Yi M Feng, MD

Medical School:
Huabei Medical College, University of North Dakota
Ph.D. Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of North Dakota

Graduate School:
M.S. Department of Physiology, University of North Dakota

Internship:
University of Louisville

Residency:
University of Louisville

Fellowship:
University of Louisville

Board Certified:
Internal Medicine and Medical Oncology

Professional Affiliations:
American Society of Hematology
American Society of Clinical Oncology

Honors:
North Dakota State Board of Higher Education Scholarship for the 1989-1990 UND Summer session
UND Graduate School Travel grand for FASEB Meeting in Atlanta, GA. 1991
Second place winner in Roger Denison graduate student competition at the 1993 annual meeting of the North Dakota Academy of Science
The outstanding graduate student in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, UND, 1993.
Who’s Who among student in American universities and colleges, 1994.
Graduate School Summer Doctoral Fellowship, UND, 1994.
ASPET Student Travel Award for the XIIth International Congress of Pharmacology in Montreal, Canada, 1994.
First Prize for best poster presentation in the clinical science category at the Fifteenth Annual Frank Low research Day, Grand Forks, ND, 1995.
Histopathobiology of Neoplasia workship ( The Edward A. Smuckler Memorial Workshop). Sponsored by American Association for Cancer Research and supported by a grant from the National Cancer Institute at Keystone, Colorado, July 21-28, 1996.
Research grant from the University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Science. “Aromatic Amine Carcinogen-Induced DNA Repair in Rapid and Slow Acetylator Congenic Hamsters”. March 1996-Oct 1996 ($4,500). Co-investigator. (Principal Investigator: William K. Becker, MD)
Research grant from United Health Foundation, Grand Forks, North Dakota . “Genetic Risk Factors in Cancer: N-Acetyltransfesase”. February 1997-December 1997 ($10,000). Co-investigator. (Principle investigator: William K. Becker, MD)
Research grant from the University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences. “The Effect of Selenium on the Aberrant Crypt Formation in Rats”. March 1997-Octorber 1997 ($5,000). Principle Investigator.

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