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Jack Remington, infectious-disease expert and clinician, dies at 90

Jack Remington, infectious-disease expert and clinician, dies at 90 The Stanford physician devised a test that saved babies’ lives by showing whether they needed immediate treatment for a parasitic disease called toxoplasmosis. Apr 27 2021 Jack Remington Jack Remington, MD, professor emeritus of infectious diseases at Stanford Medicine, died April 8 in Menlo Park, California, of complications from an injury he sustained in a fall. He was 90. An extreme-sports enthusiast with a penchant for mountain climbing, which over the years exacted a physical toll on his body, Remington was a hard-charging patient advocate who put his patients’ needs above all else. He was also an accomplished scientist who conducted groundbreaking research on

Qualtrics Chosen by Stanford Health Care to Transform the Health System s Patient Experience Program

Qualtrics Chosen by Stanford Health Care to Transform the Health System s Patient Experience Program The Qualtrics XM/OS is being used for the first time by an academic medical center to reimagine patient experience and build a culture of continuous design and improvement across its health system News provided by Share this article Share this article SALT LAKE CITY and SEATTLE, April 26, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Qualtrics (Nasdaq: XM), the world s No. 1 Experience Management (XM) provider and creator of the XM category, today announced that it has been chosen by Stanford Health Care to transform and elevate the health system s entire patient experience program.

Stories Falsely Cite Stanford Study to Misinform on Face Masks

Full Story Evidence indicating that face masks can help control the spread of the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 has grown since the virus first emerged, upending life around the world. In March, we outlined the evolving research on the efficacy of face masks and explained why experts support their use. But a stubborn thread of misinformation falsely claiming that masks do not work, and are actually dangerous, continues to be recycled and shared a year-plus into the pandemic. Viral headlines in recent days have wrongly purported that a “Stanford Study” proved that masks are ineffective and dangerous. In reality, the paper in question was one author’s hypothesis and didn’t come from anyone currently affiliated with the university.

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