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Organized labor is having a moment. Medicine has not been immune. In recent months, 75,000 Kaiser healthcare workers went on strike, and that was just one of 26 healthcare worker strikes in 2023. One of the biggest changes for medicine, though, is a significant uptick in the unionization of trainees. As of December 202... |
Because in my opinion, having a seat at the table is important, but really having what I need to be the best physician I can be, to deliver the best care possible to my patients, to learn what I need to learn in order to operate safely and well, that's what I really care about, not necessarily for a limited short perio... |
And so we want to be able to do that through unionization. And so I don't think unionization was the first lever, but rather the ultimate lever that was pulled to try to affect these types of changes. And so how did you respond to them when they came to you saying that we are organizing to vote to unionize? I think to ... |
And one of those things I did mention was that there would be limitations on those things. And so if we were to simply divide the world of programs into the haves and the have-nots, the Department of Medicine and MGH was clearly one of the ones that had. And I worried that in this effort to kind of make everything the... |
I'm very pleased to be joined by Vikram Patel, one of the lead authors on the China-India Mental Health Alliance series. Hello, Vikram. Hi, Niall. So, the first question I have is, why this series and why now? Well, India and China together represent more than a third of the world's population, and I think both countri... |
Now, clearly, of course, within the countries, there's huge amounts of diversity. But I think the other thing for maybe readers in Britain, other European countries in the US to get their heads around, is that the sort of pattern of suicide, the demographics, they seem to be very different in China and in India. If you... |
But it's scary thinking of how much social resources are going to have to be committed to deal with this tidal wave of dementia that's sort of hitting us already. So without wanting to make you lose any more sleep, I wonder if we could conclude by talking about where you'd like to see mental health care in China in th... |
Welcome to the New England Journal of Medicine summary for the week of December 5, 2013. I'm Dr. Lisa Johnson. This week, we feature articles on APOL1 risk variants, race, and chronic kidney disease, targeted temperature management for cardiac arrest, bivalorudin during transport for primary PCI, and fertility treatmen... |
As we celebrate the fact that the annual number of deaths among children younger than five years of age has fallen to 6.6 million, which is a 48% reduction from the 12.6 million deaths in 1990, despite an increased number of births in many high-burden countries during the same period, the sobering realization is that ... |
Hello and welcome to the podcast for the September 2009 issue of The Lancet Oncology. Richard Lane here and I'm joined this month by TLO's editor David Collingridge to discuss some of the issue highlights. David, let's start with a study actually looking at two trials concerning the treatment of prostate cancer. Just b... |
The article covers the contrasting reports on red wine and alcohol consumption, consumption of various food types, and lifestyle choices. And finally, the piece champions the use of meta-analyses and systematic reviews, with the inference that these types of reports are perhaps a much better source of reliable informa... |
Hey folks, just a quick reminder that this episode is not meant to be used for medical advice, just good old-fashioned education. All patient information has been modified to protect their identity and the views expressed in our podcast do not necessarily reflect the opinion of our employers. Welcome back Clinical Prob... |
I like Dan Minter even more now than I thought I could. Well, there's a lot of biliary pathogens, you know, those flukes and whatnot. Oh, this is bringing me a huge smile. Let me give you the next aliquot of the case. So the patient's past medical history included hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and a recent diagnosis of... |
And in terms of the lumen, you know, we can think about stone, sludge, biliary cast, and I have to say parasites because of that. What can happen within the walls? And the wall pathology usually leads to strictures, cancers in the form of cholangiocarcinoma, trauma, ischemic injury, and autoimmune diseases such as prim... |
And the fact that these lesions were cavitating also, I learned, was atypical of a pancreatic adenocarcinoma. And so there was some diagnostic uncertainty over whether if we found what was the underlying etiology of the extrahepatic balearial obstruction, whether or not it would definitively explain the pulmonary nodu... |
Welcome to the New England Journal of Medicine summary for the week of February 28, 2013. I'm Dr. Michael Bierer. This week's issue features articles on high-frequency oscillation for ARDS, on dancitron and risk of adverse fetal outcomes, and an artificial pancreas versus sensor-augmented pump, review articles on idiop... |
