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Ace the Case: A 40-Year-Old Man With an Episode of Witnessed Syncope While at Work

Ace the Case: A 40-Year-Old Man With an Episode of Witnessed Syncope While at Work There is no commercial support for this activity. 0.25 CME 15 MINS Support Statement Activity Description This educational activity will utilize a case study to discuss the diagnosis and treatment of a 40-year-old man with an episode of witnessed syncope while at work.   Target Audience Learning Objective Upon successful completion of this educational activity, participants should be better able to diagnose and treat patients with orthostatic hypotension. Faculty Ronald A. Codario, Jr., MD Accreditation Vindico Medical Education is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

Follow the science: Schools can reopen safely

Follow the science: Schools can reopen safely Dennis J. Ventry Jr., Monica Gandhi and Deborah Simon-Weisberg March 3, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislative leaders have unveiled another plan to prod public schools across California to reopen. It provides $2 billion to districts that resume in-person instruction by March 31, another $4.6 billion to address learning loss, and punishes districts that fail to reopen by the deadline. The plan is bound to fail. It will fail for the same reason other plans, perks, and persuasion have misfired over the last 12 months: It provides no money and no strategy to overcome the kind of false and unscientific thinking that closed schools a year ago. And because the plan avoids mandating the number of days and hours a school must open to receive new funds, it permits the forces peddling pseudoscience to scare administrators, teachers, and parents into embracing a hybrid model (part in-person, part remote) that would be even

Rift at longtime St Paul clinic leads to new home for residency program

Rift at longtime St. Paul clinic leads to new home for residency program Exodus of longtime doctors sparks anger among some, but not all, patients.  February 16, 2021 11:28am Text size Copy shortlink: On a recent Friday morning, United Family Medicine nurses and technicians in a strip mall storefront rolled up patients sleeves to administer COVID-19 vaccines. Gone were the clinic s physicians, who were working at a new facility 4 miles away. To the patients getting shots many of whom are low-income or uninsured the drama embroiling their clinic mattered less than the protection they received from people they like. Yeah, I love it. I mean it s been great for the services that I have had from the time that I started, said Teretha Glass, 72, drawn to the clinic years ago for its affordable sliding fee. I thought I missed the chance [for a shot]. But they called me right back and said they could get me in toda

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