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Duke Heart News for the Week Ending January 26th 2020

J.J. Bax Visits Duke Heart as Inaugural Pamela S. Douglas, MD Duke CV Imaging Visiting Scholar

Jeroen J. Bax of Leiden University in the Netherlands presented our Cardiology Grand Rounds last week. Bax is the immediate past president of the ESC and highly regarded as leading clinical cardiologist in Europe.  Bax joined us as the inaugural Pamela S. Douglas, MD Duke CV Imaging Visiting Scholar.

The visit highlighted the importance of putting imaging, clinical research and clinical care all in one path and practice.  The DCRI noon lecture and the Grand Rounds were amazing were amazing examples of how imaging and clinical research can be done.  They served as a great example to honor the work that Dr. Douglas has done throughout her career.

Piccini to Lead Electrophysiology Section

We are excited to announce that Jonathan Piccini, MD, MHS, Associate Professor of Medicine with Tenure will assume the role of Director of the Cardiac Electrophysiology Section in Duke’s Division of Cardiology. Jon graduated from the Northwestern University Medical School, completed his internal medicine training at Johns Hopkins, and completed his cardiology and electrophysiology fellowships here at Duke.

Since joining the faculty in 2011, Jon has been dedicated to patient care, education, and research. He has many accomplishments during his time here at Duke, but most remarkable has been his ability to establish and grow both clinical and research programs. He has spearheaded the lead management program, now one of the world’s largest programs, through team-based collaboration with the cardiothoracic surgery and radiology programs to achieve a remarkable safety record. He has also established new programs at Duke, including the Arrhythmia Core Lab at the DCRI and expanded others including the Duke Center for Atrial Fibrillation. He has also been a champion for collaboration including working with Duke Anesthesia and the heart failure section to develop the Neurocardiology Service. Jon is a recognized leader in the field of electrophysiology, serving as the chair and PI for several national and international clinical studies testing new treatments for heart rhythm disorders. Most importantly he has mentored and guided several EP fellows into successful academic medicine careers.

We are very excited to see Jon lead our electrophysiology group. Jon expressed that he is “honored and excited to have the opportunity to serve the Duke EP community in its mission to discover and deliver outstanding and innovative care to those with heart rhythm disorders. I am excited and thankful to work with our EP group to continue and build on the great legacy of Duke EP.”

Daubert Named Senior Vice Chief, Division of Cardiology

We are excited to announce that Jim Daubert, MD, has agreed to take on the role of Senior Vice Chief for the Division of Cardiology in the Duke Department of Medicine. In this role, he will serve as a key leader in the redesign of our heart service line as we look to deliver high quality care and value to patients across the region, Duke University Health System and Duke Heart Network. 

Jim was a Duke Chief Resident, Cardiology and Electrophysiology (EP) fellow. Following fellowship, he started the EP program at the University of Rochester Medical Center in 1992, where he helped lead the influential MADIT trials, before returning to Duke in 2009 to head up the EP section. Over the last 10 years, Jim has led the significant growth in the EP section, recruited many of our current EP faculty, and overseen our expansion of clinical and research programs.  Jim has done all of this while remaining a leader in the field of electrophysiology receiving the JACC Simon Dack Award for Outstanding Scholarship; Serving as Associate Editor, JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology since 2014; serving as a Member of the Governance Committee of the Heart Rhythm Society; and Chair of the Program Directors Subcommittee of the Fellowship Committee of Heart Rhythm Society. Perhaps most importantly, Jim has been a thoughtful leader who has helped our Division grow the next generation of EP leaders while ensuring quality arrhythmia care. He will join the ABIM CCEP Exam Committee in 2020.

We look forward to having Jim be a part of Heart Leadership.

Mentz to Lead Heart Failure Section

We are delighted to announce that Robert J. Mentz, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine and Population Health will assume the role of Director of the Heart Failure Section. Rob graduated from the Emory University School of Medicine, completed his internal medicine residency at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and completed his cardiology and heart failure fellowships here at the Duke Heart Center. He has numerous accomplishments as a clinician and as a cardiovascular investigator. He currently serves as an Associate Editor at Circulation: Heart Failure and has been named a rising star by the American College of Cardiology. We are excited about his willingness to serve as Director. His tremendous work in the heart failure community and as a clinical trialist has significantly advanced the care and outcomes of patients with heart failure. From an early stage, Rob has demonstrated skills and success as a mentor that have shown his passion and ability as a leader. Rob has demonstrated these talents in his service to the Division as the Director of the Duke University Cooperative Cardiovascular Society (DUCCS), which he revitalized with new energy. He has also shown his ability to successfully mentor in the Duke Heart Center, the DCRI, and the Department of Population Health – in addition to his role as an Associate Program Director for the Cardiology Fellowship Program. We look forward to having Rob work with the leadership team to execute the vision for the future of our heart failure section and its role in leading the country in patient care, medical education, and clinical investigation.