For the sake of inquiry and knowledge, the inevitability of open access, a perspective article by Anne Walpert from MIT Libraries, Cambridge, Massachusetts. It's difficult to have a measured conversation about open access, Thank you. will undermine the viability of scholarly journal publishing disagree sharply with th... |
Hey folks, just a quick reminder that this episode is not meant to be used for medical advice, just good old-fashioned education. All patient information has been modified to protect their identity and the views expressed in our podcast do not necessarily reflect the opinion of our employers. Welcome back, family. It i... |
So we would like to suggest to you, our listener, that in the setting of meeting a patient, it's not, or really anyone, it's not really the way to start building trust with them by assuming their gender and their pronouns. You don't want to start by that. And so we suggest you offer your pronouns. That way, the person... |
Welcome to the New England Journal of Medicine audio summary for the week of February 24, 2011. I'm Dr. Lisa Johnson. This week's issue features articles on environmental microorganisms and childhood asthma, heterogeneity of hemoglobin H disease, BMI and risk of death in Asians, perilipin deficiency and lipodystrophy, ... |
There are many causes of septic shock that are consistent with his presentation, so the physicians needed a way to limit and focus their differential diagnosis. The immune status of the patient is an important consideration. No overt immunosuppression is evident, but his advanced age confers a relatively immunosuppres... |
Welcome to Intention to Treat from the New England Journal of Medicine. I'm Rachel Gottbaum. For decades, scientists have tried to find effective ways to treat Alzheimer's disease, with very little success. But that could be changing. New medications may help slow the progression of the disease, and new diagnostic tool... |
So what does moving the curve actually mean for patients? What it means for the patient, if we interpret the data literally, it means that they deviated from the control curve according to some neuropsychological tests. And what is hotly debated, do those changes in the neuropsychological parameters, are they discernib... |
Because the more amyloid you have, the much more likely that you have some tau. And again, these blood tests can tell us whether the amyloid's bothering the tau. So I envision that eventually we will be at a point where we will offer this as a blood test to everybody who's entering the age of risk in the same way we m... |
This is the New England Journal of Medicine audio summary. The full text of all articles is available to personal subscribers on our website. We offer discounts on personal subscriptions to residents and students. Go to NEJM.org and click on subscribe. Welcome to the New England Journal of Medicine audio summary for th... |
A 35-year-old pregnant woman was admitted to the hospital at 19 weeks and 6 days of gestation because of the recent onset of hypertension and diabetes. She had recently had polyuria and polydipsia and increased facial puffiness. During her first pregnancy, she had had gestational diabetes. On physical examination, the... |
Welcome to the latest episode of the In Conversation with E-Clinical Medicine podcast. My name is Ari, I am Deputy Editor at E-Clinical Medicine. Each month we will be interviewing the author of a paper published in our journal, giving them an opportunity to provide a deeper discussion of the research. I'm here today... |
Welcome, my name is Devine. This is episode 494 of the Devine Intervention Podcast. In today's podcast, we're going to be examining thalassemia. It's a high-yield topic, frequently tested on all the USMLEs, so I just want to make sure that you kind of have it down. So, typically, let's start off with a question. So, wh... |
Now, since you have four genes, you can already begin to see that, oh, there's more disease permutations. Now, what are the disease permutations to know? Well, number one is, let's say you lose one alpha, let's say you lose one alpha globin chain. If you lose one alpha globin chain, it's not a big deal. You're going to... |
So some of you may wonder, Divine, what are some of the symptoms a person may see when they have these thalassemias? They can actually see a bunch of symptoms, right? So one, you may notice that they have these chipmunk faces. You may wonder, Divine, what's the mechanism there? They may have chipmunk faces. They may ha... |
So think about it this way. If your attention is divided, then things you're supposed to give very good responsibility to, time and attention to, you don't. So one of the things the liver does not give as much time and attention to when it's so preoccupied with making red cells in extramedullary hematopoiesis is album... |
Hello there and welcome to the May edition of the Lancet HIV podcast. I'm the journal's editor, Peter Hayward. This month, I'm delighted to be joined by Adam Castillejo, who is at the centre of an article published recently online and included in the May issue of the Lancet HIV. Adam, also known as the London patient, ... |
Yeah. Back when I was my diagnosis. I was, it was touch and go, if we can say. I felt like I was going to die. But then once you began treatment for the Hodgkin's lymphoma, you suggested it before that perhaps the experience with HIV had given you some sort of resilience and ability to sort of cope with the treatment. ... |
