Internist and radiologist Gul Moonis, MD, has provided her medical expertise in a variety of capacities, most recently with the Department of Radiology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Dr. Gul Moonis also has fulfilled several positions at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (Penn Medicine), including serving as an instructor in neuroradiology and assistant professor in radiology, as well as course director for Neuroradiology Departmental Fellowship.
Spanning the course of five full business days, the Neuroradiology Departmental Fellowship is offered to seven individuals each year. To qualify for the fellowship, each applicant must have completed residency programs in radiology and be board certified or eligible for board certification. As an intensive training program, the fellowship provides the opportunity for participants to study crucial neuroradiology aspects, including angiography, head and neck radiology, resonance imagery, and image-guided diagnostic and interventional procedures. Fellows are also exposed to the use of MRIs and several types of equipment, such as multidetector CT scanners and state-of-the-art three-dimensional laboratories, routinely used within the field of radiology.
A rigorous and multidisciplinary program ensures that fellows are exposed to clinical and academic activities in neuroradiology and how they relate to head and neck surgery, neuropathology and neurosurgery departments at Penn Medicine. Additionally, fellows have the opportunity to attend interdisciplinary conferences, as well as participate in funded research projects with the neuroradiology staff.
To apply for the fellowship, each prospective fellow must provide three letters of recommendation, a personal statement, a letter from his or her medical school dean, and medical school transcripts, in addition to several other documents.
Spanning the course of five full business days, the Neuroradiology Departmental Fellowship is offered to seven individuals each year. To qualify for the fellowship, each applicant must have completed residency programs in radiology and be board certified or eligible for board certification. As an intensive training program, the fellowship provides the opportunity for participants to study crucial neuroradiology aspects, including angiography, head and neck radiology, resonance imagery, and image-guided diagnostic and interventional procedures. Fellows are also exposed to the use of MRIs and several types of equipment, such as multidetector CT scanners and state-of-the-art three-dimensional laboratories, routinely used within the field of radiology.
A rigorous and multidisciplinary program ensures that fellows are exposed to clinical and academic activities in neuroradiology and how they relate to head and neck surgery, neuropathology and neurosurgery departments at Penn Medicine. Additionally, fellows have the opportunity to attend interdisciplinary conferences, as well as participate in funded research projects with the neuroradiology staff.
To apply for the fellowship, each prospective fellow must provide three letters of recommendation, a personal statement, a letter from his or her medical school dean, and medical school transcripts, in addition to several other documents.