BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Dr. Holcomb graduated
from the University of Alabama in 1963 with a B.S. in Bacteriology,
and in 1966, he earned an M.S. in Bacteriology from the University
of Alabama. Holcomb received his Ph.D. in Pharmacology and an M.D.
from Vanderbilt University in 1972. He then went on to complete
an internship in Pediatrics at the University of Florida and remained
at there for a residency in Pediatrics. In 1975 he completed his
fellowship training in adolescent medicine at the University of
Florida, while he served as Chief Resident and Instructor.
From 1977 – 1979 Holcomb
served as director of the Hamilton Rural Health Education Program
at the University of Alabama. He joined the faculty of the University
College of Community Health Services as assistant clinical professor
of Combined Medicine. In 1980 Holcomb became president of Sumter
Health Systems, Inc. PC, a professional corporation with a contract
to develop a rural medical complex and emergency medical services
in Sumter County, Alabama. He was medical director and owner of
Acute Care Clinic, a free-standing minor emergency room, from 1981
– 1985. Holcomb was in private primary care medical practice from
1985 – 1988, then served a residency in child neurology at Vanderbilt
University School of Medicine from 1989 – 1992.
An entrepreneur, Holcomb
has formed several U.S. companies, invented and developed multiple
patented technologies, and founded a non-profit tax-exempt research
institute for scientific and educational purposes. Holcomb joined
the faculty at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in 1992 as assistant
professor of Neurology and Pediatrics, a position he still holds.
In 1999, he co-founded the Neuromagnetics Institute and was instrumental
in the development for the Center for Pain Research and Neuromagnetics
at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Printer friendly format