Articles by: Geisel Communications

The Doctor Is Cooking – The New York Times

Read article – An article about how culinary medicine is an emerging field that teaches doctors to cook while also imparting practical nutrition information, which mentions that Dartmouth’s Geisel School of Medicine provides culinary medicine workshops to medical staff members, patients, and the community through teaching kitchens. The article also mentions that Julia Nordgren, Geisel ’99, cofounded “The Doctor is In … The Kitchen” program at Stanford’s medical school, which meets one evening a week to learn about how culinary medicine is implicated in a real clinical story.

Are You and Your Primary Care Doc Ready to Talk About Your DNA? – The Washington Post via Kaiser Health News

Read article – Quotes H. Gilbert Welch, professor of medicine and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, in an article about how the Pennsylvania-based Geisinger Health System will offer DNA sequencing to 1,000 patients to test for genetic mutations that increases your risk for a treatable medical condition. Welch expresses concerns about the cascading effect of expensive and potentially harmful medical treatment when a genetic risk is identified. (Picked up by NPR and NHPR.)

Study: Young Americans Inhale More Smoke From Hookah Than Cigarettes – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Read article – Quotes Samir Soneji, assistant professor of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, about a new study that found that young adults in the U.S. consume more smoke from hookah—water pipes with hot coals that heat tobacco in internal bowls—than from cigarettes. “Adolescents, young adults, and older adults alike often believe—incorrectly so—hookah is safe because the water somehow purifies and filters the smoke. This study demonstrates that hookah smoking contributes a substantial proportion of smoke and tar among dual hookah smokers and cigarette smokers,” says Soneji, who was not involved in the study.

Mergers Key to Community Hospitals’ Survival – Fosters.com

Read article – Quotes Joanne Conroy ’77, CEO of Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, about how having a multitude of partnerships—without owning any one—drives the hospital to its highest performance. Dartmouth-Hitchcock is a teaching hospital affiliated with the Geisel School of Medicine, and is also affiliated with several rural hospitals in the North Country and in Vermont. It also has long-standing relationships with the Boston hospitals. (Picked up by Seacoast Online.)

More Patients Are Taking Home Recordings of Their Doctor Visits. But Who Else Could Listen? – STAT News

Read article – Quotes Paul Barr, assistant professor of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, who is leading a project at Dartmouth to create an artificial intelligence-enabled system that allows for the routine audio recording of conversations between clinicians and patients. The project, known as ORALS (Open Recording Automated Logging System) is designed to use natural language processing to automatically tag elements of the conversation deemed most valuable for patients. (Similar coverage in Becker’s Hospital Review.)

FDA Approves Preventive Migraine Treatment – CNN

Read article – Quotes Stewart Tepper, professor of neurology, about a newly approved drug called Aimovig that’s offering hope for reducing the frequency of monthly migraine attacks. Aimovig is the first FDA-approved preventive migraine treatment in a new class of drugs that work by blocking the activity of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), a molecule that is involved in migraine attacks. Aimovig targets that molecule’s receptor in your body. “When CGRP is released, outside of the brain, it causes inflammation and blood vessel dilation—the blood vessels get big—and that combination of inflammation and blood vessels getting big is the pain of migraine,” says Tepper, who was a clinical investigator in the Aimovig trials. (Picked up by WMUR and NBC 5. Similar coverage in The Wall Street Journal, Bustle, Refinery29, The Hindu.)

Addressing the Crisis in Older Adult Mental Health – Behavioral Healthcare Executive

Read article – An article that mentions that Stephen Bartels, professor of psychiatry, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, served as a panelist for an event titled “Addressing the Crisis in Older Adult Mental Health” as part of Mental Health Awareness Month. Bartels discusses how few seniors currently have access to the most rudimentary mental health services.

End-of-Life Care Costs Declined Last Decade – Home Health Care News

Read article – Quotes William Weeks, professor of psychiatry, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, about a new study he led that found that Medicare spending on older Americans during their end-of-life years was down toward the start of last decade. The study upends the notion that older adults, many of whom end up on hospice care in the last few weeks of life, are largely responsible for driving up U.S. health care costs. (Similar coverage in the Valley News.)

F.D.A. Approves First Drug Designed to Prevent Migraines – The New York Times

Read article – Quotes Stewart Tepper, professor of neurology, about how the first medicine designed to prevent migraines was approved by the Food and Drug Administration on Thursday, ushering in what many experts believe will be a new era in treatment for people who suffer the most severe form of these headaches. “For now, they look fantastic,” says Tepper. “They shake the ground under our feet. They will change the way we treat migraine.” (Picked up by The Globe and Mail, Independent RecorderThe Bulletin, Global Financial Market Review, and TimesUnion. Similar coverage in Syracuse.com, HealioPain News Network, Neurology Advisor, and Medcape.)