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Opinion

Subcategories:Patient PerspectiveProfilesRheuminationsSpeak Out RheumVideo

New ARHP President Shares Her Story

Carol Patton  |  November 30, 2016

Back in 1999, Afton Hassett, PsyD, attended her first ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting, after receiving the suggestion from Leonard Sigal, MD, a professor of medicine in the Division of Rheumatology at Rutgers University’s Robert Wood Johnson Medical School (RWJMS). Since 2003, Dr. Sigal has served as a volunteer Clinical Professor atĀ the school. At the time, Dr….

A Glimpse into the Life of New ACR President, Dr. Sharad Lakhanpal

Carol Patton  |  November 30, 2016

Born and raised in Lucknow, India, Sharad Lakhanpal, MBBS, MD, vividly remembers his father’s stories of traveling to the U.S. As a young boy, he grew intrigued, imagined living here and knew that someday he would narrate his own adventures about this country. As president of the ACR and a practicing rheumatologist at Rheumatology Associates…

Veteran Rheumatologist Dr. Raymond Scalettar Recounts 60 Years of Practice, Growth of Specialty

Carol Patton  |  November 16, 2016

ā€œYes sir.ā€ That was the response of Raymond Scalettar,Ā MD, DSc, FACP, when his commanding officer told him the U.S. Army wanted him to switch specialties—from gastroenterology to rheumatology. There was only one problem. Dr.Ā Scalettar wasn’t exactly sure what that would entail. That was the mid-1950s. Back then, rheumatology was barely out of the womb. Residency…

Stony Brook University’s Rheumatology Department History, Leadership in the Spotlight

Berhane Ghebrehiwet, DVM, DSc, & Qingping Yao,Ā MD, PhD  |  November 16, 2016

The State University of New York (SUNY) at Stony Brook was founded in 1957, and is currently known as Stony Brook University. In the 1970s, when the Health Sciences Center was still in the cocoon stages of its metamorphosis, the School of Medicine, under the brilliant stewardship of Marvin Kuschner,Ā MD, was already on a mission…

Not All Infectious Microorganisms Malign Human Immune System

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  November 16, 2016

Which came first? The infectious microorganism or a host’s immune resistance against it? Through the millennia, a raging battle has pitted the hordes of infectious agents surrounding us against, arguably, the most complex biologic structure ever created, the finely tuned human immune system. The stakes are high for both sides. For the infectious agent, an…

The Impact of U.S. Supreme Court Decisions on Medical Affairs, Healthcare Policy

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  October 11, 2016

As America’s capital, Washington, D.C., maintainsĀ an outsized influence in our daily lives. Despite having a meager sliver of the New York City population, the daily political transactions that transpire in the District of Columbia impact our lives. The comings and goings in the corridors of Congress are likely to have a greater impact on us…

NYU Langone’s Division of Rheumatology in Manhattan Advances Its Mission to Understand Rheumatic Diseases, Improve Patient Outcomes

Gretchen Henkel  |  October 10, 2016

From its beginnings as the Rheumatic Diseases Study Group (RDSG) in the early 1930s, NYU Langone Medical Center’s Division of Rheumatology has been built on a tradition of research and clinical care. Today’s division, with 24 full-time and 76 part-time faculty members, continues to push toward understanding the pathogenesis of rheumatic diseases and interventions to…

Rheumatologist, Jazz Guitarist Dr. Alan Schenk Connects with Patients, Colleagues by Playing Music

Linda Childers  |  October 10, 2016

It’s not uncommon for a new patient to arrive at the medical offices of Alan Schenk, MD, in Laguna Woods, Calif., and immediately ask him about his musical career. In addition to being a board-certified rheumatologist for the past 32 years, Dr.Ā Schenk is also an accomplished acoustic jazz guitarist and mandolin player. Music First ā€œI…

Rheumatologist Dr. Richard Meehan Discusses Tour of Medical Duty in Gulf War, Iraq War

Carol Patton  |  October 10, 2016

Richard Meehan, MD, can still hear the distinctive sound of footsteps that would travel along a gravel path toward his wooden hut in the middle of the night in Iraq. ā€œI’d hear somebody walk from the command post, either toward my hut or the operations officer who slept in the hut next to mine,ā€ says…

Crossing the Line

When Medical Workforce Grievances Lead to Strikes

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  September 12, 2016

Picket Lines: June 27 was marked on my calendar as the day to watch. No doubt the union organizers shrewdly selected it to be their strike day because of its proximity to July 1, an auspicious date for teaching hospitals, when rookie interns and residents anxiously assume their heightened roles of responsibility within the medical…

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