Prepare effectively for your USMLE Step boards but also develop skills that will serve you throughout your medical career
Remember, mastering clinical documentation. If interested recall (1000 + questions, steps 1/3, surgery and im) https://t.co/qX02cp73fJ
With the world cup on the way. We need you on the pitch! New Traige game to drive your daily q's #triagecases
Let’s get started!
https://t.co/CP9CbKJ5T2
🚨 Looking for sign ups, The USMLE Board style question and strategy to detailed explanations of all the new questions and the high-yield concepts. Comment “like” below, and we’ll send you to share with your friends a cohort code. https://t.co/7uTzeVkStP
Weight Loss Efficacy of Incretin-Based Therapies
It’s no secret that managing weight is a significant challenge for many patients with type 2 diabetes. The struggle becomes even more pronounced when conventional treatments produc… https://t.co/u9C2ReWnWD
Ever notice how the most groundbreaking medical insights often come from the most unexpected places?
Take the recent NEJM article on access cases. While many are fixated on the latest drug trials or surgical techniques, the real game-changer lies in how we assess and share these cases. Traditional reviews often miss the nuances that can only be captured through innovative platforms like OpenEvidence and https://t.co/zm0Mt3DqXD.
Here’s a quick breakdown of why this matters:
```
+---------------------+
| Traditional |
| Case Reviews |
+---------------------+
| - Limited scope |
| - Slow feedback |
| - High bias risk |
+---------------------+
|
v
+---------------------+
| Innovative Tools |
| (OpenEvidence, |
| https://t.co/zm0Mt3DqXD) |
+---------------------+
| - Comprehensive data |
| - Real-time insights |
| - Lower bias risk |
+---------------------+
```
By leveraging these tools, we can democratize access to critical case reviews, ensuring that every healthcare professional has the insights they need at their fingertips. This isn't just about improving patient outcomes; it's about reshaping the entire landscape of medical education and practice.
So, why are we still relying on outdated methods when the future of medical assessment is already here? Are we ready to embrace this shift, or will we cling to the familiar?
The Silent Vigil: Surviving the Information Avalanche (and the Wait) Visit https://t.co/euphKPUGxI (video tutorials or reading lessons) or https://t.co/WBvxXFoBK2 (for content analysis with mind maps)
https://t.co/4ko55N7rJ6
Excerpt case from the TV show The Good Doctor – Season 2, Episode 1 (with Dr. Mike react) https://t.co/FtprcrwXSM
A tightened, high-energy react where rare pathology meets bold decisions—and not everything holds up under scrutiny.
https://t.co/a6qrJGb5OA
Access cases review on this NEJM article with review using openevidence and https://t.co/Tvz2r5SEd1 review of assessment. Free to share the case presentation article #
Case Record of the Massachusetts General Hospital (@MassGeneralNews): A 12-year-old girl was admitted to the pediatric service of this hospital because of altered mental status, abdominal distention, and persistent hypoglycemia.
On the morning of the hospital admission, the patient’s mother had difficulty rousing the patient. On awakening, the patient could not maintain her gaze and was speaking nonsensically. Her grandmother reported that she had been well the night before, when she was noted to have eaten a full meal and was behaving normally. The patient was transported by emergency medical services to the emergency department of this hospital.
On presentation to the emergency department, the patient had a temporal temperature of 35.4°C; the vital signs were otherwise normal. She appeared ill and was intermittently responsive, at times answering questions with one-word responses. There were intermittent periods of stupor. Spontaneous movement of the arms and legs was noted. The blood glucose level was 30 mg per deciliter (1.7 mmol per liter; reference range, 70 to 110 mg per deciliter [3.9 to 6.1 mmol per liter]). Treatment with an ampule of intravenous glucose in water was administered, with subsequent improvement in mental status, and a continuous intravenous infusion of dextrose in water was started.
Read the full case details in “A 12-Year-Old Girl with Altered Mental Status and Hypoglycemia,” a Case Record of the Massachusetts General Hospital, by K. Lord et al., from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (@ChildrensPhila), the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Massachusetts General Hospital (@MassGeneralNews), and @harvardmed: https://t.co/CVmYBnWdzx
It’s where preparation meets urgency.
Where pattern recognition replaces long histories.
Where teams push their limits — https://t.co/Tvz2r5SEd1
just to save one more life. 🩺 #Pitt#hbomax#medicalcases#Edtech#medtech
https://t.co/JpENAEFILM
Can you guess from the patient's vitals and conditions from this new popular show- consult for cellulitis to severe sepsis and is now suspected to involve necrotizing fasciitis, Systolic blood pressure over 100 is required for administering ____? bonus: What is the show/episode.
Today’s at https://t.co/Tvz2r5SEd1 spotlight goes to the role of Occupational Therapy — one of the quiet forces behind recovery. OT's step in to help patients rebuild their life. Guess the show/episode with this patient receiving OT care 🩺