Featured News
Dr. Manfredi, expert on wellness, publishes her national survey on wellness in EMed
Dr. Sikka, expert in telehealth, publishes on telehealth programs at teaching hospitals
A moving article on the meaning of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson's victory by Drs. Haile-Mariam, T., Nakitende, D., Wilder, M., Omorogbe, Haywood, Terry MD, Powell, N.N., Blanchard, J. 2022 Academic Emergency Medicine
Sonal Batra in JAMA on measuring social mission engagement and performance in health professions education to encourage institutional efforts to advance health equity and social justice commitments.
Dr. Natalie Kirilichin, assistant professor of Emergency Medicine, was nominated for a Clara Bliss Hinds Mentorship Rising Star Award.
Dr. Kathleen Ogle, associate professor of Emergency Medicine, was nominated for a Clara Bliss Hinds Mentorship Rising Star Award.
When a rabid fox bit nine people by the Capitol Hill grounds last week, D.C. Health called on anyone who had interacted with the creature to get in contact to determine whether they should undergo rabies treatment.
Two recent editorials in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology discuss the benefits and drawbacks of telehealth in the context of treating chronic kidney disease now and in the future.
From new forms of medicine to less wasteful business practices, many have adapted to Covid-19 in ways that have improved them, and society.
As the virulent new omicron variant of the coronavirus emerges, a key component of reducing transmissions and keeping society open is faster and more accurate testing.