Read article – Jay Buckey, professor of medicine and adjunct professor of engineering, is quoted about a recent paper that examined how deep space travel may have affected the cardiovascular health of Apollo astronauts. Buckey notes that unexplored risk factors could also explain why two Apollo astronauts died of cardiovascular disease. “Were they smokers? Did they have a family history of heart disease? Did they have high cholesterol? Those are all factors that could lead to heart disease, without having to bring galactic cosmic radiation into the mix,” says Buckey.
In the News
Fritz Wetherbee: Dr. Nathan Smith and Cornish (Video) – WMUR
Watch story – WMUR-TV story examines the life and career of Nathan Smith, who founded Dartmouth’s Geisel School of Medicine in 1797. Smith was the school’s only professor for 10 years, and during his time at the College he treated the leg injury of six-year-old Joseph Smith, who later became the founder of the Mormon religion.
Opioid Contracts, Meant to Curb Addiction, Can Harm Patients – STAT News
Read article – An opinion piece by Tim Lahey, associate professor of medicine, microbiology and immunology, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, about a patient he lost to the opioid epidemic and, potentially, to unintended consequences of a measure providers are urged to use in the new legislation regarding opioid contracts just passed by the U.S. Senate, which Obama is expected to sign into law.
Cancer Center Advertising Soars – Medpage Today
Read article – Lisa Schwartz, professor of medicine, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, and Steven Woloshin, professor of medicine, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, are quoted about how cancer center ads “generally make appeals based on emotion—not fact,” and that “hope can—and often does—morph into hype.”
Does More Technology Bring Us Better Health Care? – The Huffington Post
Read article – Article cites a book co-authored by Elliott Fisher, director of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, and H. Gilbert Welch, professor of medicine, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, where they discuss how there are diminishing returns to many technological advances in healthcare.
Parasite proteins prompt immune system to fight off ovarian tumors in mice – MedicalXpress
Read article – Features research by David Bzik, professor of microbiology and immunology, and colleagues at the Geisel School of Medicine that found a safe, non-reproducing vaccine strain of T. gondii could cure mice of several types of solid tumors. (Similar coverage in Irish Mirror, The Star, The Sun.)
Health Risk for Women Who Donate Their Eggs? – Gulf News
Read article – Judy E. Stern, professor of obstetrics and gynecology and professor of pathology, is quoted about the potential health risks of egg donation.
Why New Hampshire’s Medical Marijuana Law Shuts Out People With Chronic Pain – NHPR
Read article – Gilbert Fanciullo, professor of anesthesiology, and Seddon Savage, adjunct associate professor of anesthesiology and former president of the American Pain Society, are both interviewed about their views on medical marijuana and the effectiveness of New Hampshire’s medical marijuana program.
Sunscreen Just Part of the Regimen – Fosters
Read article – Quotes Joi Carter, assistant professor of surgery, about how children under six months old, instead of using sunscreen, should be kept out of direct sun. “After six months, I recommend using sun protective clothing and hats as much as possible and then use zinc oxide or titanium dioxide based sunscreens with at least SPF 30 for the remaining exposed skin,” says Carter.
Worst Health Ranking in the State – The Richmond Register
Read article – Article mentions hospital referral regions, developed by the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, are health-care markets with at least one hospital where complex surgeries are performed that are widely used in health-services research and policy analysis.