Dr. Huynh Dinh Chien is a dedicated medical teacher who emphasizes medical care activities for poor communities, especially ethnic minorities in Central Vietnam. After being granted his PhD degree in Immunology in Hungary in 1989, he engaged in research on immunology and poverty reduction, particularly in ethnic minority areas. Building clinical trial areas for new antimalarial drugs is the focus of his ongoing research. Dr. Chien has compiled and published 14 books (3 in English), published more than 40 scientific articles in international journals, participated as a presenter in 13 international conferences, and many domestic workshops and seminars. He was awarded the title Associate Professor in 2002 and Full Professor in 2009. Dr. Chien has been invited to act as a consultant for many international projects at non-governmental organizations as well as at the Ministry of Health. He joined Vinmec Health System in 2017 and was introduced to work at VinUni since 2019.

Recent Submissions

  • Imatinib augments standard malaria combination therapy without added toxicity 

    Chien, Huynh Dinh; Pantaleo, Antonella; Kesely, Kristina R.; Noomuna, Panae; Putt, Karson S.; Tuan, Tran Anh; Low, Philip S.; Turrini, Francesco M. (2021-08-26)
    To egress from its erythrocyte host, the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, must destabilize the erythrocyte membrane by activating an erythrocyte tyrosine kinase. Because imatinib inhibits erythrocyte tyrosine kinases ...
  • Integrated Educational Technology in Teaching Anatomy Using the ASIC Framework: A Case Study from VinUniversity 

    Ha, Thuy Minh; Hoang, Duy; Huynh, Chien Dinh; Le, Linh (2023)
    The curriculum in teaching anatomy is under increasing pressure to transform from traditional to interdisciplinary integration, from cadaver-based to multimodal instruction with a system-based approach. Educational ...
  • Imatinib augments standard malaria combination therapy without added toxicity 

    Huynh, Dinh Chien; Turrini, Francesco; Low, Philip S.; Tran, Anh Tuan; Putt, Karson S.; Noomuna, Panae; Kesely, Kristina R.; Pantaleo, Antonella (2021)
    To exit its erythrocyte host, the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum must destabilize the erythrocyte membrane by activating an erythrocyte tyrosine kinase. Given that imatinib inhibits erythrocyte tyrosine kinases and ...

Vin University Library
Da Ton, Gia Lam
Vinhomes Oceanpark, Ha Noi, Viet Nam
Phone: +84-2471-089-779 | 1800-8189
Contact: library@vinuni.edu.vn