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Opinion

Subcategories:Patient PerspectiveProfilesRheuminationsSpeak Out RheumVideo

How Global Geographic Disparities Affect Healthcare Outcomes

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  July 13, 2017

Your home & your health: Does geography impact medicine? Does it matter whether a region is surrounded by large bodies of water, encircled by towering mountain peaks or that its residents share a common ancestry? Consider Switzerland, a nation with a highly developed economy replete with advanced technological and medical infrastructure. Despite these advantages, less…

The Birth and Growth of Biotechnology, and the Impact of Biologic Drugs on Rheumatology

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  June 15, 2017

Here’s a trivia question: Where were the big ideas for the field of biotechnology first discussed? Answer: At a since-demolished delicatessen in Waikiki Beach, Hawaii. Go figure. The year was 1972, and Stanley Cohen, MD, professor of medicine at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., and Herbert Boyer, PhD, a former professor and biochemist at the…

Rheumatologist Dr. Sandra Pagnussat Recalls Journey from Patient to Physician

Linda Childers  |  June 14, 2017

When she was in elementary school, Sandra Pagnussat, MD, began experiencing unrelenting pain and stiffness, first in her pinky and then in her other fingers. Her pediatrician diagnosed her with polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). In high school, Sandra decided to pursue a career in medicine and began taking advanced placement classes in biology and chemistry….

Rheumatologist-Nobel Laureate Dr. Baruch (Barry) Blumberg Deserves Recognition

Philip L. Cohen, MD  |  May 18, 2017

I read with pleasure the March 2017 Rheuminations (written by Simon M. Helfgott, MD), but wanted to make a small emendation. There is one other rheumatologist–Nobel Laureate besides Philip Hench. Baruch (Barry) Blumberg (1925–2011) was a bona fide rheumatologist who trained in the mid-1950s with the renowned Charles Ragan at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in New…

ARHP President Dr. Afton L. Hassett’s Rise from Annual Meeting Attendee to Leadership Role

Erin Latimer Meadows  |  May 18, 2017

Current ARHP President Afton L. Hassett, PsyD—a clinical psychologist and an associate research scientist in the Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Michigan—attended her first ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting in 1999. Dr. Hassett submitted an abstract to the meeting describing her dissertation research exploring the role of pain and depression in rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia. It…

How Tuberculosis Has Shaped Medicine and Society

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  May 17, 2017

Pathologists are legendary for blending their work product with the culinary arts. Through the years, their use of delectable foods as descriptors has created a clever way to indelibly link in the minds of clinicians the histopathologic observations of disease with an assortment of these tasty foods: There is the depiction of an apple green…

Board Games Expand Rheumatologist’s Social Network, Keep Players’ Minds Sharp

Carol Patton  |  May 16, 2017

On many Saturday evenings, Kaleb Michaud, PhD, saves the world from pandemics, harvests barrels of coffee beans to sell at market or helps King Brandur recover the fabled Runic DragonStones. Dr. Michaud, an associate professor in the division of rheumatology and immunology at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) in Omaha and also co-director of…

Salsa Dancing Gives Medical Instructor Confidence Boost

Carol Patton  |  April 19, 2017

Alyssa B. Dufour, PhD, is a salsa dancing junkie. Besides taking weekly dance lessons, she salsa dances three times a week at local clubs or studios and practices routines around the house—while cooking dinner, getting dressed or watching TV. She can’t seem to get enough of the social dance that has boosted her confidence in…

FDA Drug Labeling, Approval Process Help Minimize Lawsuits Against Pharmaceutical Companies

Bruce N. Cronstein, MD  |  April 17, 2017

Like many people, I am up early and in the gym most days. Although I don’t seem to get anywhere new on the stationary bicycle or the elliptical machine, I do get to keep up with the pundits on the early morning talk shows. In contrast to the television series I binge on later in…

Weakness, Fatigue Can Signal Underlying Rheumatologic Disease

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  April 17, 2017

As clinicians, we are familiar with pain, stiffness and soreness—subjective nouns that define our métier. These helpful words serve as signposts that direct us along the path to the proper diagnosis. Consider the young man with a stiff, sore back (a case of ankylosing spondylitis?) or the postpartum woman experiencing newly painful, stiff and sore…

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