News from °”ÍűTV Langone Health
Asian American Women Are Getting Lung Cancer Despite Never Smoking. Itâs Baffling Scientists And Leading To More Research. (NBC News)
(3/7) At °”ÍűTV Langone Health, âElaine Shum, MD, assistant professor, Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology and Medical Oncology, Perlmutter Cancer Center, has seen dozens of nonsmoking Asian American women with lung cancer,â leading her to begin her own clinical trial, the initial results of which âshe presented at a major cancer conference showed that Asian women had a higher lung cancer detection rate than the original national trial â 1.5% versus 1%.â Stella S. Yi, MPH, PhD, associate professor, Department of Population Health, who co-leads the Innovations in Data Equity for All Laboratory at °”ÍűTV Langone Health, notes that Asian Americans are often categorized as âOtherâ in surveys or overly broad groups that obfuscates their data.
Are You A âFloor Personâ? Why Lying On The Ground Feels So Good. (New York Times)
The (3/8) âIf you are able to try it and want to give floor time a go, âfocus on your breath, really turn inward,â said Rachel L. Goldman, PhD, clinical assistant professor, Department of Psychiatry.
TikTok Influencers Are Now Treating Ozempic Side Effects. (TIME)
(3/7) âHolly F. Lofton, MD, clinical associate professor, Departments of Surgery, Division of Bariatric Surgery, and Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, has patients who first went to dermatologists or telehealth companies for weight-loss drugs and werenât given proper oversight.â
(3/7) Holly F. Lofton, MD, clinical associate professor, Departments of Surgery, Division of Bariatric Surgery, and Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine., said, âThere are some patients who are not candidates for this class of medication if they have a family history or personal history of medullary thyroid cancer, so itâs important that every person who is screened to consider Ozempic or Wegovy for weight loss or diabetes should be asked, do you have a personal or family history of this condition?â
(3/6) Holly F. Lofton, MD, clinical associate professor, Departments of Surgery, Division of Bariatric Surgery, and Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, about a lack of information patients are receiving about the side effects of weight loss drugs.â
Cardiologists Share The 1 Food They Never (Or Rarely) Eat. (HuffPost)
(3/8) ââMargarine seems like a great idea in theory, but it turns out to be just as bad as butter,â said Harmony R. Reynolds, MD, associate professor, Department of Medicine, the Leon H. Charney Division of Cardiology.
100+ Hospitals, Health Systems Among Newsweekâs Greatest Workplaces For Women. (Becker's Hospital Review)
(3/7) reports, âNewsweek has published its 2024 âAmericaâs Greatest Workplaces for Womenâ rankingâ created with âmarket data research firm Plant-A Insights.â The list includes °”ÍűTV Langone Health.
âParrot Feverâ Outbreaks Cause 5 Deaths In Europe, Sparking Warnings. (Fox News)
(3/7) Parrot fever âis rare in the U.S., only affecting about 10 people per year, according to Marc K. Siegel, MD, clinical professor, Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine and a Fox News medical contributor.â
Alabama IVF Ruling Draws Attention To Technologyâs Unregulated Frontiers. (Washington Post)
The (3/7) Pasquale Patrizio, in 2009, made the case âthat the debate over whether embryos are morally equal to people had fizzled long ago,â with he and co-author Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor, Department of Population Health, Division of Medical Ethics, writing, âThe era of the embryo âwarsâ may be coming to an end.â
Massachusettsâ Infant Abandonment Laws Are Failing Families In Crisis. (Boston Globe)
The (3/8) Lori Bruce, a bioethicist at Yale Universityâs Interdisciplinary Center for Bioethics, and Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor, Department of Population Health, Division of Medical Ethics, discuss how âbaby boxesâ from Safe Haven laws âare often celebrated in the news, but their implementation and use raise a number of ethical questions.â
Anorexia: When Is It Ethical To Stop Treatment? (Medscape)
Paywall* (3/7)* Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor, Department of Population Health, Division of Medical Ethics, discusses âwhat to do with young women who just seem not to respond to efforts to treat their anorexia.â
Lessons From A Compassionate Use Firestorm. (BioCentury)
Paywall* (3/7)* âOn the tenth anniversary of a viral media campaign that extended a boyâs life, bioethicistâ Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor, Department of Population Health, Division of Medical Ethics, âreflected in an interview with The BioCentury Show on how the experience reshaped public views, corporate policies and legal requirements associated with providing access to unapproved therapies.â