With the time constraints, stress, and lack of resources rheumatologists and other healthcare professionals face everyday, it can be challenging to find educational programs that not only provide measurable effects on the quality of patient care, but also offer resources to equip you for the ever-changing world of healthcare.
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Art and Medicine Converge for the Klemperer Lecture
Growing up in Brooklyn, N.Y., Paul H. Plotz, MD, often enjoyed an exciting game of stoopball with friends. Young Plotz took turns beaming a ball at the corner of his stoop, stopping occasionally to allow his father’s patients to enter the front door of his house, which also doubled as his father’s office.
Avert Rheum’s Coming Crisis
We must build our foundation from within
Health Information Explosion
Don’t be blown away by online medical information – use it to your advantage
The Peripatetitc Theodore Pincus, MD
Tireless champion for patient self-report
Make Education A Priority
All rheumatologists need to train and support the specialty’s next generation
Why I Still Like Being a Rheumatologist
The rewards of practice outshine the lure of retirement
Cost of a Free Lunch
Much is made of pharma’s influence on CME—but do we really know what this educational funding buys?
On Board with Baby
Rheumatology programs make strides in work–life balance support
ARHP Lifetime Achievement Award Winner Robert Richardson Reflects on Career
We all bring to the table our skills to form a comprehensive treatment plan, and that’s essential for meeting the patient’s total needs. It’s an excellent model to deliver quality care. —Robert Richardson, PT, MEd Robert Richardson, PT, MEd, has a lively voice that conveys his deep enthusiasm for a profession he’s had a hand…