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Internal Medicine 2018 Categorical Candidate Interviews

Louisville Lectures

We welcome our applicants from across the nation and the globe who will visit the University of Louisville Internal Medicine Residency Program over the next few months. We are excited to help expand the FOAMed movement into internal medicine where so much work has been done by various medical education programs.

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All you need to know about louisville lectures

Louisville Lectures

The Internal Medicine Lecture Series Do you want to learn medicine from university faculty? Are you a resident or medical student looking to learn practical, evidence based approaches to your patients? Our vision is to teach the world medicine. Follow us on Instagram to follow us behind the scenes!

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Storycatching: Podcast with Heather Coats and Thor Ringler

GeriPal

As Thor notes, capturing patient stories has face validity as positively impacting the patients who share their stories and have them documented, and for the clinicians who get to truely and deeply know their patients in far greater depth than “what brought you to the hospital?” Journal of Palliative Medicine , 23 (6), [link].

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Is it time for geriatricians to get on board with lecanemab? Jason Karlawish and Ken Covinsky

GeriPal

Eric: So we’ve had an interesting topic today, storytelling and medicine, narrative medicine… We’ll talk about what we should call it, but before we do, Heather, I think you have a song request. Been in the hospital four times, vented, been told the story to her family, she won’t live. Alex: Yeah.

IT 105
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Aging and the ICU: Podcast with Lauren Ferrante and Julien Cobert

GeriPal

A little over a decade ago, Ken Covinsky wrote a GeriPal post about a Jack Iwashyna JAMA study finding that older adults who survive sepsis are likely to develop new functional and cognitive deficits after they leave the hospital. To this day, Ken’s post is still one of the most searched and viewed posts on GeriPal. Eric: What was that paper?