It's not to be privileged. It's a privilege to be in this position right now. But at that time, I was in the right place at the right time. So it's important for that. So throughout, and going back to one of your questions about the process, after the transplant, we were in a constant monitor to this day, and a continu... |
And for him, I think that was very special. That bond, that instant bond we have. Yeah, to go from being the only person in the world to then having someone who's shared that experience must be, you know. Yeah, and that's a very special and unique bone we have. Yeah. And we value and share that. And we continue talkin... |
From the JAMA Network, this is Conversations with Dr. Bauchner, interviews featuring researchers and thinkers in healthcare about their publications in the latest issue of JAMA. Hello and welcome to Conversations with Dr. Bauchner. Once again, it is Howard Bauchner, Editor-in-Chief of JAMA. Last Monday, JAMA published ... |
And then when you add to that to all the police violence against these communities that has happened during this time as well, which has had a profound effect on the mental health of African Americans. Lots of data now showing that violence against unarmed people of color actually leads to four and a half extra mental ... |
The estimates from the Congressional Budget Office are that for the next decade, we will not reach the level of economic output that we would have absent COVID-19. So that's a very big period of time. It will depend a lot on actions that we take both as a society and as a government. So if we do nothing now, nothing to... |
I'm not an MD, but it's a little bit like at some times you have to treat the patient with something that's too much for the long term because you have to get them over the short term health impairment. Lisa, I want to give you the final word. It's been a painful search for equity in the United States in health care a... |
Welcome to Intention to Treat from the New England Journal of Medicine. I'm Rachel Gottbaum. Today, part two of our examination of the journal's racist history and what we can learn now. There are still such deep legacies from the past in our present practices. And it's the past that's Historical Injustice series. And ... |
So let's go forth and fix this. That is a much more valuable approach to take. Where if you say, as had been said by this point for 180 years, well, of course, there's more tuberculosis in Black people. That's what we've always seen. There's nothing to be done about that. That really takes the doctors, the nursing hom... |
Hello out there. This is Dr. Kathy DeAngelis, the Editor-in-Chief of JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association. And this week I will tell you about the December 19, 2007 issue of JAMA. And as always, I'll begin with the art cover. And the art on the cover this week is one of my very favorites. It's a pain... |
From the JAMA Network, this is JAMA Cardiology Author Interviews, conversations with authors exploring the latest clinical research, reviews, and opinion featured in JAMA Cardiology. Welcome to this podcast from JAMA Cardiology. This is Dr. Robert Bono, Editor-in-Chief of JAMA Cardiology, and we're going to have a very... |
It was about 1.8 mg per liter, both arms, which is sort of in their intermediate range. So that may be one of the explanations why there wasn't a large decrease in HSCRP. I think one of the other interesting things with the biomarkers is that, in fact, the immune biomarkers, we did not see a significant decrease with t... |
Will recommendations extend to statins beyond pitavastatin? And I think the answer is likely yes. Pitavastatin is more of a kind of moderate intensity statin. And I think having more flexibility to do higher intensity when needed is going to be important. And there have been a lot of studies now on statins with respec... |
Welcome to this JAMA Network author interview. I'm Dr. John Iannion, the Director for the Institute of Healthcare Policy and Innovation at the University of Michigan, and the Editor of JAMA Health Forum. And I'm Dr. Melinda Bunton, Chair of the Department of Health Policy at Vanderbilt University and the Deputy Editor ... |
But I think that there's a lot of lessons learned from what we found in our qualitative interviews with the staff. And I'd say that good implementation of these programs requires that there is adequate funding for administration of the program. Early on, that was a large problem, that it was expected that this program... |
Hello out there. This is Dr. Kathy DeAngelis, Theatritor-in-Chief of JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association, and this week I'm going to tell you about the October 27, 2010 issue. As usual, I will start with the art on the cover, which this week features a painting by Roberto Antonio Sebastian Mata Anch... |
Welcome to the New England Journal of Medicine summary for the week of July 12, 2012. I'm Dr. Lisa Johnson. This week's issue features articles on MEK inhibition in BRAF-mutated melanoma, potassium channel as a target of immune response in MS, hydroxyethyl starch or ringer's acetate in severe sepsis, blockade of lympho... |
It's highly unusual for air in the mediastinum to be incidentally detected in a young man during evaluation for weakness, myalgias, weight loss, and loss of libido. Obesity and Pharmacologic Control of the Body Clock A Clinical Implications of Basic Research article by Stephen Shea from Oregon Health and Science Univer... |
