting and utilizing graduate medical education.