Patient Care Yale School of Medicine
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- Health & Fitness
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This collection is filled with interviews of Yale faculty and researchers speaking on local health initiatives, bringing scientific research to benefit patients more quickly and other pertinent patient care topics.
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Yale Builds a Bridge
Yale is where chemotherapy was first used and where penicillin first saved a patient?s life. While medical advances like these may start with great ideas, they don?t get very far without an infrastructure to support them. This is Colleen Shaddox for the Yale Office of Public Affairs talking with Dr. Robert Sherwin about the ongoing construction of that infrastructure. He's director of the Yale Center for Clinical Investigation.
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Jumping the Gap
Dr. Robert Sherwin talks about why it takes a decade or more for basic science discoveries to change medical treatment. He directs the Yale Center for Clinical Investigation, which works to support and streamline clinical research. This will get new treatments to patients more quickly while maintaining safety.
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Using Science to Rapidly Benefit Patients
Dr. Margaret Grey, Dean of the Yale School of Nursing and a leading diabetes researcher, talks about the imperative to do research that makes a substantial difference in patient's lives. The School of Nursing has a long history of patient-centered research, and its capacity to do this work has been expanded by an NIH Clinical and Translational Science Award.
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Preparing Scientists to Make a Difference
Dr. Eugene Shapiro talks about his work at the Yale Center for Clinical Investigation where he helps early career scientists build skills in clinical and translational research. This type of training will help them apply breakthroughs in basic science to patient care.
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Looking Out for Volunteers
Yale's Institutional Review Board Chair Sandra Alfano talks about the protections for people who volunteer to be part of medical studies. Rigorous standards that are even higher for vulnerable groups such as children, safeguard the rights of these participants, without whom many medical advances would not be possible.
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Is There a Doctor in the Lab?
Yale's Investigative Medicine Program trains young physicians to conduct research. Its director, Dr. Joseph Craft, explains how having a clinical practice often drives these physician scholars to conduct research that can improve patient care.