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Dartmouth Alumni Relations
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Words, Wit, and Wisdom from Dartmouth Commencement Speeches
Phil Lord and Chris Miller's Commencement Address at Dartmouth College
Phil Lord and Chris Miller deliver the commencement address to the Dartmouth Class of 2023.
2024-05-31
19 min
Words, Wit, and Wisdom from Dartmouth Commencement Speeches
Russell Wilson's Commencement Address at Dartmouth College
Russell Wilson delivers the commencement address to the Dartmouth Class of 2023
2024-05-31
18 min
Admissions Beat
Interpreting Testing: Your Scores May Be Stronger Than You Think
What constitutes a strong SAT or ACT score? What do admissions officers mean when they say they consider scores in context? If a college is test-optional, should you submit your scores, or if it requires testing, are your scores strong enough to apply? The answers may surprise you. To talk through these and other questions, AB host and Dartmouth Dean of Admissions Lee Coffin is joined by Dartmouth professors Bruce Sacerdote and Michelle Tine, whose research helped inform Dartmouth’s recent decision to reinstate admissions testing requirements, and Jacques Steinberg, co-author of “The College Conversation,” an admissions guide for parent...
2024-03-26
43 min
All the Difference
Change Through Policy with Oliver Edelson '18
In this episode we interview Oliver Edelson ‘18. Oliver currently serves as Legislative Director for Congressman Chris Pappas, first district of New Hampshire (NH-01), where he develops and leads the Congressman’s policy agenda. He also manages Rep. Pappas’s service on the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Oliver has held several legislative positions on the Hill and most recently spent two years in the office of Congressman Mike Levin (CA-49). He has also worked on several campaigns, including serving as Policy Director for the Chris Pappas for Congress campaign during the 2020 election cycle. While at Dartmouth, Oliver led Plate of the...
2024-01-11
24 min
The D-Brief
Fleecing, Frost, and Frackets
Every weekend during the winter, Dartmouth students venture through the brisk winds of Hanover to party at fraternities. Of course, for warmth, they bring a jacket -- better known as a frat jacket or "fracket." Normally, this is a more disposable article of winter garb in case of the unfortunate event that someone steals it. This has become an odd ritual at Dartmouth: fracket theft. Someone takes a jacket, then that person takes a different jacket, and so on. It's a never-ending cycle of thievery. In this special issue episode of The D-Brief, host Levi Port walks us through...
2023-02-10
28 min
Rocky Talk
#310 Rocky Talk – Coeducation at Dartmouth
This episode's guest is Lynn Mather, SUNY Distinguished Service Professor Emerita, University at Buffalo School of Law and here she discusses her experiences teaching at Dartmouth. Lynn Mather taught in Dartmouth’s Government Department for 30 years. During that time, she served as Acting Director of the Rockefeller Center, chaired the Government Department, and co-founded the Women’s Studies program. She received the Distinguished Teaching Award in 1995 and held the Nelson A. Rockefeller Chair in Government. Interview by Dartmouth student Kyle Mullins '22. Edited by Laura Hemlock. Music: Debussy Arabesque no 1. Composer: Claude Debussy
2022-11-22
28 min
Dartmouth Heritage Museum presents Dartmyth - Stories From the Darkside
DartMyth: Stories from the Darkside - The Murder of Mary Russell
[ CONTENT WARNING: Domestic Violence ] If you or someone you know is in need of support, the following resources exist: Mental Health Mobile Crisis Team - 902-429-8167 or 1-800-429-8167 Avalon Sexual Assault Centre - 902-425-0122 Adsum House 902-423-5049 Kids Help Line 1-800-668-6868 211 in Nova Scotia is private and confidential - they will provide you with resources that are available in the area in which you live. ----- This episode of DartMyth tells the story of the murder of Mary Russell. DartMyth: Stories from the Darkside is produced in-house by Dartmouth Heritage Museum, and features...
