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Discussing Family Health this Father’s Day – Cleveland Clinic Newsroom

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CLEVELAND - Fathers Day is this Sunday, making it the perfect time to check in with your dad about his health and encourage him to see the doctor if hasnt got in a while.

I see people that come into my office and I ask them, Hey, why are you here, Joe? and theyll saymy familys been bugging me about coming in. So, bug them to come in, it works, said John Hanicak, MD, family medicine physician for Cleveland Clinic. And we see the downstream effects of that. So, they do show up and you get things taken care of, catch things early.

Dr. Hanicak said there are all kinds of reasons someone may delay seeing the doctor, like maybe theyve just been really busy, or they didnt think the pain or discomfort theyre experiencing was a big deal.

But, the sooner a person comes in, the better.Then their doctor can help treat the issue before it turns into something serious.

Its also important not to delay screenings or tests.

For example, prostate cancer exams are typically recommended around 50.

They may be needed sooner if theres family history.

Speaking of family history, Dr. Hanicak said parents need to make sure theyre talking to their children about genetic concerns, too.

If you haven't seen your doctor for a long time, don't be afraid to check in with us, he added. We're not going to yell at you because your cholesterol is high. Our job is to help you to be the best person that you can be. But, the first step is coming in for that appointment to catch up and see how things are going.

Dr. Hanicak said talking to men about their mental health is just as important.

He knows it can be a sensitive topic for some, but its worth addressing.

Original post:

Discussing Family Health this Father's Day - Cleveland Clinic Newsroom

Bucking the national trend: More Dal med grads opting for careers in family medicine – Dal News

This year, students graduating from Dalhousie Medical School are opting for careers in family medicine in impressive numbers.

Half of the graduating class will begin their residency training in family medicine this summer, marking a significant increase since 2018 when only 25 per cent of the class chose to enter a career path in family medicine.

Dalhousies Family Medicine program has also seen success, once again filling all available residency positions a remarkable feat, especially considering the expansion of its residency seats from 70 in 2022 to 91 in 2024.

While many programs nationwide face challenges in filling positions, this accomplishment is not merely fortuitous but rather the result of systematic changes implemented five years ago.

By intentionally integrating family physicians as educators and role models in the undergraduate curriculum we aimed to shift perceptions, says Dr. Kath Stringer, head of Family Medicine.

In 2018, concern arose when the Faculty of Medicine graduating class witnessed only a 25 per cent match rate to family medicine. Recognizing the pivotal role of family medicine in health care, the Faculty of Medicine identified the need for deliberate and sustained efforts to elevate it as a career choice.

The Family Medicine Project Charter was launched in response later that year, led by Dr. Jennifer Hall, family physician and then associate dean of Dalhousie Medicine New Brunswick. The goal: to achieve a 50 per cent match rate by 2023.

Under the guidance of the charter, initiatives were developed to boost exposure to family medicine across the Dalhousie medicine curriculum. Among them, the longitudinal family medicine clinical exposure experience was introduced for first-year medical students; a two-week rural rotation based largely in family medicine was created; enhanced Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship (LIC) opportunities were offered; and career nights were organized for medical students to explore career options within family medicine.

Efforts were also made to acknowledge and reward the contributions of family medicine residents and faculty. Continuous feedback from students and tracking career choice data has informed subsequent strategies.

The results of the Charters efforts were promising. One year after its implementation in 2018, the match rate had climbed to 41 per cent.

In 2023, the Faculty of Medicine formed a Family Medicine Specialty Committee to further advance this work.

The Family Medicine Specialty Committee led by Dr. Stringer and comprised of various leaders across the Faculty of Medicine, continues to identify and find solutions to the multifactorial barriers students face in choosing family medicine as a desired career.

The Committees work is integral to the Faculty of Medicines strategic plan, Realizing Our Ambition, which affirms the universitys commitment to advancing family medicine education and recognizing family medicine as a specialty of choice.

These efforts are yielding significant results as this years matching numbers illustrate.

The choice to pursue family medicine reflects our learners dedication to the field and embodies their profound understanding of the pivotal role family medicine plays in health care, says Dr. David Anderson, dean of the Faculty of Medicine. I congratulate each of them on making this very important decision and want to express sincere gratitude to the dedicated staff and faculty who helped achieve this impressive accomplishment.

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Bucking the national trend: More Dal med grads opting for careers in family medicine - Dal News

Virginia’s state budget will fund OB-GYN medical residencies amid obstetrics closures – News From The States

Julia Resil is leaving Virginia.

