"I know that hate will only win if people like me stand by and let it happen."
Please watch this incredible speech from Michigan State Senator @MalloryMcMorrow, who is not standing by.
Our paper on airway complications in lung transplant recipients with telomere-related interstitial lung disease is published in @CliniTransplant . Thank you to my mentors and collaborators, including @RaphaelBorie and many others! 1/n https://t.co/CLrdBHNcsi
"I don’t think I would have ever been ready to lose Evan. But I hope that ... by experiencing the other side that I can help make the devastating losses of patients and their families just a little bit less painful" https://t.co/A6ucSFNHsq via @JAMA_current part of @JAMANetwork
Congratulations to @zaracMD, who has been awarded a $3.3M @NIH grant for the study, “A layered examination of the patient experience to elucidate the role of palliative care in surgical care for seriously ill older adults.”
https://t.co/rhaSbsF667
I’ve held my tongue on a lot of publications this year. But this @JAMAPediatrics study is completely out of line. Biased, weak methodology, inflated interpretation (that’s being generous). This is plain disappointing.
Along those same lines, is there a preferred order for listing genders and race in a paragraph or table? In the past I had always listed the largest n first which tends to be white in the cohorts I've worked with. Is alphabetical better? @ATSBlueEditor@AnnalsATS
Question: Writing up a study that uses data from a research cohort. In the past I have always written, "x% were female". If the gender recorded in the study was self reported is it better to write, "x% identified as female"? Similar question for race. "y% identified as black?"
This Thursday at 3pm EST, the awesome Dr. Katie Greenzang joins OsteoBites to discuss "What's Next? Osteosarcoma Survivorship".
🧑⚕️Dr. Greenzang is a pediatric oncologist at @DanaFarber / @BostonChildrens and Instructor at @harvardmed .
Registration link in thread👇
Truly heartbroken. One of the kindest of our colleagues, who put our patients first and found time to share his intellect and wisdom with anyone, regardless of rank or department. His generosity of spirit lifted us all and he will be missed.