2022-09-01
07 min
Words, Wit, and Wisdom from Dartmouth Commencement Speeches
Jake Tapper's Commencement Address at Dartmouth College
Jake Tapper ’91 delivers the commencement address to the Dartmouth Class of 2017.
2022-06-10
22 min
Words, Wit, and Wisdom from Dartmouth Commencement Speeches
Fred Rogers' Commencement Address at Dartmouth College
Everyone's favorite neighbor, Fred Rogers ’50, delivers the commencement address to the Dartmouth Class of 2002.
2022-06-10
16 min
Words, Wit, and Wisdom from Dartmouth Commencement Speeches
Yo-Yo Ma Commencement Address at Dartmouth College
Yo-Yo Ma delivers the commencement address to the Dartmouth Class of 2019
2022-06-10
17 min
Words, Wit, and Wisdom from Dartmouth Commencement Speeches
Mindy Kaling's Commencement Address at Dartmouth College
"I’m giving you permission to root for yourself. And while you’re at it, root for those around you, too. It took me a long time to realize that success isn’t a zero-sum game," Mindy Kaling ’01 told the Dartmouth Class of 2018."Don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t do something, but especially not yourself. Go conquer the world. Just remember this: Why not you? You made it this far."Transcript.
2022-06-10
17 min
Words, Wit, and Wisdom from Dartmouth Commencement Speeches
Annette Gordon-Reed's Commencement Address at Dartmouth College
"I learned many things here, but what I value most was the validation of an enthusiasm that often gives birth to passion, because passion is absolutely required to do anything with excellence—whether it is writing a book, making a movie, raising children, or maintaining friendships," Annette Gordon-Reed ’81 told Dartmouth's Class of 2021.Transcript.
2022-06-09
14 min
Words, Wit, and Wisdom from Dartmouth Commencement Speeches
Conan O'Brien's Commencement Speech at Dartmouth College
"The point is this: it is our failure to become our perceived ideal that ultimately defines us and makes us unique. It's not easy but if you accept your misfortune and handle it right, you're perceived failure can become a catalyst for profound reinvention," Conan O'Brien told Dartmouth's Class of 2011.
2022-06-09
24 min
The D-Brief
Dancing, Drugs, and Darties
Every Spring, Dartmouth College hosts the Green Key concert: a weekend-long festival of music, food, and partying. For students, this means a much-need break from the library... and a lot more sex, drugs, and rock'n'roll. Students, alumni, and faculty all mark their calendars for this specific Dartmouth tradition. In its first episode ever, The D-Brief explores the fascination of the holy Green Key weekend and how it came into existence at all. Guest: Maya Kempf-Harris, an investigative reporter for The Dartmouth Hosted by Levi Port and Ella von Baeyer
2022-05-19
38 min
The Search with Lee Coffin
Coming Soon: Admissions Beat, a new podcast series by Lee Coffin from Dartmouth College
At a time when college applications are rising sharply and the most selective colleges are more competitive than ever, there's a lot of news—and noise—about college admissions. But how much of the chatter is accurate? And how much is just fear-mongering or gossip? For straight talk from experts who know the score, turn into our new series, Admissions Beat. Each week, Lee Coffin, Vice Provost and Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid at Dartmouth College, will consider some of the top admissions headlines and hot topics from the national admissions beat. A roundtable of experts will offer conv...
2021-10-13
04 min
A Walk Around Occom
Jake Tapper '91: The 2020 Election and His Journey After Dartmouth
CNN Anchor, Jake Tapper '91, sits down with Professor Charles Wheelan '88, at a recent Rockefeller Center event to discuss the outcome of the recent election and his career journey after Dartmouth.