At this stage in her career, the chapter of being a medical resident is naturally coming to a close and she will move on to become an attending physician in Rhode Island. Resil has spent the past three years at Johnston Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, in Southwest Virginia. Shes excited that shell be closer to her family in Boston and nearer to metropolitan areas, though practicing family medicine in a rural area was attractive to her as a medical resident.

Family medicine practice can include obstetrics the delivery of babies and the exodus of doctors like Resil comes at a time where several rural hospitals in Virginia have suspended their obstetrics programs. Within the past year, Sentara Halifax Regional Hospital, Sovah Health in Martinsville and LewisGale Hospital-Montgomery in Blacksburg have stopped offering obstetrics.

President of Sentara Halifax Regional Hospital Dr. Brian Zwoyer said that there was a 33% decrease in births there over the past five years. In a recent email, he attributed this to changing demographics, aging populations and a national declining birth rate.

With hospitals already less accessible in rural areas of the state than urban areas, Resil noted that patients end up traveling further for check-up appointments or to give birth.

And as you get closer to your due date, you have more appointments, Resil said.

About 15% of people in Virginia dont have a birthing hospital within a 30-minute drive, according to a report from the March of Dimes.

Danville-based doula Roshay Richardson works with clients around Virginias South Side and occasionally some from North Carolina. She said that shes seen patients travel to Danville from elsewhere to give birth and wonders how much of a strain that could put on labor and delivery doctors with an uptick in clients. Richardson works with the Virginia Rural Health Association, which advocates to lawmakers about rural healthcare needs.

While doulas arent obstetricians, they provide companionship and patient advocacy to their clients. A U.S. Department of Health study noted doulas role in positive health outcomes and theyve been particularly helpful for Black parents.

Likewise, Resil described a patient traveling about three hours because they wanted to see a doctor of color. Resil is among a diverse cohort of medical residents in a predominantly white part of the state.

They were a little bit scared because they had providers that were white in the past and they felt uncomfortable because they felt like they werent being heard, Resil said of the patient.

As a woman of color with family from Haiti, Resil knows this feeling. She shared that anecdotally, she and members of her family have felt this way when theyve gone to the doctor.

Then seeing that in some of my patients. Theyve been hopping around from doctor to doctor saying something is wrong but I cant figure it out; but no one is listening to me, Resil said. And then we find out, oh yeah, there is. Lets make sure we get you to the high-risk OB-GYN.

OB-GYN care can be deadly at times, with pregnancy-related medical emergencies that can arise suddenly. Such was the case for Wendy Welchs friend.

Welch, director of the Southwest Virginia Graduate Medical Education Consortium, described how a friend developed eclampsia. The pregnancy-related blood pressure disorder is life threatening and her friend had to be flown to a different hospital across the state line and into an urban area. This saved her life, but also resulted in much higher medical bills.

She explained that her friend was unconscious when loaded onto a flight and then woke up about $30,000 in debt.

Money is both an issue and a solution, Welch explained. Her nonprofit organization works to help cover costs of bringing medical residents into Virginia.

Welch said that lower population density and declining birth rates has meant theres not enough people for the hospital system to consider (obstetrics) profitable.

But funding positions could help. Most OB-GYN residencies are in other areas of the state, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Though family medicine residents can work with pregnant clients, OB-GYN residents are more specialized in obstetrics and gynecology.

(Rural areas) get screwed, Welch said. To catch a unicorn to catch someone whos that valuable and knows theyre that valuable, you need a whole lot of stuff to attract them now. If theyre a kayaker or their mom is in Southwest Virginia, youve got them, but if not, how are you going to get them here?

Lawmakers have secured funding in the state budget that they hope can bolster medical residencies. Del. Chris Obenshain, R-Montgomery and Del. Jason Ballard, R-Giles pressed for one million over the next two years to fund 10 obstetric-gynecological residents. Two positions are specifically earmarked for Johnston Memorial, where Resil has worked in family medicine.

The matter is also personal to Obenshain, whose wife had to travel to give birth to their child recently when the LewisGale hospital near them stopped labor and delivery services.

He felt lucky that there is a cluster of hospitals in his portion of Southwest Virginia, but he noted how other parts of Southwest Virginia and South Side have less options.

Its a much bigger issue when a hospital doesnt provide these services anymore, Obenshain said.

Virginia legislators in both parties worked on a variety of bills this year to improve maternal health outcomes. Some proposals, like a requirement for health insurance coverage of doulas, were signed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Meanwhile, he vetoed a proposal to include unconscious bias and cultural competency training when renewing medical licenses. Black people are more likely to experience negative maternal health outcomes, in part, due to providers racial bias, according to a study. Black women are also more likely to die from pregnancy complications than white women, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows.

