Posts tagged Medicine
AI and Healthcare: What to Look Out for

While AI has been around for decades, it feels like it has really taken off in just the last year or two. From planning a travel itinerary to perfecting emails, the possibilities are seemingly endless with AI. But with any new technology comes the power to use it for good and to abuse it. One area of concern for me and other health experts is AI’s role in healthcare…

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Change Can’t Come Soon Enough: The Real, Life Endangering Impacts of Racial Bias in Healthcare

 According to the CDC, Black, American Indian, and Alaska Native women are up to five times more likely to die of preventable, pregnancy-related issues than white women. Hypertension, blood clots, and other catastrophic medical issues are poorly identified and managed during pregnancy for these populations, with devastating results…

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Facing a Breast Cancer Diagnosis? This Glossary May Be Helpful

My name is Sarah Zimmerman, PA-C and I am a freelance writer and Physician Assistant. I recently started working in a breast center, and The SEAM editors have kindly asked me to write a regular column on all things breast cancer… The fact is, breast cancer is very complicated, and it’s easy to feel lost in the myriad diagnoses, tests, and treatment options. So often, when we’re given a cancer diagnosis, all we hear are alarm bells going off in our heads, and the specific and foreign medical jargon is too much. I’m here to try to make it all clearer….

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The Talk Part II: Thriving Through Menopause

Menopause expert, Dr. Amy Heeringa, wishes it were common practice to have a second version of “The Talk” when women hit their forties. We all know “The Talk” we get around fifth grade: blood, body hair, and birth control. But what about those changes later in life? Ideally all women would have a second “Talk” around the age of forty, says Heeringa. A candid seminar, if you will, on lube, libido, and love in later life….

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Founder and Chairman of the Hope for Depression Research Foundation, Audrey Gruss, on Mental Health, Awareness, & Advocacy

As the Founder and Chairman of the Hope for Depression Research Foundation (HDRF), established in 2006, Audrey Gruss is helping to pioneer international scientific research into the origins, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of depression and its related mood and emotional disorders…

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Conversations on Clinical Prevention: A Mothers Day Q+A

On Tuesday, May 3rd, The Lynne Cohen Foundation hosted their very first live webinar q+a featuring LCF Clinic Patient, Playwright, Sophia Heinecke. Here, Sophia unpacks her experience at LCF’s preventive care clinic located at Bellevue Hospital as well as her work with the Creative Center at University Settlement, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to bringing the creative arts to people with cancer, chronic illnesses, and through all stages of life.

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Meet One of the Most Important People in America Right Now: FDA Director of Generic Drug Policy, Maryll W. Toufanian

As the Director of the Office of Generic Drug Policy (OGDP) for the FDA (which includes the Division of Policy Development and the Division of Legal and Regulatory Support) Maryll W. Toufanian has her fingers on the pulse of pharmaceuticals and their development in the United States. We had the honor of sitting down with Maryll to discuss the state of the world and her experience at the FDA.

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Inside Quantgene, A Company on the Cutting Edge of Genetic Research & Cancer Prevention

Quantgene is a fascinating company on the cutting edge of genetic research. They are a research group and startup dedicated to unlocking the Deep Human Genome by building and deploying the world’s leading Deep Genomics solution. The Quatgene team is working toward utilizing this technology to save lives through early detection and prevention….

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Dr. Julia Smith, Clinical Director of the Cancer Screening Program at NYU Langone, on Genetic Testing & Democratizing Access

Dr Julia Smith is an icon in the world of women’s cancer prevention and gynecologic oncology. Four decades ago, she was the first woman in the NYU MD PhD program, ever. Today, she is the Clinical Director of the Cancer Screening and Prevention Program at the NYU Isaac and Laura Perlmutter Cancer Institute. In this very special interview, Dr. Julia Smith discusses the shifting landscape of ovarian cancer prevention and the tremendous impact of genetic research in the field…

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Dr. Lynda Roman, Dir. of Gynecologic Oncology at USC, Shares Her Insights on Ovarian Cancer Research & More

Dr. Lynda Roman is the busiest woman we know. Right now she serves as the Director of the Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Director of Research, and the Fellowship Program Director at USC. We are honored to have Dr. Roman share her brilliance with us in an exclusive interview delving into the state of the world and women's cancers…

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