Home About UH Academic Calendar Courses Undergraduate Education Graduate Education Degrees, Minors, & Certificates Colleges, Schools, & Academic Units

Administration


General Information

Advising

Academic Policies

MD Program

Postgraduate Medical Education Programs

Graduate Programs

Special Programs


Anatomy, Biochemistry and Physiology

Cell and Molecular Biology

Communication Sciences and Disorders

Complementary and Alternative Medicine

Family Medicine and Community Health

Geriatric Medicine

Medical Technology

Medicine

Native Hawaiian Health

Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Women's Health

Pathology

Pediatrics

Psychiatry

Public Health Sciences

Surgery

Tropical Medicine, Medical Microbiology and Pharmacology

Pathology

John A. Burns School of Medicine
651 Ilalo Street
Honolulu, HI 96813
Tel: (808) 692-1130

Faculty

M. Carbone, MD, PhD (Chair and Interim Director, University of Hawai'i Cancer Center)—thoracic pathology, molecular pathology
P. K. Bryant-Greenwood, MD, MBA (Vice Chair)—anatomic pathology, molecular pathology
D. Shimizu, MD (Program Director)—surgical pathology, GYN pathology
M. Bankowski, PhD—microbiology
W. Kim, MD—clinical pathology
B. J. Kaya, MD—anatomic pathology and neuropathology
K. S. Thompson, MD, MS—pediatric pathology, surgical pathology, genetics
J. H. Uyehara-Lock, MD—neuropathology

Degree Offered: MD

The Academic Program

Pathology (PATH) is the study of disease. Instruction in pathology is open to undergraduate, graduate, medical students, and residents. All medical students may elect to take PATH 515 as a part of the problem-based learning curriculum. PATH 541 provides essential autopsy experience for all third- and fourth-year medical students, and residents may enroll in one or more of PATH 545 and 699. Instruction in laboratory medicine for the practicing physician, clinical pathology, anatomic pathology, clinical immunology, and molecular diagnostics is offered.

The department directs an integrated residency program in pathology. Residents are based at Kaiser Hospital, Queen's Medical Center, and Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children, and participate in the training of medical students and residents alike. Clinical faculty come from all the community hospitals and provide gross and microscopic specimens for demonstration and clinico-pathologic correlations for medical students and residents. In addition, they participate in seminars and give lectures along with the full- and part-time faculty.

PATH Courses