2020-12-10
1h 00
The Ballot, a Dartmouth Podcast
The Ballot, a Dartmouth Podcast - Episode 6
Join Georgetown University and Smithsonian Institution professor and scholar Daniel Lucey ’77 MED’81 in conversation with Geisel School of Medicine and Thayer School of Engineering professor Kendall Hoyt for a discussion on the world's response to COVID-19 and pandemics past and future. Lucey is an infectious disease expert and "epidemic chaser," as described in a recent Financial Times article, who has traveled the world to get to the source of diseases like HIV, SARS, and Ebola. Hoyt is an authority on bioterrorism, technology, and vaccine development and is a member of the Global Health Security Initiative at Dartmouth's Dickey Center for Interna...
2020-11-02
37 min
The Ballot, a Dartmouth Podcast
The Ballot, a Dartmouth Podcast - Episode 1
Join our host, Professor Mike Mastanduno, as we explore the November election with Dartmouth faculty experts and dynamic alumni special guests. Episode 1 features a discussion on remote campaigning, unprecedented conventions, and mail-in voting with Professor Emerita Linda Fowler and Democratic communications strategist Lis Smith '05.
2020-08-14
00 min
A Walk Around Occom
Dr. Joanne Conroy '77: Dartmouth-Hitchcock on the Front Line
Dr. Joanne Conroy '77, CEO and President of Dartmouth-Hitchcock and Dartmouth-Hitchcock Health talks about the coronavirus's arrival in the Upper Valley, her vision for the future of health care, and tells stories from her own time as a medical student. It's a conversation full of hope and reassurance.
2020-05-02
41 min
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Lectures
Dartmouth’s Pediatric Clinical Trials Unit: Capacity Building in Pediatric Research
Pediatric Grand Rounds for Wednesday, September 26, 2017. Our presenters are Paul Palumbo, MD, Brian O’Sullivan, MD and Carolyn Murray, MD. Dr. Palumbo is a Professor of Pediatrics at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth and is a Pediatric Infectious Disease specialist at the Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth-Hitchcock. Dr. O’Sullivan is a Professor of Pediatrics at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth and is a Pediatric Pulmonologist at the Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth-Hitchcock. Dr. Murray is an Assistant Professor of Community and Family Medicine and the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice at the Geisel S...
2017-09-26
59 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
A Mere Mortal
A Mere Mortal Dr. Steven Schlozman wasn't terribly surprised when an insurance company rejected his request to prescribe a new treatment for a patient. And, as usual, he expected to spend personal time sitting on hold waiting to appeal the decision. But what startled him was the conversation that took place when he finally got through to a live human being. In this podcast, Schlozman—a 1994 graduate of the Brown-Dartmouth Program in Medicine—recounts what happened in this "rare and truly honest moment." This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2009 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Maga...
2009-06-18
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Dartmouth undergrad examines opioid death toll
Dartmouth undergrad examines opioid death toll Conducting the first comprehensive analysis of prescription opioid-related deaths in New Hampshire presented some special challenges for Laura Hester, a geography major in the Dartmouth College Class of 2009. It involved driving an hour each way from Hanover, N.H., to the Chief Medical Examiner's Office in Concord almost every other day for two months in the winter. It required combing through the 1,500 death certificates from 2003 to 2007 that were loosely classified as involving "toxic substances" in order to find the 488 deaths that were due to prescription opioids. And since the certificates exist only in paper...
2009-06-18
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Talking about health-care reform
Talking about health-care reform Everyone—from the Obama administration to your friends and neighbors—is talking about health-care reform. So in the Summer 2009 issue of Dartmouth Medicine magazine, alumni of Dartmouth Medical School from across the country answered questions about their practices and the changes they'd like to see made to the nation's health-care system. To find out more about what Americans who are patients rather than physicians are saying on this topic, Dartmouth Medicine spoke to people on the streets of White River Junction, Vt., and Hanover, N.H. They mentioned the wide array of medical challenges they face and...
2009-06-18
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Surviving cancer
Surviving cancer P.J. Hamel, a senior editor at King Arthur Flour Company, headquartered in Norwich, Vt., describes herself professionally as a "baker and blogger." She writes the King Arthur catalog, creates recipes, has written cookbooks, and blogs about baking on the company's website. And personally Hamel is, among many other roles, a cancer survivor--she was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2001 and over the next nine months had surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. She began blogging about cancer as well, shortly after her diagnosis. Writing, she says, is a thread that has run through her entire...
