When the way we come together with our patients and treat them is compromised, it strains our ability to perform our jobs.

When the way we come together with our patients and treat them is compromised, it strains our ability to perform our jobs.
Cheyanne M. Silver, MD, uses her art as a creative outlet and an emotional release valve.
The answer lies in three domains: our professional duties to the patient, our ethical obligations to the patient, and our fiduciary responsibilities to society.
In the past six months, I’ve detected duplicated images in multiple submitted articles, equating to more than 40% of the articles I reviewed.
In our otolaryngologist supply chain, no organizational negative feedback mechanism exists to apply supply controls.
Now that we’re exiting the pandemic stage, it’s time to brainstorm ways to build back our connections to each other and with our local communities.
Our specialty was initially worried about whether we would have enough otolaryngologists when we perhaps should have been worrying about whether we might have too many.
Young physicians have medicine’s great future for enhancement of patient care and prevention of disease ahead of them as perhaps no other generation of physicians or specialists in otolaryngology has ever had.