Please join us in recognizing and thanking G. Michael Felker, MD, MHS, Professor of Medicine, who has served in this role since 2013. While serving as the Heart Failure section Chief, Mike was inducted into the American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI) in 2014, led and coordinated several multi-center trials, and was awarded the Robert M. Califf Award for Excellence in Mentoring in 2017. He currently serves as the principal investigator for the NIH funded Heart Failure Network and the Center Director for the Duke AHA Strategically Focused Research Network (SFRN) grant studying the overlap of HF and Diabetes. He has also been an Associate Editor for JACC-HF since 2012 and is the co-editor of Heart Failure, the leading heart failure textbook.

As Section Chief, under Mike’s leadership the section has grown from 8 to 19 faculty and we have experienced a dramatic growth in both Heart Transplant and VAD care. He also led the redesign of the HF inpatient services (Tx, VAD, HFS) in the setting of this ongoing clinical growth. Additionally, he helped start the Advanced Heart Failure/Transplant Cardiology ACGME Fellowship. Mike has identified and supported several junior and mid-career faculty, and has mentored over 23 past and current fellows.  Over 60 percent of these fellows have attained academic appointments. Additionally, more than 50 percent of the HF section faculty have NIH funding. Mike is currently also serving as the DCRI Transformation Strategic Planning leader and on the DCRI Executive Director Search Committee. He has done all this with humility, humor, and truly a servant mindset. We thank Mike for his incredible leadership of the HF Section and look forward to his continued leadership in the Division.

 

DUHS CAREhub Initiative

Over the past few months, Duke University Health System has begun an effort to figure out how we can better use our beds across all three hospitals. Termed CAREhub, this effort has four main groups (see image). Several members of the Duke Heart team have been involved in this work, as have team members from other service lines. We’ll provide updates as their work continues. The overall goal is to help all service lines achieve their goals while making their day-to-day processes easier to manage (i.e. reduction in transfer delays, fewer bed holds, etc.).

Shout-out to Spates, Yankey

Anna Lisa Crowley shared the following this week, from Kim Nolte, a PA in Duke Gynecologic Oncology: “I wanted to let you know about the fantastic job your fellows did today. I had a patient coming to the cancer center for a problem visit, who fell when she was walking in. Dr. George Yankey and Dr. Toi Spates stopped and helped my patient. They assessed her acutely and then helped her to check in at the cancer center. She was so appreciative of how kind they were to her and what a great job they did taking care of her. After they ensured the patient was taken care of they came and found me in clinic to let me know what happened. They both really went above and beyond to ensure the patient was taken care of and that appropriate hand-off had been given.”

Sipa and Toi, you’re superstars! Way to represent Duke Heart!!

2019 Year in Review: Last Call for Accomplishments

Final call for your 2019 accomplishments! We are looking for important discoveries, grants, papers of note, clinical programs, or innovations that we can highlight for the School of Medicine and the Health System.

Please send your list via email to Tracey Koepke and Manesh Patel by tomorrow, Jan. 27, so that we can work to catalog your accomplishments from the past year. Many thanks to those of you who have shared your work with us so far!

Duke Health ‘Live’: The Power of You

This week!!! Join Dr. Eugene Washington, Chancellor, and your Duke Health colleagues for the chancellor’s annual address.

Tuesday, January 28

4 -5 p.m.

Great Hall, Trent Semans Center

Reception to follow

 

Upcoming Opportunities/Save the Date:

GME Special Visiting Professor, Carol Bernstein

The Office of Graduate Medical Education has invited Carol Bernstein, MD, Vice Chair for Faculty and Well-Being at Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein School of Medicine, to visit Duke this week. She is a psychiatrist, co-chaired the ACGME’s Task Force on Physician Well-Being and is the recipient of many teaching and professional awards.  She is a national expert on the topics of burnout, depression, and physician suicide.

