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James M. Noble, MD, MS Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurology Neurology Clerkship Director
Education:
- BS: Vanderbilt University, Math and Chemistry
- Internship: Columbia Presbyterian Hospital
- Residency: Columbia University Medical Center
- Fellowship: G.H. Sergievsky Center and the Taub Institute, Columbia University Medical Center
- MS: Mailman School of Public Health (Epidemiology), Columbia Universityv
Board Certification: Neurology, American Board of Neurology and Psychiatry Behavioral Neurology and Neuropsychiatry, United Council of Neurologic Subspecialties Public Health, National Board of Public Health Examiners
Office Telephone: 212-939-4238 Memory Disorders Center at Harlem Hospital: 212-939-3021
Insurance: per Harlem Hospital *Please verify insurance participation with the physician's office when making an appointment.

Awards:
2008 Anna C. Gelman Award for Excellence in Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University
Grant Support:
April 2009 - April 2010 Friends of Harlem Hospital Center, support for project: A Renaissance of the Mind: Healing Memories with Art in Central Harlem
July 2008 - June 2010 New Investigator Research Grant from the Alzheimer's Association, project: Arteriosclerosis and Alzheimer disease in a multiethnic cohort of autopsy brains.
» Publications
Jamie Noble completed his undergraduate studies at Vanderbilt University, followed by medical school at Emory University. He then became a medicine intern and later neurology resident and chief resident in Neurology at Columbia University. He then completed a combined fellowship in neuroepidemiology and behavioral neurology at Columbia University. He then became an Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurology at Columbia University, primarily based at Harlem Hospital Center, where he is the director of the memory disorders center satellite of the Columbia University Alzheimer Disease Research Center. In addition to patient care of general neurologic patients as well as those with dementia, his research interests include health literacy, vascular risk factors, and systemic inflammatory markers as contributors to stroke and dementia health disparities.
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© 2004 The Neurological Institute of New York • 710 W 168th St, New York, NY 10032
Department of Neurology | Columbia University Medical Center | Last updated:
August 28, 2009
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