Read article – Cites a study conducted by researchers at Dartmouth that found that from 1997 through 2016, medical marketing in the U.S. grew from $17.7 to $29.9 billion, with direct-to-consumer advertising for Rx drugs and health services accounting for the most rapid growth.
In the News
New Research on Effects of PFAS on Children Underway in NH – New Hampshire Union Leader
Read article – Quotes Megan Romano, assistant professor of epidemiology, in an article about how new research is being conducted in New Hampshire on the effects of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances on pregnant women and young children. Romano is working with the New Hampshire Birth Cohort to get data for 1,000 women from the Concord and Lebanon regions. She hopes to find out more about PFAS exposure’s effects on gestational weight gain, breastfeeding, and early life physical growth of children.
Machine Learning Model May Save Women From Unnecessary Breast Surgery – HealthImaging
Read article – Quotes Saeed Hassanpour, assistant professor of biomedical data science and of epidemiology, who worked with colleagues to develop a new machine learning model that allows physicians to determine whether atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) could upgrade to cancer.
Are All Those Medical Screening Tests Really Necessary? – The Washington Post via Consumer Reports
Read article – Quotes Steven Woloshin, professor of medicine, community and family medicine, and of The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, in an article about how to determine whether a screening test you’re considering is needed. “It only makes sense to get screened if you’re testing for something you can do something about—and if treatment is more effective when the problem is detected before symptoms develop,” says Woloshin.
AI Detects High-Risk Breast Lesions With Accuracy – AI in Healthcare
Read article – Quotes Saeed Hassanpour, assistant professor of biomedical data science and of epidemiology, who worked with colleagues to develop a new machine learning model that allows physicians to determine whether atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) could upgrade to cancer.
Build Your Own ‘Medicare for All’ Plan. Beware: There Are Tough Choices. The New York Times
Read article – A panel of health policy experts examining major proposals to expand Medicare or Medicaid includes Ellen Meara, professor of The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice and adjunct professor in economics. “Expanding coverage to a subset of the population, for example those nearer retirement age, will be cheaper and more politically palatable,” says Meara. “The desire for incremental approaches led us to create Medicare, Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, each targeted to specific subgroups of the population.”
The Best Sleep Doctor in Every State – Reader’s Digest
Read article – A list of the best sleep doctors in every state includes Michael Sateia, active emeritus professor of psychiatry.
NH First Responders Making House Calls to Treat Overdose Cases – Sun News
Read article – An article about a new program that allows communities to set up “mobile Safe Stations” mentions research by Lisa Marsch, the Andrew G. Wallace Professor and professor of psychiatry and of The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, who contributed to a study supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. According to Marsch, deaths resulting from fentanyl-related overdoses increased by 1,629 percent from 2010 to 2015, people in New Hampshire are producing fentanyl in their homes using standard kitchen blenders, and people are having difficulty accessing Narcan.
New Machine Learning Method Could Prevent Unnecessary Breast Surgery – Technology Networks
Read article – An article about how Saeed Hassanpour, assistant professor of biomedical data science and of epidemiology, led a research team that found a machine learning method to predict the likelihood that a high-risk atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) breast lesion is cancerous.
Expert Lays Out Mystery of Why Some Gout Is Non-Inflammatory – Healio
Read article – An article about the different factors that play into gout quotes William Rigby, professor of medicine and of microbiology and immunology. “To get inflammation in the joint, we usually work from the construct that there are many factors,” says Rigby. “No joint inflammation arises spontaneously.”