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Boston's hospital chiefs moonlight on corporate boards at rates far beyond the national rate


Boston’s hospital chiefs moonlight on corporate boards at rates far beyond the national level
Hospital chiefs and trustees defend this as boosting public-private partnerships, but critics say these board positions - some paying millions of dollars - raise troubling issues of conflict of interest and hospital priorities.
By Liz Kowalczyk, Spotlight fellow Sarah L. Ryley, Mark Arsenault and Spotlight editor Patricia Wen Globe Staff and Globe Staff,Updated April 3, 2021, 4:54 p.m.
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Globe Staff/Photo Illustration by Globe Staff
As chief of Boston Children’s Hospital, one of the most esteemed pediatric hospitals in the world, Sandra Fenwick had outsized influence. After the pandemic struck last spring, she used that clout to lobby Massachusetts legislators for more money for telemedicine, a suddenly essential alternative to in-person visits. ....

New York , United States , Beth Israel Medical Center , Dana Farber Cancer Institute , United Kingdom , Tufts Medical Center , Laurie Glimcher , Scott Sperling , Matthew Mccoy , Josh Bekenstein , Jay Duker , Joseph Loscalzo , Michael Gustafson , Peter Healy , William Galvin , Timothy Ferris , Sunil Eappen , Peter Slavin , Lucia Lee , Sandra Fenwick , Christopher Clark , Craigf Walker , Kevin Churchwell , Steven Joffe , Charles Grassley , Kristen Dattoli ,

Breaking bad: how shattered chromosomes make cancer cells drug-resistant


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IMAGE: In this scanning electron micrograph of inside the nucleus of a cancer cell, chromosomes are indicated by blue arrows and circular extra-chromosomal DNA are indicated by orange arrows.
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Credit: Image courtesy of Paul Mischel, UC San Diego
Cancer is one of the world s greatest health afflictions because, unlike some diseases, it is a moving target, constantly evolving to evade and resist treatment.
In a paper published in the December 23, 2020 online issue of
Nature, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine and the UC San Diego branch of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, with colleagues in New York and the United Kingdom, describe how a phenomenon known as chromothripsis breaks up chromosomes, which then reassemble in ways that ultimately promote cancer cell growth. ....

New York , United States , San Diego , United Kingdom , University Of California San Diego , Dong Hyun Kim , Simonf Brunner , Miao Yu , Bing Ren , Rona Yaeger , Markh Ellisman , Rongxin Fang , Juliasz Li , Dying Sun , Peterj Campbell , Don Cleveland , Ofer Shoshani , Guillaumea Castillon , Yael Nechemia Arbely , Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Institute , National Cancer Institute , Cancer Research United Kingdom , Wellcome Sanger Institute , Ludwig Institute For Cancer Research , Uc San Diego School Of Medicine , California San Diego School ,