Congratulations @PennCPORT Senior Scholar Gary Bass @garybassmd (@UPennTrauma) who lead the @estesonline Clinical Research Priorities for Emergency Surgery, a needs assessment & roadmap for future global outcomes research. https://t.co/UEDyIfUW8E
🚨Publication Alert!🚨
Out today from @PennCPORT Co-Director @emilyvailmd & team: 1st nat'l study showing better transplantation outcomes from organ donors treated at dedicated recovery facilities. @Penn_Transplant@PennAnesthesia@UNOSNews@PennLDI
https://t.co/ggvN37EJ3K
How do we define & measure IRB quality?
Recent work from @HollyLynchez, Whitney Eriksen& CPORT senior scholar Justin Clapp sheds light on current approaches & opportunities to improve. Read more here:
🚨Publication Alert!🚨
New work out in @annalsthorsurg from CPORT senior scholar Emily Mackay & team: what determines whether intraop TEE is used for CABG surgery? Hospital practice pattern >> patient factors.
Excited to share @FAERanesthesia funded article in-press @annalsthorsurg. Hospital/surgeon practice pattern predicts Intraoperative TEE. Big thanks to co-authors, @STS_CTsurgery, and senior author @NimeshDesaiMD. Read the paper: https://t.co/dAckCUD7I8.
"The COVID-19 pandemic has shown the amazing things that can come out of a truly pragmatic clinical trial."
NEW Spotlight—Platform trials: the future of medical research?
Read more here: https://t.co/VPxg7JmAov
Congratulations Gary Bass (@garybassmd) & Lewis Kaplan for their 4 linked publications in this month’s European Journal of Trauma & Emergency Surgery @estesonline exploring surgical current practice in acute appendicitis.
Now online: A special issue on Structural Racism and Public Health
This issue covers a range of topics, such as housing and redlining, intersectional frameworks, criminal justice systems, maternal and child health, and more
https://t.co/IuoVjdNhNG
@PublicHealth
There's a rising need to challenge systems of oppression. More than 400 preemption bills were filed in state legislatures in 2021 and nearly 300 are being considered this year. 3/
Common sense is irreplaceable in medical practice. Yet appeals to common sense have also been invoked at one point or another to rationalize every now-debunked therapy, ranging from the simply ineffective to the outright dangerous. Beware the appeal to “common sense.” Trust RCTs.
#PhysAnesWk23 starts today!
I am so proud to be a physician who specializes in #anesthesiology and perioperative pain medicine and grateful for my anesthesiology colleagues around the world who advance patient safety and outcomes through research & clinical innovation 👏🏽
We are honored to host @RosauraOrengo as part of our 2023 Speaker Series on community engagement and partnership. 📣 Join us this upcoming Wednesday, 2/1, at 11am (ET) for this virtual talk.
RSVP and find out more ⤵️!
https://t.co/jEZwKuj7ru
Many observational studies fail because they don't properly emulate a target trial, not because of data limitations. Join @_MiguelHernan on Jan. 31 as he explains how observational data can be used when randomized trials don't exist: https://t.co/bKMG44dL1z