Thank you to @Health_Affairs for the opportunity to share my approach to building a solid ethical foundation for the interdependent relationship between physicians and health systems!
https://t.co/3JU8n93iuA
COVID isn’t gone. Neither are the psychological effects on our community. We suit up for work each day, but short tempers, dark thoughts, and sleepless nights persist. We’ve educated peers all over about managing COVID. We need to talk more about this. Thanks @nytimes.
The U.S. has given official notice of its withdrawal from the WHO.
Global health experts, doctors and lawmakers lambasted the move: one said it was "a political gift to China," another said it may jeopardize U.S. access to lifesaving COVID-19 vaccines.
https://t.co/6ZQm0VstUI
Confirms the work needed to undo racism in underlying social risks that influence health outcomes.
And also, why did the NYT need to sue the @CDCgov for data? 🧐 It should be much more robust and publicly available, like @nycHealthy data
"Advance directives are one of the most important gifts people can give to their loved ones before they die. But few people actually have them in place," Joel Rowe writes. https://t.co/1Bl22S7REL
Beautifully written piece by Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai emergency medicine resident Dr. Joel Rowe that addresses our shared need to embrace advance directives, especially in the era of COVID-19. #palliativecare https://t.co/BZO2V9ksph
My time in the ICU and the ED during COVID really drove home the importance of talking with our patients about dying but I wasn’t able to put it into words as eloquently as my excellent resident @jrowemd did in his piece in the Atlantic @Sinai_Emerg_Med https://t.co/cc5iggUx5J