The past year was filled with accomplishments and I take away wonderful memories
Pursue Remission
Disease remission should be the goal for all rheumatologists treating childhood arthritis
REF Fellowship Training Award Expanded
Workforce training should be at the forefront of every rheumatologist’s mind. The release of the 2006 Rheumatology Workforce Study, commissioned by the ACR, confirms that the current shortage of rheumatologists will continue to increase, affecting current and future patient care.
Innovative Educational Programs for Rheumatology APNs and PAs
Arthritis and other rheumatic diseases affect more than 46 million adults and 300,000 children in the United States. With the aging of the U.S. population, the number of adults with rheumatic disease is expected to increase to 67 million by 2030.1 While the demand for rheumatology services is increasing, the supply of practicing rheumatologists is diminishing. The ACR Rheumatology Workforce Study (published earlier this year) predicts that there will be little or no increase in the number of practicing rheumatologists, resulting in a critical shortage of rheumatologists by 2020.
Disappearing Dollars
What’s happening to federal research funding in rheumatology?
Reading Rheum
Handpicked Reviews of Contemporary Literature
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
It’s a Small World After All
Global collaboration can improve care
REF Reaches for a Cure
ACR Research and Education Foundation launches campaign to find RA cure
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 71
- 72
- 73
- 74
- 75
- …
- 77
- Next Page »