James L. Madara, MDCEO, University of Chicago Medical CenterUniversity Vice President for Medical AffairsDean, Division of the Biological Sciences and the Pritzker School of MedicineSara and Harold Lincoln Thompson Distinguished Service ProfessorOne of the nation's foremost academic pathologists and an authority on epithelial cell biology and on gastrointestinal disease, James L. Madara, MD, was appointed in 2002 as dean of the Division of the Biological Sciences, dean of the Pritzker School of Medicine and vice president for Medical Affairs at the University of Chicago. Following a successful first term, he was reappointed by University of Chicago President Robert F. Zimmer in 2007 for a second five-year term.
In June 2006, in an effort to bring biomedical research, education, and patient care at the University of Chicago and its hospitals even closer together, the boards of trustees at the university and the hospitals agreed to concentrate leadership of the entire biomedical enterprise under a single chief executive and they selected Dr. Madara to be the first chief executive officer of the University of Chicago Medical Center. In that position he oversaw the restructuring of the Medical Center's organization and governance, and led the faculty and staff through the transition. Dr. Madara graduated from Hahnemann Medical College in Philadelphia in 1975, completed residency and research training in pathology at Harvard Medical School and the Harvard-affiliated New England Deaconess and Peter Bent Brigham Hospitals, and joined the faculty at Brigham and Women' Hospital in 1980, serving as director of the Division of Gastrointestinal Pathology. He spent the first 17 years of his faculty career at Harvard's Brigham and Women's Hospital, rising through the ranks to become a professor of pathology in 1993 and director of the Harvard Digestive Diseases Center in 1994. During this time, Dr Madara published more than 200 original papers and chapters making important contributions to understanding the biology of the cells that line the digestive tract. He has explored and clarified how these cells permit the absorption of nutrients while serving as a barrier to intestinal bacteria, and how these cells help regulate the immune response to normal and disease-causing bacteria. This research has been crucial to understanding infectious diseases that affect the intestine, to treating inflammatory disorders such as ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease and to improving drug delivery. In 1997, he left Harvard to become the chairman of the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and the William Patterson Timmie Professor at Emory University Medical School in Atlanta, Ga. He served as chairman of the department until he came to the University of Chicago in 2002. Office Phone(773) 702-3004 Office Fax(773) 702-1897 Office Postal AddressJames L. Madara, MD
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Selected PublicationsView a partial list of Dr. Madara's publications through the National Library of Medicine's PubMed online database. |

