Women receiving cancer treatment in clinical trials exhibited higher risk for severe symptomatic and hematologic adverse events than their male counterparts, according to a study.These findings remained consistent across multiple treatment modalities, including immunotherapy, chemotherapy and target...
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As a former blood banker, I feel like I've learned a lot from this podcast (and gotten a lot of free CE from the CE episodes). Didn't know any of them were video recorded until just now, though.
An aggressive, antifungal-resistant form of tinea, a contagious ringworm fungal infection, has appeared in the US, likely driven by overuse and misuse of antifungal medications.
Thought I'd share my primary sources for CE credit; feel free to comment and add yours!
(free!) ARUP Labs
(free!) Blood Bank Guy - selected podcasts qualify for CE credit through Wiley Health Learning. Listen to the podcast and take a 5-question quiz at WHL.
I also like paying for a year of LabCE in the year my certs are due. Currently this costs $95 for a year. I can finish up any credits I wasn't able to get for free, submit for renewal, then after my certs are renewed, I have the rest of the year to get a head start on the next 3 years.
Other sources I've been able to access free through an employer include Immucor and American Red Cross, but you need your lab's organization code to sign up.
Even the decisions that aren't horrible on their face generally contain language within the opinions that essentially tells conservatives how to do it "right" next time ("right" = get the results they want).
In Moore v. Harper, yeah, they could've ended democracy as we know it and chose not to. But in the majority opinion, Roberts basically said, "The plaintiffs went too far in asking us to endorse ISL, but if they'd just asked us to rule whether the NC Supreme Court went too far in its reading of state law, we would've gone their way." He also went out of his way to cite a precedent that says states can assign their electoral votes by House district if their state constitution doesn't prohibit it. For states that went electorally blue in 2020 but have gerrymandered-for-Republicans congressional districts (AZ and GA at a minimum), this would take states where Biden won a majority of individual votes, and give most of their electoral votes to the Republicans instead.
Roberts is playing the long game.
Thanks for asking this! I was also looking to create a community and thought I was going nuts not seeing any kind of create community button, but also not seeing any rules against regular users making communities.
Aw, poor tiger lilies - what did they do to deserve becoming the flower of hatred?