Skip to Main

Internal Medicine

The Department of Internal Medicine is organized into 14 divisions that provide the excellent education, research, and patient care for which the department is renowned.

Our Mission

  • To educate medical students, residents, and postdoctoral fellows in accordance with the highest professional standards 
  • To prepare clinicians to practice patient-centered, high-value, cost-conscious medicine of the highest standard
  • To answer fundamental questions in the mechanisms, prevention and treatment of disease, in the basic sciences, and in health care delivery

As of 2025, the department had 1,076 faculty members: 801 with primary appointments, 110 more from other departments who held secondary appointments, and 165 with adjunct appointments. The primary and secondary faculty includes:

Nobel Prize icon

3

Nobel Prize winners

National Academy of Sciences icon

8

Members of the National Academy of Sciences

National Academy of Medicine icon

9

Members of the National Academy of Medicine

American Academy of Arts and Science icon

4

Members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences

American Society for Clinical Investigation icon

39

Members of the American Society for Clinical Investigation

Association of American Physicians icon

28

Members of the Association of American Physicians

These exceptional faculty lead UT Southwestern Medical Center's Internal Medicine programs to produce graduates who balance the core responsibilities of medicine: selfless dedication, competence, and compassion. As with the rest of UT Southwestern, Internal Medicine is pursuing the future of medicine, today.

Spotlight on Internal Medicine Grand Rounds

Join us in welcoming Dr. Kathryn Moore from New York University for Internal Medicine Grand Rounds on Friday, Nov. 21, at 8 a.m. in D1.502 as she presents, "Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer: A Dangerous Liaison."

Dr. Moore is internationally recognized for her research on the molecular pathogenesis of cardiometabolic diseases, and the roles that non-coding RNAs and dysregulated immune responses play in those settings. By forging new links between lipids, metabolism and innate immunity, her discoveries have revealed fundamental insights into pathways that regulate cholesterol homeostasis and vascular inflammation. In 2019, she established the Cardiovascular Research Center, which fosters cross-disciplinary research in basic, translational and clinical cardiovascular sciences.

 
 

Internal Medicine Events