Fri, May 25 – 10 Stories of The Day!
25 May, 2018 | 00:19h | UTC
1 – Report: Diet, Nutrition, Physical Activity and Cancer: a Global Perspective – World Cancer Research Fund (free)
Commentaries: A blueprint to beat cancer – World Cancer Research Fund (free) AND 10-year study shows obesity increases risk for 12 cancers – UPI (free)
Related Guideline: Pancreatic cancer in adults: diagnosis and management – National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (free)
Related Systematic Review: Chemotherapy and radiotherapy for advanced pancreatic cancer – Cochrane Library (free)
Summary: ACEP Clinical Policy on Acute VTE 2018 – R.E.BE.L.em (free)
Related: Should We Anticoagulate Patients with Isolated Subsegmental Pulmonary Emboli? – NEJM Journal Watch (free)
4 – Review: The art of cardiovascular risk assessment – Clinical Cardiology (free)
5 – Review: Pitfalls on the replacement therapy for primary and central hypothyroidism in adults – European Journal of Endocrinology (free)
6 – Europe’s open-access drive escalates as university stand-offs spread – Nature News (free)
7 – Perspective: How Tech Can Turn Doctors Into Clerical Workers – The New York Times Magazine (10 articles per month are free)
“The threat that electronic health records and machine learning pose to physicians’ clinical judgment — and their well-being”.
8 – New Free Online Course: Introduction to Critical Care Medicine – University of Glasgow and FutureLearn (free) (via @classcentral)
Editorial: Atopic eczema and cardiovascular disease (free)
Commentaries: Severe eczema and increased risk of cardiovascular problems – The BMJ Opinion (free) AND Severe eczema linked to cardiovascular problems – OnMedica (free) AND People with severe eczema at higher risk of heart conditions – NHS Choices (free)
10 – Association Between Gestational Hypertension and Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Among 617 589 Norwegian Women – Journal of the American Heart Association (free for a limited period)
Editorial: Cardiovascular Sequels of Hypertension in Pregnancy (free for a limited period)
Related Studies: All Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy Increase the Risk of Future Cardiovascular Disease (free PDF and commentaries) AND Hypertensive Disorders in Pregnancy and the Risk of Subsequent Cardiovascular Disease (link to abstract and free commentaries)