This concludes the summary of the July 12 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. We're interested in your feedback about our audio summaries. Any comments or suggestions may be sent to audio at NEJM.org. Thank you for listening. |
Hello, this is Aaron Van Dorn from the Lentz New York office. Today I'm speaking with Dr. Rodrigo Hasbun from the University of Texas Science Center in Houston, where we discuss research into bacterial meningitis in the United States. Dr. Hasbun, how did you gather the data for your study of the epidemiology of bacte... |
Hello, welcome to a podcast for The Lancet Oncology, which forms part of our March 2019 issue. I'm Gavin Cleaver, and I'm delighted to be joined on the phone today by Bianca Herben to talk about her recent work with the SIOP Radiotherapy Working Group. Dr. Herben, thank you so much for your time today. No thanks at all... |
So potential designs for such future studies could focus on several aspects of vertebral growth development. You could use a retrospective multicenter setting to gather big data from patients who were irradiated on the spinal axis and who have received high-quality imaging during their follow-up. And you could analyze... |
I'm Stephen Morrissey, managing editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, and I'm talking with Arthur Kellerman, a policy analyst at RAND and an emergency medicine physician. Dr. Kellerman has co-authored a perspective article on lessons from the Boston response to the Marathon bombing. Dr. Kellerman, in your arti... |
It's certainly helpful. Veterans typically respond better than rookies in any situation because they've worked under stress before. They have some background or perspective on the event. But I think perhaps more helpful over time, probably in Boston and certainly in the country, is the collective sharing of experience ... |
It's your neighbor or you who will be the first responder. And so basic first aid skills, basic knowledge of what to do, I think should be an important part of citizenship in this country for all of us. And I think that the citizens of the race, the people who came back, stopped running, turned around, and returned to... |
This debate is not about health versus wealth. It's not an either-or. It's not mutually exclusive. What we're trying to argue is that they are intertwined and that wealth cannot be pursued as an end in itself, which I think we have seen to date. But rather the question facing us is wealth for what purpose? And we hold ... |
Why shouldn't issues around trips, trade issues, liberalisation, globalisation more generally be part of an MBBS undergraduate programme? So we could take it through all levels to make sure that we generate enthusiasm and understanding and interest and ability for the health profession to get their voice heard more cle... |
I think the overall messages are that the health profession needs to become involved and engaged in this. National health is not national health anymore, it's international health. Whether you're on the developing country end or the developed country end, it's international health. And you need to be aware of the inte... |
Hey everyone, I hope that you are staying safe in the midst of pandemic world. I wanted to let you know that tonight we will be doing another live show on Twitter, a curbside quiz show with Hannah R. Abrams as host and me facing off against Chris the Chew Man Chew in a Curbsiders trivia. We hope that you'll join us ton... |
And you make sure, like, did I hit my learning objectives in the talk? You plan those ahead of time. Otherwise, you might get lucky, but probably you won't. Probably not. Yeah. So our mission statement is supercharge your learning and enhance your practice with this internal medicine podcast featuring board certified i... |
And that one runs you about $330, but definitely that I would recommend that option if you're going to be doing any in-person recording. And I actually use it even recording right now. Um, I use it to record a backup of this conversation that Paul and I are having. Um, Paul, do you have any, I know you use one of the o... |
Like you probably don't want to have like three underscores in your website name. So you purchase a domain name and then I'm not really going to go into this on this podcast because this is not how to create a website. But there are websites that some that require coding like WordPress and some that don't like Squaresp... |
And when you open QuickTime, you just click File, New Recording, and hit the Record button. And with Voice Recorder, you just search for it in Windows and open it and click Record. Because no one's ever actually used it before, and no one knows where it is on their computer. So invariably, you have to search for it fi... |
Hello and welcome to the Annals of Internal Medicine August 21st, 2018 podcast. I'm Dr. Christine Lane, Annals Editor-in-Chief, with highlights of what's new in Annals since our last highlights podcast. Let's begin with articles published online first on August 14th. All women should be screened annually for urinary in... |
Next is a research and reporting methods article that evaluates the association of publication status and language with treatment effects using a meta-epidemiological approach. The authors examined Cochrane reviews published between March 2011 and January 2017 with a meta-analysis of a binary outcome including three o... |
