- Airway Management and Intubation Techniques
- Dysphagia Assessment and Management
- Dental Anxiety and Anesthesia Techniques
- Cancer Treatment and Pharmacology
- Voice and Speech Disorders
- Medicine and Dermatology Studies History
- Empathy and Medical Education
- Education and Critical Thinking Development
- Innovations in Medical Education
- Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments
- Surgical Simulation and Training
- Antifungal resistance and susceptibility
- Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills
- Respiratory and Cough-Related Research
- History of Medicine Studies
- Esophageal and GI Pathology
- Simulation-Based Education in Healthcare
- Viral Infections and Outbreaks Research
- Health and Conflict Studies
- Tracheal and airway disorders
- Vaccine Coverage and Hesitancy
- Fungal Biology and Applications
- Medical History and Innovations
Temple University
2024
Harvard University
2024
American Academy of Otolaryngology — Head and Neck Surgery
2024
SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University
2020-2023
State University of New York
2020-2021
Stony Brook School
2020
Stony Brook University
2020
The practice of medicine is changing rapidly as a consequence electronic health record adoption, new technologies for patient care, disruptive innovations that breakdown professional hierarchies, and evolving societal norms. Collectively, these have resulted in the modification physician's role gatekeeper increased shift-based amplified interprofessional team-based care. Technological present opportunities well challenges. Artificial intelligence, which has great potential, already...
Objective Simulation may be a valuable tool in training laryngology office procedures on unsedated patients. However, no studies have examined whether existing awake procedure simulators improve trainee performance laryngology. Our objective was to evaluate the transfer validity of previously published 3D‐printed laryngeal simulator improving percutaneous injection laryngoplasty (PIL) competency compared with conventional educational materials single‐blinded randomized controlled trial....
BACKGROUND Invasive mucormycosis is a rare, life-threatening infection that requires urgent medical management. Here we describe patient who developed invasive after receiving only short course of dexamethasone. The purpose to highlight this atypical presentation rare disease. CASE REPORT A 74-year-old woman with history diabetes mellitus (DM), hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and small cell lung cancer metastasis the brain presented Emergency Department altered mental status hyperosmolar...
The "tonsil riots" of 1906 were panics that developed at several public schools in historically immigrant-dominated neighborhoods New York City (NYC). Per archived newspaper articles, NYC asked for parental consent to have Board Health physicians come and perform tonsillectomy adenoidectomy on their students. When children subsequently returned home from school "drooling mouthfuls blood barely able speak," mothers reacted with panic flocked the demanding safe return children. Police,...
The history of the nasogenital reflex, a theory that purports bidirectional pathway between nose and genitalia, reveals complex diverse record spanning back to antiquity across Eurasian continent. This article examines how an antiquated medical made its way into early contemporary medicine, lesson this account serves as otolaryngology-head neck surgery continues work toward making all interventions based on hierarchy evidence.
Abstract This article explores the historic records of American Academy Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery's (AAO‐HNS) John Q. Adams Center for History Surgery, with particular attention paid to Dr. Chevalier Jackson Collection. The library houses diverse materials that would be interest medical historians seeking understand early innovations in our specialty. With a repository over 2200 items chronicling 200‐years otolaryngological history, contains special collections dedicated Drs....