RCMI Coordinating Center (RCMI CC) Header Logo

Derek Wilus

Concepts (74)

Concepts are derived automatically from a person's publications.
The timeline below shows the dates (blue tick marks) of publications associated with Derek Wilus's top concepts. The average publication date for each concept is shown as a red circle, illustrating changes in the primary topics that Derek Wilus has written about over time.
Nutrition Therapy, 1 publications between 2022 and 2022, average publication date December 2022. Fimbriae, Bacterial, 1 publications between 2023 and 2023, average publication date February 2023. Opioid-Related Disorders, 2 publications between 2023 and 2023, average publication date June 2023. Melanoma, 1 publications between 2023 and 2023, average publication date June 2023. SEER Program, 1 publications between 2023 and 2023, average publication date June 2023. Skin Neoplasms, 1 publications between 2023 and 2023, average publication date June 2023. Buprenorphine, 1 publications between 2023 and 2023, average publication date November 2023. Air Pollutants, 1 publications between 2025 and 2025, average publication date January 2025. Environmental Exposure, 1 publications between 2025 and 2025, average publication date January 2025. Particulate Matter, 1 publications between 2025 and 2025, average publication date January 2025. Papillomavirus Vaccines, 1 publications between 2025 and 2025, average publication date March 2025. DNA, Mitochondrial, 1 publications between 2025 and 2025, average publication date July 2025.

To see the data from this visualization as text, click here.
Wilus's Networks
Click the
Explore
buttons for more information and interactive visualizations!
Concepts (74)
Explore
_
Co-Authors (17)
Explore
_
Similar People (60)
Explore
_
Same Department Expand Description
Explore
_
RCMI CC is supported by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institutes of Health (NIH), through Grant Number U24MD015970. The contents of this site are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH

For technical support please contact support