Hello and welcome back to Sharp Scratch. You're listening to episode 102, The Social Life of Medics. This is a podcast brought to you by the BMJ, where medical students, junior doctors and expert guests come together and discuss all the things you need to know to be a good doctor, but that you might not get taught at m... |
At the time I was open to it, but I think now I don't know if it was my sort of thing just because it was I don't know a bit sketchy like if you saw the venue it was a bit weird um for me that we had like we planned a barbecue for freshers um for the freshers coming in um and I think it was like end of August or someti... |
In second year, when I was a bit more kind of sure of myself and sure of what I wanted to get involved in I was on the like college welfare team and there were three of us who like supported the kind of students throughout the whole of the college and it was really really hard, it was absolutely exhausting, I failed my... |
So when I was working as VP for the ACS um I would try a lot to plan things around when I knew I would have a formative um or summative exam um and this would just be like a matter of like looking at the dates and knowing that okay maybe this week I'm not going to be doing as many meetings or this week we're not going ... |
I'm Stephen Morrissey, Managing Editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, and I'm talking with Margaret Somerville and Nicola Biller-Andorno about their clinical decisions article on physician-assisted suicide. Dr. Somerville is an ethicist at McGill University in Montreal, and Dr. Biller-Andorno is an ethicist at... |
And that's what we're thinking of doing. Dr. Biller-Andorno, to return to the point that Dr. Samuel raised about possible abuses, which is a concern that opponents of physician-assisted suicide have often raised. If patients do choose to end their lives for the wrong reasons, financial considerations, being a burden to... |
And I think what it wants to achieve is a peaceful death, a death that the individual can actually readily accept. And I think we can provide sufficient safeguard to maintain that as a practice that actually is quite in accord with our legal frameworks. And finally, I also think we shouldn't think of physician-assiste... |
🎵 Welcome back to the Curbsiders. This is the internal medicine podcast that uses expert interviews to bring you clinical pearls and practice changing knowledge. This is Paul Williams here by myself, plus or minus a couple of cats. I'm here to introduce an episode about primary care of the refugee patient. This is an ... |
But I would highly recommend the Discworld series and the City Watch or Night's Watch series, which Snuff is part of. But I build Legos with my kids every day. We have so many Legos. That's like a main activity in my house. So I will choose Legos. Excellent. I just want to point out that the whole reason I picked it ou... |
And then you can consider a CBC, a BMP with glucose to look for chronic illness or diseases, and then updating their vaccinations as well. So that's the major coverage at the initial exam. And so this is, just so I'm understanding, this is the initial domestic exam before they're still seen in your primary care office.... |
The UNHCR has a lot of information about refugee camps and their challenges in those camps and the health challenges that they face as well. So I think just knowing who you're getting to know is important. And then I guess the next part of it is taking a migration history. So I think this is the key component of your s... |
And then over time and over building a relationship, you work with the patient to explore their prior stressors and trauma and their current stressors and to see if we can make that connection. But I think the most therapeutic thing is validating and building that relationship. Are you using any specific screening tool... |
We do it with all our patients. You will get buy-in. And I think over time you will be able to establish that individual relationship with your patient, and I think that's important to talk to the patient directly without family members being there. Any other questions? Are there any other resources that you use to pr... |
Welcome, my name is Devine. This is episode 468 of the Devine Intervention Podcast. In today's podcast, I'm going to be continuing the rapid review series for the USMLE Step 2 CK and Step 3 exams. This is going to be series 98. So let's go ahead and jump right into it. So what if they give you a question about a patien... |
If you see, and you know, they will say like in the question that, oh, at a doctor's visit like a month ago, there was no murmur heard in this child's chest, right? And then you may see, they may give you a picture of like the tongue in this child or whatever. When you put all these things together, what are you thinki... |
And over time, that can present as mitral regurg. Okay, mitral regurg can be a presentation of dilated cardiomyopathy on exams. And again, remember our friends at the USMLEs, they can give dilated cardiomyopathy many different names. They can call it eccentric hypertrophy on exams. They can call it chronic volume overl... |
