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Search results for: machine learning

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How to Avoid Cognitive Errors in Rheumatology

Megan Milne, MD, & Rebecca E. Sadun, MD, PhD  |  March 14, 2022

The 1999 Institute of Medicine report To Err Is Human gave a sobering depiction of the magnitude and consequences of medical error.1 The report concluded that approximately 98,000 people die in hospitals annually due to preventable medical errors. Of all the errors detailed in this report, diagnostic errors have since been determined to be the…

Filed under:Professional Topics Tagged with:best practicesbiascognitive errorsErrorsmedical errors

Using the 2019 EULAR/ACR Classification Criteria to Predict Disease Severity in SLE

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  November 30, 2021

Predicting a patient’s disease course is difficult, especially in SLE. A recent study examined the link between a patient’s 2019 EULAR/ACR SLE Classification Criteria score at diagnosis to subsequent disease severity, finding a score of 20 or more may predict a more severe disease course.

Filed under:ConditionsSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:Classification CriteriaSLEsystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

Summer 2021’s Awards, Appointments & Announcements in Rheumatology

Kelly April Tyrrell & Gretchen Henkel  |  September 14, 2021

Marian Hannan Celebrated after 10 Years as AC&R Editor-in-Chief By Kelly April Tyrrell This summer, the 10-year tenure of Marian Hannan, MPH, DSc, as editor in chief of Arthritis Care & Research (AC&R), has come to an end. Kelli Allen, PhD, assumed the post on July 1. “Marian has done a fantastic job over the…

Filed under:AwardsProfiles Tagged with:Dr. John J. O’SheaDr. Marian HannanDr. Tuhina Neogi

2-Year Extension Study Supports Voclosporin to Treat Patients with Lupus Nephritis

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  August 23, 2021

Research has shown voclosporin in combination with MMF and low-dose steroids benefits patients with lupus nephritis, significantly increasing the speed of remission. New data from an ongoing extension study demonstrate a positive risk/benefit profile.

Filed under:ConditionsDrug UpdatesSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:kidneyLupus nephritisvoclosporin

Rheum After 5: Polly Ferguson, MD, Is Perfecting Her Pottery Skills

Carol Patton  |  November 5, 2020

After a busy day in rheumatology, Polly Ferguson, MD, gets creative at a local arts center, making beautiful pottery pieces, a skill she has wanted to develop for nearly 30 years.

Filed under:AudioProfilesRheum After 5 Tagged with:Dr. Polly Fergusonhobby

The Problem with Peer Review

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  August 12, 2020

I should have paid more attention in medical school. If I had, I might have remembered enough about basic pathophysiology to know why everyone was suddenly pulling their patients off of lisinopril. For those of you who need a quick primer: When the pressure in the renal artery drops, the kidney secretes renin. Working together,…

Filed under:OpinionResearch RheumRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:Peer reviewResearch

We Make a Difference

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  June 15, 2020

“No!” she screamed. My niece just finished her first semester as a freshman at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. If the institution sounds familiar to you, it may be because you remember a particularly famous graduate—William Windsor, who sometimes goes by his formal titles: Duke of Cambridge and heir to the British throne….

Filed under:ConditionsOpinionRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:COVID-19

Forging New Ways to Teach in Response to COVID-19: Q&A with Anisha Dua, MD, MPH

Carina Stanton  |  April 17, 2020

Unable to connect with rheumatology fellows and patients in person, Anisha Dua, MD, MPH, and a team of rheumatologists have worked quickly to find new ways to communicate and share resources. Dr. Dua directs rheumatology medical education and the fellowship training program at Northwestern Memorial Hospital (NMH), Chicago. She spoke with The Rheumatologist about how…

Filed under:Education & TrainingProfessional Topics Tagged with:coronavirusCOVID-19fellowshiprheumatologistsTraining

New Tools for Myositis Diagnosis, Classification & Management

Susan Bernstein  |  April 15, 2019

CHICAGO—At Hot Topics in Myositis, a session at the 2018 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting, three experts discussed new classification criteria for idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) and offered practical primers on overlap myositis conditions and inclusion body myositis (IBM). New Myositis Classification Criteria After a 10-year development process, the new EULAR/ACR Classification Criteria for Adult and Juvenile…

Filed under:ConditionsOther Rheumatic Conditions Tagged with:2018 ACR/ARHP Annual Meetingfibrosing myopathyidiopathic inflammatory myopathiesinclusion body myositis (IBM)overlap myositis

Ultrasound Training Tips & Pitfalls

Eugene Kissin, MD, RhMSUS; Paul J. DeMarco, MD, FACP, FACR, RhMSUS; Daniel G. Malone, MD, RMSK; Catherine Bakewell, MD, RhMSUS; Karina Torralba, MD, FACR, CCD, RhMSUS; Rany al Haj, MD; Narandra Bethina, MD, RhMSUS; Clara Lin, MD, RhMSUS; Amy M. Evangelisto, MD, RhMSUS; Jay Higgs, MD, RhMSUS; & Midori Jane Nishio, MD, RhMSUS  |  November 19, 2018

The past 20 years have seen dramatic changes in the practice of rheumatology, ranging from bench to bedside therapeutic advances to dramatic improvements in diagnostic imaging. The results have been gratifying for our patients and attractive to internal medicine trainees making subspecialty career decisions. We are pleased to provide this article for The Rheumatologist’s wide-ranging…

Filed under:CertificationEducation & Training Tagged with:RhMSUSUltrasound

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