How a Nobel-winning accidental scientist changed the world by saving himself timesofisrael.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from timesofisrael.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Dr. Amanda Green is a busy, busy woman; busy taking care of her family and busy taking care of her community.
Born in Corsicana, Green was raised in nearby Fairfield. She said she has âalways wanted to take care of people.â
âMedicine is all about the interactions between people,â she said. âThe science is fun, too, but the people are what really matters.â
Green attended Texas A&M University, majoring in genetics, before entering medical school at Baylor College of Medicine. She spent her residency at Duke University Medical Center and was an attending at the medical center there before she and her husband, Gregory, an orthopedic surgeon, made the move to Lamar County in 2003.
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The health world is awash with contradictory information and it can be hard to find safe and sustainable weight loss tips that work. Shedding timber ultimately boils down to eating healthy food, moving regularly, stressing less and sleeping well. Simple in theory, but often easier said than done.
As a result, many people turn to shady supplements and questionable diets to ditch the pounds, which have little scientific evidence behind them. But sustainable weight loss doesn t have to be expensive or esoteric – you just need a few lifestyle tweaks and little bit of know-how.
The Diet-Whisperer, and registered nutritionist Clarissa Lenherr share 27 easy-to-implement weight loss tips that actually work:
Disparities in Cesarean Rates Increase With Maternal Education medscape.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from medscape.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Patient-Level VHA Data Show No Association Between Paclitaxel-Coated Devices and Long-Term Mortality
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February 23, 2021 In the first study examining the impact of paclitaxel-coated device (PCD) use on mortality in patients treated within the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), Gutierrez et al found no increased risk of long-term all-cause mortality associated with PCD use. The study was recently published in the
KEY FINDINGS
The rates of 2- and 3-year all-cause mortality were similar between the PCD and non-PCD groups, even when stratified by claudication or critical limb ischemia presentations.
No statistically significant risk in all-cause mortality was seen between the use of PCD and non-PCD devices after adjustment for treatment assignment.