Archive for 2017

Helping Babies: Perinatal Addiction in the Opioid Epidemic – In-Training

Read article – An article by John Damianos Geisel ’20, in which he writes about the prevalence of neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS)—the collection of withdrawal symptoms that neonates present with at birth following prenatal exposure to narcotics—in New Hampshire. The article quotes Alison Holmes, associate professor of pediatrics, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice, who has collaborated with the Moms in Recovery Program to educate addicted mothers on NAS and how they can participate in the care of their child.

So Much Care It Hurts: Unneeded Scans, Therapy, Surgery Only Add to Patients’ Ills – Los Angeles Times via Kaiser Health News

Read article – Continued coverage of comments by Lisa Schwartz, professor of medicine, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, about how overzealous screening for cancers of the thyroid, prostate, breast and skin, leads many older people to undergo treatments unlikely to extend their lives, but which can cause needless pain and suffering.

Trump’s Botched Condolence Call to Sgt. La David Johnson’s Widow: What We All Can Learn – USA Today

Read article – An opinion piece by Kathy Kirkland, professor of medicine and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, in which she discusses President Donald Trump’s condolence call to Myeshia Johnson, the young widow of a serviceman killed in Niger. “A condolence call should be less about talking and more about listening, about being present. The only way to know the right thing to say is to listen for clues,” says Kirkland. (Kirkland is participating in this year’s Dartmouth Public Voices project.)

Road to Geisel: Class of ’21, Part 2

Road to Geisel: Class of ’21, Part 2

Meet some of the members of the Geisel School of Medicine’s Class of 2021—KC Collier, Tianrae Chu, and Allie Morgan—as they share their stories about what brought them to the Dartmouth community and why they wanted to pursue a career in medicine.