2009-03-11
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
A Patron of Positivity
A Patron of Positivity The summer after her first year of medical school, Dr. Julia Nordgren worked with Dr. Judy Frank, conducting research and shadowing Frank on rounds in the neonatal intensive care unit. What she learned from Frank changed her outlook on both medicine and life. "Judy Frank was clearly no ordinary woman in medicine," Nordgren says. In this podcast, originally published as an essay in the Spring 2009 issue of Dartmouth Medicine, Nordgren reflects on how her experiences that summer shaped her own career as a woman in medicine. This is a web extra to an article that appeared...
2009-03-11
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Lee Witters discusses the discovery of insulin
Lee Witters discusses the discovery of insulin One early prescription for diabetes involved drinking a pint and a half of milk for breakfast, eating rancid meat for dinner, and using hog's lard as skin lotion. Actually, explains Dr. Lee Witters, this treatment did some good simply by causing patients to eat less (no one likes rancid meat, after all). The discovery of insulin, which paved the way for more effective diabetes treatments, was one of the great advances in medical history, and it makes for quite a story. In this video, Witters discusses diabetes in ancient societies, the first descriptions...
2008-12-15
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
An interview with Dr. James Bernat, a history of DHMC's ethics committee, and more information on advance directives
An interview with Dr. James Bernat, a history of DHMC's ethics committee, and more information on advance directives Dr. James Bernat, an internationally recognized medical ethicist, is a professor of neurology at Dartmouth Medical School and head of the Ethics Committee at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. In 1997, and again in 2006, Bernat was one of several scholars invited to Rome to advise the Vatican on how to define death. Reporters from prominent media outlets--from the New York Times to People magazine--often ask him to comment on major ethics cases, especially those involving brain death. He was quoted widely, for example, on Terri...
2008-12-15
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Discovering New Darwins
Discovering New Darwins Charles Darwin was lucky. Without the financial support of his family, all of his powers of observation and analysis might have gone for naught. Today, of course, most scientists do not depend on their families to fund their research. Instead, the U.S. federal government began investing heavily in science in the mid-20th century. As a result, says Dr. Ethan Dmitrovsky, the United States has been a leader in the biomedical revolution. Dmitrovsky, a DMS professor of pharmacology and toxicology, argues in this audio essay that lagging support for research in recent years risks ending the...
2008-12-15
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Getting, and getting used to, a cochlear implant
Getting, and getting used to, a cochlear implant Geneva Durgin was 13 months old when she heard sound for the first time through a cochlear implant. Before the implant, she couldn't hear anything, even with hearing aids. Although Geneva spent the first year of her life in silence, she thrived developmentally, thanks in large part to sign language instruction and early intervention from the Vermont Center for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. Geneva's parents decided to get a cochlear implant for her because they thought it offered her the best chance at learning English and learning to talk. They also...
2008-09-20
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
An interview with José Conejo-Garcia
José Conejo-Garcia talks about his discovery of PILAR The immune system protects us from a host of pathogens, but in some cases it's actually the cause of health problems. T cells, a type of white blood cell that is a key player in the immune system, become activated when they encounter antigens. Usually, those antigens are signs that a pathogen is trying to get a foothold in the body, so the response of T cells is essential to fighting off disease. But when the antigen is actually a self-antigen--when it is part of the host and not an invader--a response b...
2008-09-20
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Inside Waste Management at DHMC
Inside Waste Management at DHMC Over 2,500 tons of trash pass through the waste management room at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center each year. Practicing good environmental stewardship while processing so much trash—some of it hazardous—requires a well-thought-out system. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer07/html/green.php
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Scenes from a Dartmouth Visit to Vietnam
Scenes from a Dartmouth Visit to Vietnam Last spring, the director of DMS's biomedical libraries, William Garrity, led a group of volunteers to Vietnam to launch the RICE pilot project. RICE, which stands for "remote interaction, consultation, and epidemiology," employs smartphones (such as the BlackBerry) to improve communication between rural health providers and the larger, central hospitals. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer07/html/vs_hanoi.php
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What are enteroviruses?