Women whose skin is darker than my wifes skin have significantly worse outcomes, Sen. Chris Head, R-Botetourt, said during a floor speech while defending the bill in the Senate. Something needs to be examined and done about that.

Head had carried the bill with three Democratic lawmakers who are also Black women: Sens. Lashrecse Aird, D-Petersburg; Mamie Locke, D-Hampton; and Jennifer Carroll Foy, D-Prince William.

Though he ultimately vetoed the bill, Youngkin had first sought amendments that advocates for the bill worried made the training just a checked box.

Youngkin signaled interest in working on more maternal health legislation so the bill could come up again next year.

In the meantime, new cohorts of medical residents will cycle through Virginia and state agencies are set to use the new budget funding to recruit some with OB-GYN specialties.

While Resil has been able to bring her perspective as a practitioner of color to rural Virginia, she has lessons learned from the more hands-on experience that she will take with her when she leaves.

I have made countless house calls to people, and I know thats something I would probably not do in Boston, back home, she said. Being able to see how people are living, you can get a better idea of a family.

She said she plans to be more inquisitive with her patients going forward as a result.

Originally posted here:

Virginia's state budget will fund OB-GYN medical residencies amid obstetrics closures - News From The States

Discussing Family Health this Fathers Day – Mega Doctor News

Speaking of family history, Dr. Hanicak said parents need to make sure theyre talking to their children about genetic concerns, too. Image for illustration purposes

Mega Doctor News

see people that come into my office and I ask them, Hey, why are you here, Joe? and theyll saymy familys been bugging me about coming in. So, bug them to come in, it works, said John Hanicak, MD, family medicine physician for Cleveland Clinic. And we see the downstream effects of that. So, they do show up and you get things taken care of, catch things early.

Dr. Hanicak said there are all kinds of reasons someone may delay seeing the doctor, like maybe theyve just been really busy, or they didnt think the pain or discomfort theyre experiencing was a big deal.

But, the sooner a person comes in, the better.Then their doctor can help treat the issue before it turns into something serious.

Its also important not to delay screenings or tests.

For example, prostate cancer exams are typically recommended around 50.

They may be needed sooner if theres family history.

Speaking of family history, Dr. Hanicak said parents need to make sure theyre talking to their children about genetic concerns, too.

If you havent seen your doctor for a long time, dont be afraid to check in with us, he added. Were not going to yell at you because your cholesterol is high. Our job is to help you to be the best person that you can be. But, the first step is coming in for that appointment to catch up and see how things are going.

Dr. Hanicak said talking to men about their mental health is just as important.

He knows it can be a sensitive topic for some, but its worth addressing.

Read more:

Discussing Family Health this Fathers Day - Mega Doctor News

Mon Health Bariatrics performs first procedure, in Kingwood, West Virginia – WV News

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Mon Health Bariatrics performs first procedure, in Kingwood, West Virginia - WV News

UW initiative aims to bring together social sciences and genetics – Wisbusiness.com

Integrating the fields of genetics and social science is putting us on the right track for understanding the world better, a UW-Madison expert says.

The universitys La Follette School of Public Affairs yesterday held a panel discussion on its Initiative in Social Genomics, which aims to bring together these disciplines to explore how genetics are connected to behavior, socio-economic outcomes and other factors.

Jason Fletcher, a professor of public affairs with the school, underlined the complexity involved with combining two nuanced areas of study into one discipline. Still, conducting research focused on just one while excluding the other fails to recognize that both genetics and social factors interact with one another, he said.

By focusing on your one domain, youre not including all of the relevant factors, he said, noting that only in the past two decades or so has information from both fields been combined into the same data structures.

He said the university is making major investments into training more people to wrangle this firehose of data to conduct meaningful social genomics research.

Because it is so complicated, the solutions so far have not been obvious, theyve required a lot of work, he said. And were not there. We dont have the solutions yet, but I think thats the enterprise here, is that we need collaborations to build this bridge where both sides are building at the same time, and coming together.

Lauren Schmitz, an assistant professor of public affairs with the school, said that ever since the human genome was first fully mapped in 2003, we have many more questions than answers about what makes us tick. She noted rapid advancements in computing and genome sequencing have led to a flood of new genetic data that scientists are still working to understand.

In part, sequencing the human genome wasnt the silver bullet humanity hoped for, because we realized that we cant study the human genome in isolation, she said yesterday. If we want to gain a better understanding of how genetic diversity shapes who we are, we need to understand and get outside the lab, to study genetic diversity and our genes in the wild.

Conditions of work, environmental factors and even economic trends also powerfully shape our life outcomes, she noted.

