yousentwhohome.bsky.social
Pediatric emergency medicine, RSV, lung ultrasound, Stata, LaTeX
56 posts
291 followers
1,924 following
Regular Contributor
Active Commenter
comment in response to
post
They're very different vests (kevlar v chainmail). And in higher volume settings they would likely hurt your PPH and productivity more generally. They also signal a lack of trust that may or may not be reasonable depending on where you practice. For most civilians I think the answer is no.
comment in response to
post
Child life specialists really could usefully be extended to a lot of adults. Especially in busy departments where the less sick patients can't get much physician time.
comment in response to
post
People who never emotionally left primary school and are even ad adults are still seeking approval from those in authority. If you won't speak truth to power then what kind of academic or scientist can you actually be?
comment in response to
post
So often it is one clinician who chases these things. It makes you wonder what is going on with the other patients in the same center.
comment in response to
post
It's also amazingly useful ..if it's elevated something is wrong...
comment in response to
post
Speaking truth to power is extraordinarily expensive.
comment in response to
post
In part because the minority inconvenienced(great term!) keep the lights on.
comment in response to
post
This was long overdue
comment in response to
post
We are powerless. The federal marshalls are not arresting the lawless president or his minions as they ignore the laws and court ruling. Congress is not telling LEO to enforce the law, so I as a citizen am supposed to do what exactly? Make a citizens arrest? How do you think that would go exactly?
comment in response to
post
But why would you consider ceftriaxone narrow spectrum in pneumonia? I also wonder about what is being diagnosed as pneumonia here. I didn't find and may have just missed the ps model for pneumonia, but it strikes me that these small differences might be sensitive to the model used.
comment in response to
post
Toxo
comment in response to
post
But what can ordinary people really do? We rely on police to arrest lawbreakers and now the police have chosen to protect rather than arrest these very well connected criminals.
comment in response to
post
According to our Epic augmentin 600/42.9 is 10 x cheaper than the other concentrations.
comment in response to
post
Amoxicillin is safe so sure. However we typically give adults 500mg to 1000mg per dose. (Usually tid) So the relative amount for what is often a toddler is up there.
comment in response to
post
I agree with you but people tend to assume that computers are better at math than people and they assume the default concentration is reasonable. Neither of these assumptions is true with Epic...hence the monstrosity of a script you show. I see this as primarily a software issue though.
comment in response to
post
Epic is notorious for this kind of no upper bounds prescription. It's highschool level programming.Why an attorney has not taken Epic to the cleaners years ago makes me think attorneys are mostly just looking for the quick easy buck
comment in response to
post
FWIW, the 2023 data—the first ever nationally representative sample of US transgender high school students—showed that 92% of trans teens reported being verbally abused by their parents and 54% reported being physically abused: “hit, beat, kicked or physically hurt in any way.”
comment in response to
post
I’ve now posted the national data, 2015-2023, in Stata format here. I will add state and district data when I’m able.
www.datalumos.org/datalumos/pr...
comment in response to
post
Never trust a clothed one either. Especially in respiratory season
comment in response to
post
Thanks. Can you do me a PDF?
comment in response to
post
Link is not working for me
comment in response to
post
The problem with random forests is that they over fit data to the point that you could train them to predict lottery results. Alas only previous ones. Not future ones.