The plenary session on Monday afternoon, Stress, Burnout & Depression Among Physicians: Challenges & Opportunities, will be live-streamed and recorded. (Click here to access.) This is a good opportunity to learn from a national authority on a truly important and relevant topic.

 

Cardiology Grand Rounds

This week we welcome Erin Michos, director of Women’s Cardiovascular Health at Johns Hopkins, for Sex and Gender and their Impact on the Cardiovascular Health of Women. Please join us on Tuesday, Jan. 28. 7:15 a.m., DN 2003.

Upcoming Grand Rounds:

  • February 4: Fellow presentation by Titus Ngeno. Topic: central line-associated bloodstream infections
  • February 11: Cary Ward
  • February 18: Chris Longenecker, Case Western
  • March 24: Carolyn Lam, Duke-NUS
  • April 14: Ryan Tedford, MUSC
  • May 12: Michelle Kittleson, Cedars Sinai

 

National Heart Month

February is national Heart Month. Key dates to make note of are:

  • 7 – Wear Red Day. If you’re on social media and interested in posting, please tag our local AHA affiliate by using #goredtriangle.
  • 7-14: Congenital Heart Defect Week
  • 28: Triangle Heart Ball, Raleigh Convention Center

 

Save the Date: ACC 2020 Reception, Chicago!

The annual Duke ACC Reception will be held March 28 from 5:30-8:30 p.m. in the Grant Park Room at the Hyatt Regency, Chicago.

 

Have news to share?

If you have news to share with the Pulse readership, please contact Tracey Koepke, director of communications for Duke Heart at tracey.koepke@duke.edu. We would love to hear about your latest accomplishments, professional news, cool happenings, and any events or opportunities that may be of interest to our Duke Heart family. Please call with any questions: 919-681-2868. Feedback on Pulse is welcome and encouraged.

Duke Heart in the News:

January 17 — E. Magnus Ohman

Medscape

‘Uber of Interventional Cardiology’ Pushes Stents Over Surgery

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/923926?src=rss

January 22 — Yuichiro Yano (Family Medicine & Community Health)

Health Day

‘Yo-Yo’ Blood Pressure Numbers in Youth a Bad Sign for Health Later

http://bit.ly/2TVtq6a

 

 

Duke Heart Week ending January 19th 2020

Highlights of the week:

This week we welcome Jeroen J. Bax of Leiden University in the Netherlands. Bax is the inaugural Pamela S. Douglas, MD Visiting Scholar. The title of his talk is “Comprehensive Multimodality Imaging in Coronary Artery Disease”. Please join us on Tuesday, Jan. 21. 5 p.m., DN 2003. A reception will follow at the Nasher Museum of Art starting at 6:15 p.m.

2019 Year in Review: Call for Accomplishments

It’s not too late! We are still accepting your submissions as we capture your accomplishments and highlights for 2019. We are looking for important discoveries, grants, papers of note, clinical programs, or innovations that we can highlight for the School of Medicine and the Health System.

Please send an email to Tracey Koepke and Manesh Patel so that we can work to catalog your accomplishments from the past year. Once we have them all compiled, we will share the 2019 highlights with you all. Many thanks to those of you who have shared your work with us so far!  We hope to finalize all of the updates by January 27th 2020.

Tucker to Serve as Clinical Lead, DUH CT Stepdown – 3100, Effective March 16th

We are pleased to announce that Sarah Tucker, RN, PCCN will become Clinical Lead for Duke University Hospital’s Cardiothoracic Stepdown – 3100 Unit, effective Monday, March 16. Tucker joined the Duke Heart team in 2013 as a staff nurse on 3100 and is poised to earn her Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington at the beginning of March.

Tucker has previous experience as a nursing care assistant in the Emergency Department at Duke Regional Hospital. She has been an integral part of building our successful team through her commitments as a unit preceptor, charge nurse, IV Champion, CPC Committee Tri-Chair, Unit Orientation Committee member, and Unit Scheduling Committee member. She is an active member of AACN and has been nominated for several awards including NC Great 100 and Friends of Nursing.

Tucker holds an Associates of Health Sciences degree from Mount Olive (2013) and a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration and Marketing from North Carolina State University (2009).

