Los Angeles Times – In this op-ed, Steven Woloshin and Lisa Schwartz discuss a recent article they wrote in JAMA Internal Medicine that looks at how marketing advertisers target middle-aged men with low testosterone, or “low T.”
Archive for 2014
A Watchful Eye in Hospitals
The New York Times– In this op-ed, Associate Professor of Medicine Tim Lahey looks at the ethics of video monitoring patients and staff in hospitals. “Hidden cameras should be a last resort,” writes Lahey. “Hospitals should notify patients that covert video monitoring may be used in unusual circumstances, and only with the oversight of a hospital ethics committee.”
Geisel Medical School Sees Enrollment Jump
New Hampshire Union Leader – The Geisel School of Medicine saw a 27 percent increase in applications this year over last year, with 5,241 prospective students interested in enrolling. Aileen Panitz, assistant director of admissions at Geisel, is quoted in the story.
New Weight Loss Drugs’ Side Effects Worrisome, Say Dartmouth Doctors
The Boston Globe – Dartmouth researchers Lisa Schwartz and Steven Woloshin are looking into two new weight loss drugs—Belviq and Qysmia—which they say “have been associated with serious harms.” Advising the public, they say, “until there is more convincing evidence about the cardiovascular safety of these drugs, physicians and patients should approach them cautiously.” Schwartz and Woloshin are both professors of medicine and of community and family medicine, as well as co-directors of the Medicine and the Media program.
Debating the Value and Effectiveness of Mammograms
PBS Newshour – H. Gilbert Welch, professor of medicine, of community and family medicine, and of TDI, was interviewed on PBS Newshour to discuss a new Canadian study that has reinvigorated debate on the value of mammography. A transcript of the interview is provided.
UK Rolls Out Terror-Attack Plan
Nature – Quotes Robert Gougelet, assistant professor of medicine, on a new UK Initial Operational Response program that offers guidelines on how to treat mass civilian casualties in the aftermath of a bioterrorist attack.
Study Disputes Value of Routine Mammograms
Associated Press via NPR – Quotes H. Gilbert Welch, professor of medicine, of community and family medicine, and of TDI, who says mammography screening “is a choice, not a public health imperative.” This story looks at a new Canadian study that has renewed the debate over the risks of routine mammograms.
Geisel Applications Surge, Projected to be More than Triple the National Average
Applications to Geisel’s 2014 MD entering class are up 22% compared to last year. The medical school experienced an increase of 1,104 applications, pushing the total to 5,241 applications from prospective students this year.
Study Raises Awareness of Risks of Mammograms
USA Today – An additional story on a new Canadian study that has renewed the debate over the risks of routine mammograms. Steven Woloshin, Geisel ’96, a professor of medicine and community and family medicine and co-director of the Center for Medicine in the Media, is quoted.
Vast Study Casts Doubts on Value of Mammograms
The New York Times – Quotes H. Gilbert Welch, professor of medicine, of community and family medicine, and of TDI, on Switzerland’s decision to halt new mammography screening programs.