A Q&A with Dr. John Modlin about Enteroviruses Dr. John Modlin, an international expert in childhood infectious diseases, is the chair the Department of Pediatrics at DHMC and a professor of pediatrics (infectious disease) and of medicine at DMS. He is the former chair of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; has served on many other influential national committees and advisory groups; and has authored more than 150 papers on the development and prevention of human enterovirus infections, poliovirus immunization, public policy on immunizations, and related topics. His studies and advocacy on the potential...
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How are enteroviruses spread?
A Q&A with Dr. John Modlin about Enteroviruses Dr. John Modlin, an international expert in childhood infectious diseases, is the chair the Department of Pediatrics at DHMC and a professor of pediatrics (infectious disease) and of medicine at DMS. He is the former chair of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; has served on many other influential national committees and advisory groups; and has authored more than 150 papers on the development and prevention of human enterovirus infections, poliovirus immunization, public policy on immunizations, and related topics. His studies and advocacy on the potential...
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What is Enterovirus 71? How does it compare to polio?
A Q&A with Dr. John Modlin about Enteroviruses Dr. John Modlin, an international expert in childhood infectious diseases, is the chair the Department of Pediatrics at DHMC and a professor of pediatrics (infectious disease) and of medicine at DMS. He is the former chair of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; has served on many other influential national committees and advisory groups; and has authored more than 150 papers on the development and prevention of human enterovirus infections, poliovirus immunization, public policy on immunizations, and related topics. His studies and advocacy on the potential...
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Why are you concerned about an outbreak of Enterovirus 71?
A Q&A with Dr. John Modlin about Enteroviruses Dr. John Modlin, an international expert in childhood infectious diseases, is the chair the Department of Pediatrics at DHMC and a professor of pediatrics (infectious disease) and of medicine at DMS. He is the former chair of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; has served on many other influential national committees and advisory groups; and has authored more than 150 papers on the development and prevention of human enterovirus infections, poliovirus immunization, public policy on immunizations, and related topics. His studies and advocacy on the potential...
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Why did polio spread through the upper middle class in the late 1800s?
A Q&A with Dr. John Modlin about Enteroviruses Dr. John Modlin, an international expert in childhood infectious diseases, is the chair the Department of Pediatrics at DHMC and a professor of pediatrics (infectious disease) and of medicine at DMS. He is the former chair of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; has served on many other influential national committees and advisory groups; and has authored more than 150 papers on the development and prevention of human enterovirus infections, poliovirus immunization, public policy on immunizations, and related topics. His studies and advocacy on the potential...
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Is there a treatment or vaccine for Enterovirus 71?
A Q&A with Dr. John Modlin about Enteroviruses Dr. John Modlin, an international expert in childhood infectious diseases, is the chair the Department of Pediatrics at DHMC and a professor of pediatrics (infectious disease) and of medicine at DMS. He is the former chair of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; has served on many other influential national committees and advisory groups; and has authored more than 150 papers on the development and prevention of human enterovirus infections, poliovirus immunization, public policy on immunizations, and related topics. His studies and advocacy on the potential...
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How did you get interested in enteroviruses and polio?
A Q&A with Dr. John Modlin about Enteroviruses Dr. John Modlin, an international expert in childhood infectious diseases, is the chair the Department of Pediatrics at DHMC and a professor of pediatrics (infectious disease) and of medicine at DMS. He is the former chair of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; has served on many other influential national committees and advisory groups; and has authored more than 150 papers on the development and prevention of human enterovirus infections, poliovirus immunization, public policy on immunizations, and related topics. His studies and advocacy on the potential...
