Dr. Neetika Garg | Nephrology Award | Best Researcher Award
Dr. Neetika Garg, University of Wisconsin – Madison, United States
Publication profile
Dr. Neetika Garg completed her M.B.B.S. from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India, in 2008. She pursued her postgraduate training as a Junior Resident in the Clinical Microbiology Division under the mentorship of Dr. A. K. Mukhopadhyaya and Dr. Sarman Singh at the same institution. Subsequently, Dr. Garg moved to Boston University Medical Center, Boston, MA, where she completed her residency in Internal Medicine from 2009 to 2012, guided by Program Director Gopal Yadavalli, MD.
Certifications
Dr. Garg holds certifications from the American Board of Internal Medicine in Internal Medicine (2012) and Nephrology (2014), along with a Hypertension Specialist Certification from the American Society of Hypertension (2014). She is licensed to practice medicine in multiple states, including Massachusetts (2013-2016) and Wisconsin (2016-present), and holds a Federal DEA License for controlled substances.
Honors and Achievements 🏆
Dr. Garg has been recognized for her academic excellence and contributions to healthcare. Awards include the Prof Baldev Singh Memorial Award for Physiology (2003), the Sir Dorabji Tata Prize for Best Undergraduate in Biochemistry (2003), and the Best Quality Improvement Project Award at Boston University Medical Center (2012). Her dedication to teaching was acknowledged with the ‘Certificate of Excellence in Tutoring’ from The Academy at Harvard Medical School (2014), highlighting her commitment to medical education and mentorship.
Publication Top Notes
- A content analysis of smartphone–based applications for hypertension management 📱
- Published: Journal of the American Society of Hypertension, 2015
- Cited by: 244
- Are video sharing web sites a useful source of information on hypertension? 🎥
- Published: Journal of the American Society of Hypertension, 2014
- Cited by: 200
- YouTube as a source of information on dialysis: a content analysis 📹
- Published: Nephrology, 2015
- Cited by: 163
- Optimal management of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia 💉
- Published: Journal of Blood Medicine, 2014
- Cited by: 142
- Greater freedom of speech on Web 2.0 correlates with dominance of views linking vaccines to autism 💬
- Published: Vaccine, 2015
- Cited by: 98
- Subclinical antibody-mediated rejection after kidney transplantation: treatment outcomes 🩸
- Published: Transplantation, 2019
- Cited by: 83
- De novo thrombotic microangiopathy after kidney transplantation 🏥
- Published: Transplantation Reviews, 2018
- Cited by: 80
- Cytomegalovirus mismatch still negatively affects patient and graft survival in the era of routine prophylactic and preemptive therapy: a paired kidney analysis 🦠
- Published: American Journal of Transplantation, 2019
- Cited by: 73
- The emerging role of mobile-health applications in the management of hypertension 📲
- Published: Current cardiology reports, 2018
- Cited by: 58
- Recurrence of IgA nephropathy after kidney transplantation in steroid continuation versus early steroid‐withdrawal regimens: a retrospective analysis of the UNOS/OPTN database 📊
- Published: Transplant International, 2018
- Cited by: 51