Please join us in congratulating and welcoming Sarah to her new role!

 

Duke Health ‘Live’: The Power of You

Please join Dr. Eugene Washington, Chancellor, and your Duke Health colleagues for the chancellor’s annual address on January 28 to learn more about the vital role each of us play in the success of Duke Health, and how we will continue to excel in 2020. Note: many of the highlights include work done by our Duke Heart team members!

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

4 -5 p.m.

Great Hall, Trent Semans Center

Reception to follow

 

The event will be available through a live stream for those who cannot join in person. We hope to have details for you next weekend on how you and your staff can view the live stream. All faculty, staff and students from Duke Health are invited and encouraged to attend.

 

Upcoming Opportunities/Save the Date:

Cardiology Grand Rounds

Upcoming Grand Rounds:

  • January 28: Erin Michos, Johns Hopkins. Sex and Gender and their Impact on the Cardiovascular Health of Women.
  • February 4: Fellow presentation by Titus Ngeno
  • February 11: Cary Ward
  • February 18: Chris Longenecker, Case Western
  • March 24: Carolyn Lam, Duke-NUS
  • April 14: Ryan Tedford, MUSC
  • May 12: Michelle Kittleson, Cedars Sinai

 

Save the Date: ACC 2020 Reception, Chicago!

The annual Duke ACC Reception will be held March 28 from 5:30-8:30 p.m. in the Grant Park Room at the Hyatt Regency, Chicago. The DCRI event planning team will be sending additional information later this week. Be sure to check your email!

Have news to share?

If you have news to share with the Pulse readership, please contact Tracey Koepke, director of communications for Duke Heart at tracey.koepke@duke.edu. We would love to hear about your latest accomplishments, professional news, cool happenings, and any events or opportunities that may be of interest to our Duke Heart family. Please call with any questions: 919-681-2868. Feedback on Pulse is welcome and encouraged.

Duke Heart in the News:

January 10 — Patrick Pun (Nephrology; DCRI)

Medpage Today

Dialysis Patients at No Disadvantage After In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

https://www.medpagetoday.com/nephrology/esrd/84294

January 13 — Michael Nanna and Eric Peterson

Cardiovascular Business

99% of MI patients eligible for newer secondary prevention therapies

https://www.cardiovascularbusiness.com/topics/acute-coronary-syndrome/many-mi-patients-eligible-newer-therapies

January 13 — Duke University Hospital (DCD heart transplant)

Cardiovascular Business

DCD donor hearts could help ease organ shortages

http://bit.ly/2R3X8nJ

January 15 — Jacob Schroder

Healio/Cardiology Today

Q&A: New heart transplant protocol could expand donor pool

http://bit.ly/2R572Fv

January 16 — Jacob Schroder

STAT

‘Donation after cardiac death’: New heart transplant method being tested for the first time in the U.S.

http://bit.ly/373TOOT

January 16 — Jonathan Piccini

Healio/Cardiology Today

Key opinion leaders discuss top news from 2019

http://bit.ly/2tjecwZ

Duke Heart Newsletter Week ending January 12th 2020

Matt Roe to Leave to become Chief Medical Officer of Verana Health

This week we share the bittersweet news around the transition of one of our Faculty members. Matthew Roe will be leaving the Duke at the end of January to join Verana Health as their Chief Medical Officer, an exciting new role created within this dynamic start-up company. Although we surely will miss Matt, this is a notable opportunity for him to leverage his wealth of experience to help lead an up-and-coming company in the health data science sector.

Matt has been a real leader at Duke both in clinical care and a champion for the DCRI. He has  led significant trials and studies across the organization over the past 20 years, in addition to serving as a senior cardiologist at Duke Heart. Matt established his legacy here with outstanding clinical care and leadership of the DCRI Fellowship program, the reinvigoration of the DCRI Think Tanks program, and his role helping to co-lead the innovative ADAPTABLE trial along with other faculty and operational colleagues. Furthermore, Matt has been dedicated to building new and exciting partnerships with our industry sponsors and global academic collaborators.

Matt will be adjunct faculty position in the Division of Cardiology, and he intends to catalyze new partnership and collaboration opportunities for the DCRI in his new role.  Matt has been a selfless team member, leader, and role model for many of our fellows and faculty.  He will be missed, but we look forward to working with him in the future.  When you see him – please wish him the best.