It's an irreversible inhibitor of COX-1 and COX-2. Well, guess what? If you shut down COX-1 and COX-2, then arachidonic acid needs to be useful in life. So how is it going to get useful? It's going to get useful by getting shunted down the lipo-oxygenase pathway into making leukotrienes. Well, leukotrienes, they can c... |
I'm Jan Engmeyer with JAMA Evidence. Today we'll hear from Dr. Richard Bedlak about carpal tunnel syndrome, a topic discussed in Chapter 10 of the Rational Clinical Examination. Welcome to the podcast, Dr. Bedlak, and please introduce yourself to our listeners. Well, thanks for having me, Jan. My name is Dr. Richard ... |
From the JAMA Network, this is the JAMA Medical News Podcast, discussing timely topics in clinical medicine, biomedical sciences, public health, and health policy, featured in the Medical News section of JAMA. How can machine learning reduce diagnostic errors and amplify the reach of precision medicine? Is it possible ... |
I think that that's a really important goal. We keep our use cases in mind, our patients in mind. And it's one thing to be at the bleeding edge of the AI development. And in order to get these solutions to work for a task as challenging as fetal diagnostic ultrasound, we absolutely have to do those things. But we also... |
Hey everybody, welcome back to another episode of the USMLE Guys podcast. My name is Dr. Paul. Today we're doing another high-yield USMLE Step 1 drill session. If you're enjoying the drill sessions and you'd like to learn more about how you can work with us to pass your USMLE Step 1 exam, don't forget to visit our webs... |
Diphenhydramine. Name three classes or specific drugs that can cause SIADH. Carbamazepine, cyclophosphamide, and SSRIs. Halothane, amanita phylloides, valproic acid, and acetaminophen can all cause damage to which organ? The liver. Which two steps can minimize the risk of pill-induced esophagitis? Upright posture and ... |
Hello and welcome to the latest podcast from The Lancet. It's April the 5th and my name is Francesca Towey. Today we're discussing a new article from the Global Burden of Disease Working Group who provide worldwide observational epidemiological data at global, national and regional levels. This latest study focuses o... |
Hey, Paul, I'm excited to tell you that we are launching a Curbsiders Patreon. Have you heard about this? I did because I work with you, but tell me more about it. All right, Paul. Well, we want to be able to keep offering this great free content, and we're doing things like upgrading our website. We offer transcripts ... |
And I've really been focusing on the past five or 10 years, and maybe if not a little bit longer, on the service aspect of it. I think in medicine, we're here to serve. We're here to give back to our community and build and nurture, especially in some of the turbulent times that we've seen. So I think just taking the t... |
So that can be a challenge, but that might be a little tip off too. And I see that occasionally. That's a challenge where you get somebody with fatigue and achiness and they have what probably is acne rosacea, but is interpreted as a malar rash and then that ANA is fired. But again, I mean, you're seeing the patient, y... |
I feel like, yeah, these initial tests, like this is invariably we'll come back with like an elevated set rate, but a normal CRP and maybe the rheumatoid factor is positive, but the CCP is negative. And you're like, oh, well, now, now, now what do I do with this? Which I guess is what we're going to be talking about th... |
It's a citrullinated vimentin. I'll talk, I think, beyond this, but what I'm presenting here at the conference are two additional RA labs. One is what's called a 1433-ATA protein, and I believe that got its name because of the way it patterned out on a gel electrophoresis. The name is really kind of annoying, I guess, ... |
So Paul, do you want to read this one? Sure. We're going to now be talking about Sharon, who is a 33 year old female. She has a history of rosacea, obesity with a BMI of 34 and low back pain. This should sound hauntingly familiar. She recently saw dermatology for hair loss. Her iron indices and thyroid testing were nor... |
If you're starting to destroy organs, probably not bad as a specialist to maybe consider checking it. I think, though, the pitfall, as you very astutely bring up, Paul, is that you might get this ANA of 1 to 80 speckle pattern, then you're like, well, what does that mean? And again, rheumatology can kind of help you th... |
Paul, how do you handle this? Or do you have any other questions about this area before we move on a little bit? No, I mean, I would probably handle it. Surprisingly, actually, like the case where I would tell the patient, I'm not sure I would have checked this in the first place. I don't think there's anything to worr... |
And then, of course, that's the global point of how you want to keep updating your pre-test probability for your future test to help you get that diagnosis. But then, of course, knowing the strengths and weaknesses of the test is always key. And I don't think as an intern or even a subspecialist, you have to know all ... |
Hello and welcome to the February 1st, 2022 Analysts of Internal Medicine podcast. I'm Dr. Christine Lane, Analyst Editor-in-Chief, with a quick overview of the new material you'll find if you go to analyst.org. I know how busy our listeners are, so let's get right to the new articles. First is a case control study tha... |
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