Mellick’s Multimedia EduBlog: New Ways to Remove Foreign Bodies
Pediatric patients frequently put foreign bodies into their mouths, noses, and ears, and Dr. Mellick shows you in these three videos some techniques for removal plus some interesting experiments you may like to try. Read more in his blog at http://bit.ly/Mellick. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - October 30, 2018 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

Mellick’s Multimedia EduBlog: New Ways to Remove Foreign Bodies, Video 2
Pediatric patients frequently put foreign bodies into their mouths, noses, and ears, and Dr. Mellick shows you in these three videos some techniques for removal plus some interesting experiments you may like to try. Read more in his blog at http://bit.ly/Mellick. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - October 30, 2018 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

Mellick’s Multimedia EduBlog: New Ways to Remove Foreign Bodies
Pediatric patients frequently put foreign bodies into their mouths, noses, and ears, and Dr. Mellick shows you in these three videos some techniques for removal plus some interesting experiments you may like to try. Read more in his blog at http://bit.ly/Mellick. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - October 30, 2018 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

Mellick’s Multimedia EduBlog: New Ways to Remove Foreign Bodies, Video 3
Pediatric patients frequently put foreign bodies into their mouths, noses, and ears, and Dr. Mellick shows you in these three videos some techniques for removal plus some interesting experiments you may like to try. Read more in his blog at http://bit.ly/Mellick. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - October 30, 2018 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

Type III interferon is a critical regulator of innate antifungal immunity
Immunology Interest Group Amariliz Rivera received her B.S from the University of Puerto Rico-Mayaguez campus and her PhD from Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. She did her postdoctoral training at MSKCC under the mentorship of Eric Pamer where she began the abiding theme of her research-achieving a better understanding of how the immune system fights fungal infections. After her training, she moved to Rutgers where she is Assistant Professor in the Department of Pediatrics and member of the Center of Immunity and Inflammation. Her work through the years has delineated fungus-specific CD4 T cell responses and mon...
Source: Videocast - All Events - October 16, 2018 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

Knowledge Discovery in Clinical and Biomedical Data: Case Studies in Pediatrics and Mental Health
With the widespread adoption of electronic health records and increasing discoveries reported in biomedical literature, computational approaches are needed for further knowledge discovery and hypothesis generation. Challenges include the capture of key information within text and standardization issues, requiring use of natural language processing and data integration techniques. Clinical data mining and biomedical literature mining have been used in a range of contexts to discover disease knowledge such as comorbidities and patterns related to social, behavioral, and familial (SBF) factors. In this lecture, a series of ca...
Source: Videocast - All Events - October 9, 2018 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

What do we know about how people recognize faces?
Catherine Stamoulis, assistant professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, answers the question on this edition of "Ask a Scientist." Original air date: Aug. 28, 2018This is an NSF Multimedia Gallery item. (Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery)
Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery - August 29, 2018 Category: Science Source Type: video

Genomics & Health Disparities Lecture: Towards Understanding the Role of Population Diversity in Cancer Genome Science
Genomics and Health Disparities Lecture Series John Carpten, PhD is Professor and Chair for the Department of Translational Genomics. His training and professional experiences include postdoctoral training at the National Human Genome Research Institute/NIH, and serving as Deputy Director of Research at the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen). Dr. Carpten ’ cancer research program spans multiple disciplines including germline genetics for disease risk and predisposition, somatic cancer genomics, health disparities research, cell biology, functional genomics, and precision medicine. The primary focus of his r...
Source: Videocast - All Events - August 15, 2018 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

July 2018: EMedHome’s Videos with Sergey Motov, MD
Sergey Motov, MD, reviews the top 10 2017 pediatric EM pain articles that might change your practice: http://bit.ly/EMN-EMedHomeVideos (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - June 30, 2018 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video