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The clickable links below navigate directly to outside media articles which featured Department of Medicine faculty throughout the month of May.


Ross Boyce, MD,gave tips on how to keep ticks from biting, in .

Margaret Drickamer, MD, providing home-like hospice care in the hospital.

Arlene Seña, MD, MPH, issue of the rise in syphilis cases, especially in women and newborns.

David L. Rosen, MD, PhD, MSPH, on mental health in North Carolina jails.

Ana C.G. Felix, MBBCh, FAAN, was invited to present at the in Boston.

Billy Fischer, MD,was featured about the science and myths surrounding Ebola.

John Batsis, MD, in The Well for his work to reduce transportation and geographic barriers to health care services for older adults.

Erin Finn, MD, John Stephens, MD, and Ria Dancel, MD, published “The state of internal medicine point-of-care ultrasound fellowships in the US and Canada.”

Evan S. Dellon, MD, MPH, FACG, the ongoing positive data for dupilumab in treating patients with EoE.

David Wohl, MD, COVID-19 no longer being characterized as a global health emergency.

Giselle Corbie-Smith, MD, MSc, in a New York Times article,

“Addiction Treatment Medicine Is Vastly Underprescribed, Especially by Race, Study Finds.”

Stephan Moll, MD, is coauthor on the new American Society of Hematology guideline on thrombophilia testing in patients with venous thromboembolism.

A. Sidney Barritt, MD, MSCR, spoke about non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, the risk factors, treatment options, and research being conducted in the field in

A study lead by Sameer Arora, MD,in this article on preventing heart disease in younger generations.

Seth Berkowitz, MD, MPH, and Gaurav Dave, MBBS, DrPH, MPH, “Potential gaps in income support policies for those in poor health: The case of the earned income tax credit—A cross sectional analysis.”

Health will Epic and Microsoft’s generative artificial intelligence tool that automatically drafts message responses.

The Dennis Research Group, led by Ann Dennis, MD, MS,released a new white paper titled, “Revitalizing Community Engagement in the Public Health Use of Molecular HIV Epidemiology.”