2007-07-25
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What's wrong with the U.S. health-care system?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How did you become the founder of outcomes research?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What is the Dartmouth Atlas project?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What are some major findings of the Dartmouth Atlas?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Why are there geographical variations in surgical procedures?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Why are there geographical variations in chronic illness care?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Have the Dartmouth Atlas findings been controversial?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How can more care result in poorer outcomes?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What is DHMC doing to address practice variations?
A Q&A with Dr. Jack Wennberg about the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care Project John Wennberg, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS) and the Peggy Y. Thomson Professor of the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. CECS was established in 1989 and is the locus for a diverse group of scientists and clinician-scholars who conduct cutting edge research on critical medical and health issues with the goal of measuring, organizing, and improving the health-care system. The Center also publishes The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which demonstrates striking variations in how health...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Can you describe your work treating polytrauma?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Can you explain what catastrophic polytrauma is?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How does the Civil War give insights into plastic surgery?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How do you rebuild a face that's been destroyed?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What is the "Virtual Face" project?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
When might a patient need an exoskeleton?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How does an exoskeleton work?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How else could an exoskeleton be used?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How might polytrauma be treated in the future?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What do we need to do to get all this to happen?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What needs to be done for all this new technology to work?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Can you describe your work improving health-care systems?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What other projects are you working on?
A Q&A with Dr. Joseph Rosen about Polytrauma Dr. Rosen is a plastic surgeon at DHMC who treats patients around the world including soldiers injured in Iraq. His specialties include nerve repair and human-machine interfaces, microsurgery and transplantation of limbs, and telemedicine and informatics. He was an organizer of the 2006 Polytrauma Conference at Dartmouth College, is a professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at DMS, and is a consultant to the military. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
A interview with physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D.
A conversation with physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D. Parker Towle, a neurologist who has been on the Dartmouth Medical School faculty for more than 25 years, is also a much-published poet. He has a book of poems coming out soon, and his work was recently featured on National Public Radio's Writer's Almanac. He talks here about the thrill of hearing one of his poems read by Garrison Keillor; about how he got started writing poetry; about what has kept him at it; and about the relationship between poetry and medicine. To read the associated article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
A poetry reading: The Best Time by physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D.
A poetry reading: The Best Time by physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D. Parker Towle, a neurologist who has been on the Dartmouth Medical School faculty for more than 25 years, is also a much-published poet. He has a book of poems coming out soon, and his work was recently featured on National Public Radio's Writer's Almanac. He talks here about the thrill of hearing one of his poems read by Garrison Keillor; about how he got started writing poetry; about what has kept him at it; and about the relationship between poetry and medicine. To read the associated article, go to: ...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
A poetry reading: Cases by physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D.
A poetry reading: Cases by physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D. Parker Towle, a neurologist who has been on the Dartmouth Medical School faculty for more than 25 years, is also a much-published poet. He has a book of poems coming out soon, and his work was recently featured on National Public Radio's Writer's Almanac. He talks here about the thrill of hearing one of his poems read by Garrison Keillor; about how he got started writing poetry; about what has kept him at it; and about the relationship between poetry and medicine. To read the associated article, go to: http://dartmed...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
A poetry reading: Hooking Rugs and Ice Fishing by physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D.
A poetry reading: Hooking Rugs and Ice Fishing by physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D. Parker Towle, a neurologist who has been on the Dartmouth Medical School faculty for more than 25 years, is also a much-published poet. He has a book of poems coming out soon, and his work was recently featured on National Public Radio's Writer's Almanac. He talks here about the thrill of hearing one of his poems read by Garrison Keillor; about how he got started writing poetry; about what has kept him at it; and about the relationship between poetry and medicine. To read the associated article...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
A poetry reading: At the Hiroshima hospital by physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D.
