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Articles by Jeannette Wolfe, MD Current Features If that coughing and wheezing febrile premee is a boy he is at greater risk for a bad outcome due to his prenatal testosterone causing a delay in his lung maturity. If the patient with afib is a woman, she is at higher risk to stroke out and her stroke is more likely to be hemorrhagic. In addition, she is at a greater risk for developing both a prolonged Qtc from certain anti-arrhythmics, and for digoxin toxicity plus she will require smaller amounts of warfarin to become therapeutic. Read moreCurrent Features
Current Features Deeply ingrained gender traits make it difficult for many female emergency physicians to successfully negotiate their contracts. Here are five negotiating pitfalls, and strategies for breaking the cycle. Read moreCurrent Features When Karen Sibert, an anesthesiologist with four children, wrote an op/ed piece in the New York Times about the deleterious economical and societal impact of physicians who choose to work part time, my email inbox exploded. Comments were all over the place, from “You’ve gotta be kidding,” to “Wonder if it would have been printed if a man wrote it,” to “Raises some interesting points.” Read moreCurrent Features
Current Features Emergency physicians may be the “jack of all trades” but we are the kings and queens of conflict management. If we define conflict as the simple mismatch between two parties’ expectations, EPs start holding court before we have even buttoned up our white coats. Read moreCurrent Features Please take a moment to fill out the following brief survey on the impact of personal conflict within the emergency department: Read moreFeatures
In My Opinion For camaraderie and a dose of perspective, try organizing a medical humanities night for your ED
Read moreWork + Life Seven pain plan pearls from an emergency department whose system-wide protocol never got off the ground.
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