Inside Tract Summer 2010
WOMEN TREATING WOMEN
Of the myriad reasons that diversity has become a hot topic in medicine, the ability to empathize with patients may rank supreme.
-------------------------------
Linda Lee (fourth from right) and her colleagues at Johns Hopkins’ Integrative Medicine and Digestive Health Center offer patients a unique treatment perspective.
Of the myriad reasons that diversity has become a hot topic in medicine, the ability to empathize with patients may rank supreme.
-------------------------------
Linda Lee (fourth from right) and her colleagues at Johns Hopkins’ Integrative Medicine and Digestive Health Center offer patients a unique treatment perspective.
Articles in this Issue
Feature
-
Of the myriad reasons that diversity has become a hot topic in medicine, the ability to empathize with patients may rank supreme.
Hepatology
-
Even when their disease is advanced, many patients who come to Johns Hopkins are learning that there may be treatment possibilities they didn't know about.
Consultation
-
Johns Hopkins gastroenterologist Mark Lazarev discusses the wide range of treatments that are helping more patients control their Crohn's disease.
Medical Adherence
-
Sometimes people don't understand they must take their medication exactly as described to get the most benefit from it.
At the Bench
-
By watching in real time how a certain protein moves sodium into and out of cells, researcher Nicholas Zachos hopes to find clues to better treatments for one of the world's most common ailments.
View Issues Archive
Anthony Kalloo, M.D., editor, akalloo@jhmi.edu
Mary Ann Ayd, managing editor, mayd@jhmi.edu