2019 Year in Review: Call for Accomplishments

We are in the process of capturing our accomplishments and highlights for 2019. We don’t always capture or hear about all the great things you are doing. We are looking for important discoveries, grants, papers of note, clinical programs, or innovations that we can highlight for the School of Medicine and the Health System.

Please send an email to Tracey Koepke and Manesh Patel so that we can work to catalog your accomplishments from the past year. Once we have them all compiled with will share the 2019 highlights with you all. Many thanks to those of you who have shared your work with us so far!

Faculty and Fellows Gather to Get Ready for next phase of Cardiovascular Critical Care Trials Network

Thanks Chris and Bradi for hosting – sounds like it was a great time.

Meng Joins CT Anesthesia Faculty

Please join us in welcoming Marie-Louise Meng, MD to the Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology faculty. Meng obtained her medical degree from Harvard and completed residency and fellowships in adult Cardiothoracic Anesthesia and Obstetrical Anesthesiology at Columbia University, where she was on faculty for three years prior to joining our Duke team this month. She brings unique areas of expertise in the management of high risk obstetric patients with advanced cardiac conditions and in peripartum hemorrhage. She will divide her time between providing Cardiothoracic and Obstetric anesthesia care. Many thanks to Mihai Podgoreanu for sharing this great news with us. Welcome to Duke, Marie-Louise!

 

Shout-out to the CTICU APP team:

Our inpatient Cardiology APP team leaders would like to recognize and thank the CTICU APP team leaders for working creatively and collaboratively to cover shifts during a last minute staffing shortage in Cardiology. When no one from the Cardiology APP team was able to cover a shift where we were down by two staff members, Lynn McGugan and Peg Murphy were able to float a staff member, Dayana Ramos, to the Cardiology team. This led to much safer care for the patients. Hats off to Dayana for joining our team for two days in a row! We appreciate the camaraderie and team work. – Stephanie Barnes, Todd McVeigh. Great job, everyone – this is what being on a team is all about!

CT Surgery Evidence Based Care Update

Heart nursing leadership team members from Duke Regional and Duke University Hospitals met up this week for a dress rehearsal and final planning for rolling out the Duke CT Surgery Evidence Based Care; the rollout will take place on February 10. The multidisciplinary committee met January 9 for a final approval and implementation planning session that included updated order sets and patient and staff educational materials.

A special thanks to the project leaders including Jill Engel, Myra Ellis, Ashley Barba, Kelly Kester, and Drs. Annemarie Thompson, Jeff Gaca, Peter Smith and Carmelo Milano. This is an amazing example of teamwork and Duke Heart leading in the field!

Many thanks to the planning team members who were able to join our dinner event on Jan. 9th.

 

Duke Health ‘Live’: The Power of You

Duke Health reached new heights of excellence and impact this past year. Whether in patient care, research, education or building healthy communities, we advanced health together. And there is a reason we’ve been so successful. Please join Dr. Eugene Washington, Chancellor, and your Duke Health colleagues on January 28 to learn more about the vital role each of us play in the success of Duke Health, and how we will continue to excel in 2020. Note: many of the highlights include work done by our Duke Heart team members!

SAVE THE DATE:

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

4 -5 p.m.

Great Hall, Trent Semans Center

Reception to follow

The event will be available through a live stream for those who cannot join in person; details for how to view the live stream will be shared prior to the 28th. All faculty, staff and students from Duke Health are invited and encouraged to attend.

Duke Cardio-Oncology Conference, Feb. 22

The Duke Cardio-Oncology Conference: Improving Cancer Outcomes and Optimizing Cardiovascular Health will be held on Saturday, Feb. 22 from 8 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. at the Washington Duke Inn & Conference Center, Durham, NC. To learn more or to register, please visit: http://www.dukecancerinstitute.org/events/duke-cardio-oncology-conference-0

ICYMI

Congratulations to Todd McVeigh and Chelsey Moore, two of our Duke Heart physician assistants, for their recent paper published in the Journal of the American Academy of Physician Assistants. They submitted a complicated patient case write up, “What is causing this patient’s recurrent cough and dyspnea?” Their paper can be found here: https://insights.ovid.com/crossref?an=01720610-202001000-00012. Nice job!