Her own research, focused on aging and longevity, explores how social conditions and disadvantages affect biological age. She said scientists can now calculate biological age quite accurately based on analysis of epigenetics, or how various factors affect gene expression. With just a blood sample, they can calculate how life circumstances are accelerating or slowing down the aging process.

This scientific explosion of data is really allowing us to see the impacts of public policy on the cellular level, she said.

In a 2022 study focused on the Great Depression, Schmitz sought to understand how this period of economic hardship affected biological aging.

What we found is that individuals who were in utero, who were in the womb during the Great Depression, were aging faster decades later, she said. And so here we see this really important connection between early life conditions and late-life aging.

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UW initiative aims to bring together social sciences and genetics - Wisbusiness.com

Women have a higher genetic risk for PTSD, according to study by VCU and Swedish researchers – VCU News

By Olivia Trani

Women are twice as likely as men to develop post-traumatic stress disorder, but the factors contributing to this disparity have largely remained unsettled. A research team led by Virginia Commonwealth University and Lund University in Sweden conducted the largest twin-sibling study of PTSD to date to shed light on how genetics may play a role. Their results, published Tuesday in theAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, are the first to demonstrate that women have a higher genetic risk for the disorder compared with men.

By analyzing health data from over 16,000 twin pairs and 376,000 sibling pairs, the research team discovered that heritability for PTSD was 7 percentage points higher in women (35.4%) than in men (28.6%). They also found evidence that the genes that make up the heritable risk for PTSD vary between the two sexes.

The researchers say their findings could inform strategies for PTSD prevention and intervention following a traumatic event, as well as help address stigmas related to womens mental health.

Women are at higher risk for developing PTSD than men, even when controlling for the type of trauma, income level, social support and other environmental factors. Some of the theories as to why that is have frankly been unkind to women, such as attributing the sex difference to a weakness or lack of ability to cope, saidAnanda B. Amstadter, Ph.D., a professor in theVCU School of Medicinesdepartments ofPsychiatryandHuman and Molecular Geneticsand lead author of the study. I think this study can help move the narrative that people can have an inherited biological risk for PTSD, and that this genetic risk is greater in women.

Nearly 70% of the global population are exposed to at least one traumatic event in their lifetime, such as physical or sexual assault, a motor vehicle accident, exposure to combat or a natural disaster. About 6% of those who are exposed to trauma develop PTSD.Amstadters research focuses on understanding the conditions that might increase or decrease a persons risk of experiencing PTSD, particularly how a persons genes impact their risk.

If you think of risk for PTSD like a pie chart, were trying to better understand what factors make up the pieces of this pie, she said. Some of the risk is influenced by a persons environment, such as the experiences they have while growing up. On the other hand, some of the risk will be influenced by the genes they inherit from their parents.

Previous research has looked into how genes influence the likelihood of developing PTSD, but the study conducted by Amstadter and her colleagues is the first of its kind to investigate how genetic risk varies by sex.

For this project, the research team examined anonymized clinical data from Swedish population-based registries. Their analysis consisted of more than 400,000 pairs of twins or siblings born up to two years apart in Sweden between 1955 and 1980. Studies on twins and siblings, because of their genetic similarities, can help researchers determine how a persons genes influence their risk for mental illnesses.

Every time a person within this age group interacts with Swedens health care system, whether thats visiting their primary care doctor, filling a prescription or going to the hospital, that information is recorded in their national registries. This kind of data is a really powerful tool for addressing questions related to genetic risk for medical conditions, Amstadter said. Prior PTSD studies involving twins and siblings have typically only included a few thousand individuals. Because our sample size was so large in comparison, we were able to make calculations with a higher degree of certainty.

Through statistical modeling, the researchers calculated how much a persons genetic makeup influenced their likelihood of developing PTSD following a traumatic event. In finding that PTSD was 35.4% heritable in women but only 28.6% heritable in men, they demonstrated that women have a higher biological risk for PTSD.

Their models also revealed that the genes associated with PTSD were highly correlated (0.81) but not entirely the same between men and women. This suggests that the genetic underpinnings of sex hormones, like testosterone, estrogen and progesterone, may be involved in the development of PTSD. The research team is collaborating with the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium to identify the molecular genetic variants that may contribute to sex-specific pathways of risk.

Amstadter conducted the research at theVirginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Geneticsat VCU alongside co-authors Shannon Cusack, Ph.D., a postdoctoral scholar; and Kenneth Kendler, M.D., the institutes director, professor of psychiatry and eminent scholar. They collaborated with Lund University co-authors Sara Lnn, Ph.D.; Jan Sundquist, M.D., Ph.D.; and Kristina Sundquist, M.D., Ph.D.

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Women have a higher genetic risk for PTSD, according to study by VCU and Swedish researchers - VCU News