A poetry reading: At the Hiroshima hospital by physician-poet Parker Towle, M.D. Parker Towle, a neurologist who has been on the Dartmouth Medical School faculty for more than 25 years, is also a much-published poet. He has a book of poems coming out soon, and his work was recently featured on National Public Radio's Writer's Almanac. He talks here about the thrill of hearing one of his poems read by Garrison Keillor; about how he got started writing poetry; about what has kept him at it; and about the relationship between poetry and medicine. To read the associated article, go...
2007-03-22
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Gordon Gribble Tells the Story of the Triterpenoid Project
Triterpenoids and Chemoprevention: A Dartmouth Collaboration For 11 years, Dartmouth chemists Gordon Gribble and Tadashi Honda have collaborated with Dr. Michael Sporn, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Dartmouth Medical School, to create drugs that prevent and treat cancer. In 1998, Gribble's lab synthesized CDDO, a synthetic triterpenoid. This compound and one of its derivatives are now in Phase I clinical trials for solid tumors and leukemia. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/compound_interest.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What are triterpenoids?
Triterpenoids and Chemoprevention: A Dartmouth Collaboration For 11 years, Dartmouth chemists Gordon Gribble and Tadashi Honda have collaborated with Dr. Michael Sporn, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Dartmouth Medical School, to create drugs that prevent and treat cancer. In 1998, Gribble's lab synthesized CDDO, a synthetic triterpenoid. This compound and one of its derivatives are now in Phase I clinical trials for solid tumors and leukemia. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/compound_interest.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How did you create the synthetic triterpenoids?
Triterpenoids and Chemoprevention: A Dartmouth Collaboration For 11 years, Dartmouth chemists Gordon Gribble and Tadashi Honda have collaborated with Dr. Michael Sporn, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Dartmouth Medical School, to create drugs that prevent and treat cancer. In 1998, Gribble's lab synthesized CDDO, a synthetic triterpenoid. This compound and one of its derivatives are now in Phase I clinical trials for solid tumors and leukemia. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/compound_interest.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How did you begin working with Dr. Sporn?
Triterpenoids and Chemoprevention: A Dartmouth Collaboration For 11 years, Dartmouth chemists Gordon Gribble and Tadashi Honda have collaborated with Dr. Michael Sporn, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Dartmouth Medical School, to create drugs that prevent and treat cancer. In 1998, Gribble's lab synthesized CDDO, a synthetic triterpenoid. This compound and one of its derivatives are now in Phase I clinical trials for solid tumors and leukemia. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/compound_interest.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Why has your collaboration with Dr. Sporn been so successful?
Triterpenoids and Chemoprevention: A Dartmouth Collaboration For 11 years, Dartmouth chemists Gordon Gribble and Tadashi Honda have collaborated with Dr. Michael Sporn, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Dartmouth Medical School, to create drugs that prevent and treat cancer. In 1998, Gribble's lab synthesized CDDO, a synthetic triterpenoid. This compound and one of its derivatives are now in Phase I clinical trials for solid tumors and leukemia. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/compound_interest.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How do triterpenoids relate to cancer prevention?
Triterpenoids and Chemoprevention: A Dartmouth Collaboration For 11 years, Dartmouth chemists Gordon Gribble and Tadashi Honda have collaborated with Dr. Michael Sporn, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Dartmouth Medical School, to create drugs that prevent and treat cancer. In 1998, Gribble's lab synthesized CDDO, a synthetic triterpenoid. This compound and one of its derivatives are now in Phase I clinical trials for solid tumors and leukemia. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/compound_interest.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Do academic chemists often see their compounds go into trials?
Triterpenoids and Chemoprevention: A Dartmouth Collaboration For 11 years, Dartmouth chemists Gordon Gribble and Tadashi Honda have collaborated with Dr. Michael Sporn, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Dartmouth Medical School, to create drugs that prevent and treat cancer. In 1998, Gribble's lab synthesized CDDO, a synthetic triterpenoid. This compound and one of its derivatives are now in Phase I clinical trials for solid tumors and leukemia. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/compound_interest.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Is the U.S. facing a physician shortage?
