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Coming up May 19

Sharon Brangman, MD: Does your loved one need a feeding tube?

Frederick Sengstacke, MD: Does losing weight help overweight women conceive?

Dr. Richard O’Neill’s Check-Up From The Neck-Up: Finding work/life balance for runners’ burnout

Coming up May 26

Patrick Basile, MD: Upstate medical graduate performs high profile double arm transplant

Dr. Richard O’Neill’s Check-Up From The Neck-Up: Who, What, Where, When, How, or… what I learned on my vacation to China

Richard Cantor, MD: PEDS to Parents – How to keep kids safe in summer

Harold Smulyan, MD: What killed Wizard of Oz author L. Frank Baum?

Deirdre Neilen, PhD: The Healing Muse – ‘Snow’ and ‘Things My Daughter Lost in Hospitals’

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Dr. Richard O’Neill’s Check-Up From The Neck-Up: How to avoid a broken heart

Richard O'Neill, PhDDr. Richard O’Neill shares the bottom line from an interesting research study that looked at 15,000 cases of acute heart problems — people with more friends, and better relationships, had about 60% fewer acute, life-threatening cardiac events than people who lived alone.

Read the study: Prognosis of acute coronary events is worse in patients living alone: the FINAMI myocardial infarction register

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