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The Department of Internal Medicine is pleased to welcome the following new staff, faculty, postdoctoral fellows, and postdoctoral associates who joined the team in July 2024:
In the United States, a significant number of patients continue to struggle with persistent hypertension.
The Yale study on non-urgent blood draws demonstrates a need for more patient-centered care.
Researchers from the Yale School of Medicine Section of Cardiovascular Medicine outline emerging areas of research in cardiovascular medicine. Explore the latest advances in scholarly and scientific publishing.
Late-Breaking Basic Science submissions for the AHA Scientific Sessions close August 23.
Sex is not a reliable indicator of the individual hemodynamic phenotype between women and men with high blood pressure, particularly older adults, a new Yale-led study concludes.
The Heart Rhythm Society annual meeting will be held in San Francisco, CA, from Friday, April 29 - Sunday, May 1, 2022.
A new Yale study finds increasingly persistent racial and ethnic disparities when it comes to how many hours individuals sleep per day.
From 1999 to 2018, racial and ethnic differences in health status, care access, and affordability mainly persisted, according to a study published in the Aug. 17 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
There has been little to no progress in eliminating racial and ethnic disparities in some key health indicators over the past two decades, according to a Yale study.
People with atherosclerosis, particularly those who earn a low income and have other socioeconomic disadvantages, are more likely to experience food insecurity than those without the condition, according to new research.
According to results of a new study, nearly 50% of U.S adults may not recognize the signs and symptoms that they may be having a heart attack.
A Yale-led group of doctors has developed a new mathematical model that can predict the risk of acute kidney injury (AKI) in patients undergoing a common heart procedure.
A recent study suggests that millions of Americans do not know the symptoms of heart attack or how best to respond to them, and certain socioeconomic groups are at particular risk.
More than 10 million adults in the United States don't know most heart attack symptoms or the best way to respond to them, a new study finds.
A recent study found using single diagnosis codes, rather than grouped, and present on admission designations improved the accuracy of patient cost estimates.
Many cardiac catheterization and electrophysiology laboratory directors receive significant payments from industry that could create conflicts of interest, according to a new study of payments to lab directors at top hospitals.
Channel Update Highlight: Editor’s Pick In our most recent Channel update, Noam’s “Editor’s Pick” highlights recent work from Dr Chenxi Huang (Yale-New Haven Hospital) and colleagues entitled “Enhancing the prediction of acute kidney injury risk after percutaneous coronary intervention using machine learning techniques: A retrospective cohort study” published in PLOS Medicine.