A physician–patient’s experience with Sjögren’s syndrome
Search results for: Big data
Physician Maxime Dougados, MD, Is Intent on Advancing Clinical Measurement in Rheumatology
Visionary rheumatologist credited with developing new spondylarthritis criteria, collaborating on the OASIS study, and promoting the 3E Initiative in rheumatology
Tech Talk: New Technologies Attempt to Find Better Treatments for Rheumatic Diseases
Research in proteomics and genetics sheds new light on treatment strategies, brings potential for breakthroughs
EULAR 2013: Drugs New and Old Could Treat Spondylarthropies
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) might still have a role in treating axial spondylarthritis, but other drugs, therapies are being explored
Speak Out Rheum: Attacks Against Healthcare Providers in China Spur Chinese Rheumatologists to Heal Strained Doctor–Patient Relationships Through Technology
The Chinese SLE treatment and research group (CSTAR) database serves as an information resource about lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, and systemic sclerosis, and a communication platform between health-care providers and rheumatology patients
PR-COIN Initiative Takes Aim at Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
The Pediatric Rheumatology Care and Outcomes Improvement Network uses clinical evidence and a network of collaborators to improve outcomes for children with JIA
What Adult Rheumatologists Need to Know about Juvenile Arthritis
How to recognize distinctions between pediatric and adult arthritis
Speak Out Rheum: How the U.K. and U.S. Healthcare Models Stack Up
A national, socialized medical system has significant advantages over the often-fragmented, unequally distributed U.S. system of healthcare, says one rheumatologist
Rheuminations: Epigenetics May Help to Explain Why Some Get Rheumatic Disease
Recent research around genes and environmental stresses suggests outside influences can make lasting changes to the genome via epigenetic mechanisms
Letter: There’s No Reason Now to Screen for Uric Acid
Screening was common in the 1970s and before, but new studies demonstrate that most hyperuricemia patients never developed gout or kidney stones, so enthusiasm for screening waned
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 40
- 41
- 42
- 43
- 44
- …
- 51
- Next Page »