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July 24, 2013
How Much Should Patients Know About Their Own Genome?
In April, the American College of Medical Genetics recommended that all labs sequencing the human genome report on medically actionable mutations of 57 genes, whether or not requested by the physician or patient.
In an article cowritten for JAMA, Robert Klitzman, Director of Columbia’s M.S. in Bioethics program, argues that first we must understand how common these genes are in the general population, whether patients and the parents of pediatric patients want such information, and if so, what they will do with it.
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From Silicon Valley Bank to Lehman Brothers, history shows that liquidity crises are often driven less by balance sheet metrics and more by confidence. In Columbia’s M.S. in Enterprise Risk Management program, students learn to assess both the quantitative and behavioral dimensions of liquidity risk.
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M.S. in Applied Analytics Professor Siddhartha Dalal traces his decades-long career in using AI to save lives.
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Accelerating electric vehicle adoption depends on advances in EV technology, public policies, and infrastructure investments.
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