A Q&A with Dr. David Goodman about Physician Workforce Dr. David Goodman has researched physician workforce issues for over 10 years at Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. He is a professor of pediatrics and of community and family medicine. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/faculty_focus.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Do more doctors mean better care?
A Q&A with Dr. David Goodman about Physician Workforce Dr. David Goodman has researched physician workforce issues for over 10 years at Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. He is a professor of pediatrics and of community and family medicine. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/faculty_focus.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Are there specialties that have too few or too many doctors?
A Q&A with Dr. David Goodman about Physician Workforce Dr. David Goodman has researched physician workforce issues for over 10 years at Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. He is a professor of pediatrics and of community and family medicine. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/faculty_focus.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
When physicians come to the U.S. from developing countries, is that a problem?
A Q&A with Dr. David Goodman about Physician Workforce Dr. David Goodman has researched physician workforce issues for over 10 years at Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. He is a professor of pediatrics and of community and family medicine. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/faculty_focus.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What is all this talk about raising the Medicare GME cap?
A Q&A with Dr. David Goodman about Physician Workforce Dr. David Goodman has researched physician workforce issues for over 10 years at Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. He is a professor of pediatrics and of community and family medicine. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/faculty_focus.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What is the Dartmouth Health Workforce Program?
A Q&A with Dr. David Goodman about Physician Workforce Dr. David Goodman has researched physician workforce issues for over 10 years at Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. He is a professor of pediatrics and of community and family medicine. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/faculty_focus.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What's your next project?
A Q&A with Dr. David Goodman about Physician Workforce Dr. David Goodman has researched physician workforce issues for over 10 years at Dartmouth's Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences. He is a professor of pediatrics and of community and family medicine. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter06/html/faculty_focus.php
2007-01-08
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What is HPV and who gets it?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Is HPV always sexually transmitted?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What protection will the new vaccines offer?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What do we know from the vaccine trials?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Are the vaccines safe and how long do they last?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How does HPV affect men?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Are Pap smears still necessary after getting the vaccine?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What are the benefits of the vaccines in the United States?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What are the benefits of the vaccines in other countries?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Should insurance companies pay for the vaccines?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Where can women get more information?
A Q&A with Dr. Diane Harper about HPV Dr. Diane Harper, the director of Dartmouth's Gynecologic Cancer Prevention Research Group, was a principal investigator for the HPV vaccine trials of both Merck and GlaxoSmithKline. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/faculty_focus.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
The Music of a Harp Practitioner
Harp Plucks Heartstrings: A Harp Practitioner's Techniques. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Fall 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/fall06/html/vs_briefs.php
2006-10-23
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
What is palliative care?
A Q&A with Dr. Ira Byock about Palliative Care. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer06/html/vs_gift.php
2006-06-13
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How does hospice care differ from palliative care?
A Q&A with Dr. Ira Byock about Palliative Care. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer06/html/vs_gift.php
2006-06-13
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
If a patient receives palliative care, does it mean that her doctors think she is going to die?
A Q&A with Dr. Ira Byock about Palliative Care. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer06/html/vs_gift.php
2006-06-13
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Would you explain why palliative care has been descibed as just good medical care?
A Q&A with Dr. Ira Byock about Palliative Care. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer06/html/vs_gift.php
2006-06-13
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
How did you get interested in palliative medicine?
A Q&A with Dr. Ira Byock about Palliative Care. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer06/html/vs_gift.php
2006-06-13
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Would you describe a patient and their family who benefited from palliative care?
A Q&A with Dr. Ira Byock about Palliative Care. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer06/html/vs_gift.php
2006-06-13
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Why did you choose Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center?
A Q&A with Dr. Ira Byock about Palliative Care. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer06/html/vs_gift.php
2006-06-13
00 min
Inside Dartmouth Medicine
Summertime fun at Camp Dartmouth-Hitchcock
A summer camp that offers more than s'mores. This is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to: http://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/summer06/html/vs_camp_dh.php
2006-06-13
00 min