Shout-out to Capps

We are sending a belated shout-out to Gabrielle Capps, RN for quickly identifying an OSH transfer who needed immediate triage and escalation of care, and helped with a smooth RRT on the evening of Dec. 27. You did a great job, Gabrielle, and we thank Jordan Hausladen and Stephanie Barnes for letting us know. Keep up the great work!

 

Upcoming Opportunities/Save the Date:

Cardiology Grand Rounds

This week, on Tuesday, Jan. 14, Karen Alexander and an invited patient/clinical trial participant will discuss the ISCHEMIA trial results. Please join us! 7:15 a.m., DN 2003.

Upcoming Grand Rounds:

  • January 21 5 pm (Special Time): Jeroen Bax, Leiden University, Netherlands – Visiting Pam Douglas Lecture in Cardiovascular Imaging.  There will be a reception to follow.
  • January 28: Erin Michos, Johns Hopkins
  • February 4: Fellow presentation by Titus Ngeno
  • February 11: Cary Ward
  • February 18: Chris Longenecker, Case Western
  • March 24: Carolyn Lam, Duke-NUS
  • April 14: Ryan Tedford, MUSC
  • May 12: Michelle Kittleson, Cedars Sinai

Save the Date: ACC 2020 Reception, Chicago!

The annual Duke ACC Reception will be held March 28 from 5:30-8:30 p.m. in the Grant Park Room at the Hyatt Regency, Chicago. The DCRI event planning team will be sending additional information later this week. Be sure to check your email!

Have news to share?

If you have news to share with the Pulse readership, please contact Tracey Koepke, director of communications for Duke Heart at tracey.koepke@duke.edu. We would love to hear about your latest accomplishments, professional news, cool happenings, and any events or opportunities that may be of interest to our Duke Heart family. Please call with any questions: 919-681-2868. Feedback on Pulse is welcome and encouraged.

Duke Heart in the News:

December 21 — Adam DeVore

Medscape

Sacubitril/valsartan Switch Further Curbs NT-proBNP Levels in HF Patients

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/922916

December 27 — Richard C. Becker/Duke School of Medicine (adjunct)

Medscape

Many US Adults Unaware of Basic MI Symptoms

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/923166?src=rss#vp_2

December 28 — Jacob Schroder

Live Science

How Long Can Organs Stay Outside the Body Before Being Transplanted?

https://www.livescience.com/how-long-can-donated-organs-last-before-transplant.html

December 30 — Duke mention

WRAL Tech Wire

Duke University gets $130 million in funding to accelerate drug discovery

Duke University gets $130 million in funding to accelerate drug discovery

 

December 30 — Audrey Blewer (Family Medicine & Community Health)

HealthDay

AHA News: Bystander CPR Less Common in Hispanic Neighborhoods

http://bit.ly/39Y8yR5

January 1 — Renato Lopes

Reuters

Cutting out alcohol may reduce atrial fibrillation episodes

https://reut.rs/36CwxDy

January 6 — Chiara Melloni

HealthDay/AHA News

AHA News: Statins May Do Double Duty on Heart Disease and Cancer

http://bit.ly/35BwEOo

January 7 — Chiara Melloni

Beloit Daily News (Madison, WI)/AHA News

Statins May Do Double Duty on Heart Disease and Cancer

https://www.beloitdailynews.com/article/20200106/AP/301069856

January 7 — Duke University Health System mention

Becker’s Hospital Review/Hospital CFO Report

7 health systems with strong finances

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/7-health-systems-with-strong-finances-01072020.html

January 7 — Cris Slentz

International Business Times

Remove Dangerous Belly Fat By Performing This Exercise Every Day

https://www.ibtimes.com/remove-dangerous-belly-fat-performing-exercise-every-day-2897001

 

January 8 — Patrick Pun (Nephrology)

Healio/Nephrology

Patients with ESKD had lower resuscitation scores, similar cardiac arrest survivorship vs controls

http://bit.ly/2R1nFAz

 

January 9 — DCRI mention

Bloomberg.com

Two Big Drug Flops Show How Health-Care Economics Have Changed

https://bloom.bg/37YjkF5

 

January 9 — Sunil Rao

TCTMD/the heart beat

Diabetes Does Not Appear to Hinder FFR Insights for CAD

https://www.tctmd.com/news/diabetes-does-not-appear-hinder-ffr-insights-cad