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Trans definitions make the best case for protecting biological women – Leader & Times

L&T Publisher Earl Watt

Twenty-one states have voted to protect biological women in sports so far including Kansas. However, in the U.S. House of Representatives, the issue became partisan when a similar vote passed with all 219 Republicans voting for it while all 203 Democrats voted against it.

The bill wont likely pass the Senate unless Kirsten Sinema and Joe Manchin are willing to switch, and even if they do, Joe Biden has committed to vetoing the measure.

Much like the pandemic, it seems that partisan participation overrides common sense.

Why is it that only Republicans question the origin of COVID? Why is it that only Republicans are looking to protect biological women in sports?

According to an NPR/Ipsos poll, which is not a conservative poll, 63 percent of Americans do not want trans athletes competing against women.

Sounds reasonable. The work done for Title IX in the late 1960s and 70s was to make sure girls had equal opportunity in sports.

Women have not always been given a fair shot, and society has tried to make sure that women are receiving equal pay for equal work, equal opportunity in academic achievement and the ability to compete to be the best in sports.

It seems that biological women, those who are born female, who experience female puberty, who experience that monthly visitor, who get pregnant, who develop as a unique human being with female traits are somehow worth even less because a biological man can choose to occupy their space on the ecological niche.

Before the common opposers believe this is transphobic, that is simply not true. In a free society, men have the option to be men or displace women as choosing to be a woman as their gender choice. Knock yourself out.

But the difference here is how hard women worked to be recognized as a born female who achieved in business or in community service only to see a biological male take home the Female of the Year award.

Or win a swim meet. Or a track race. The list goes on.

This was an option biological women did not have in being a woman, and beyond that, it is a fact of nature that females are born female and males are born male.

In order to make you forget about the biological facts, you have to be stripped of your handle on the language.

Biology no longer matters, or so we are told. You are also told that gender identity begins in the womb, regardless of what biology says.

You are also informed that children in kindergarten need to be told to explore their sexuality so they can decide whether or not they are a boy or a girl.

Biology has already answered that question in virtually every case. There is the occasional moment when a child is born with genitalia of both male and female, but this according to Intersex HumanRights Australia, is only in 0.016 percent of the population.

What was once called gender dysphoria, where a person feels as if they do not identify with their biological sex, is now being rewritten.

Why?

Because of feelings rather than science.

We dont want anyone to feel bad, so we redefine the language.

Different trends are used for a person to stick out in a crowd, to be an individual. Hippies grew their hair long, goths chose to wear all black and black make-up, people enjoy a tattoo, and some even choose piercings in a variety of places. Weve also seen hair colors of all varieties.

Weve gone so far in people standing out, that there really is nothing that a person can really do to be unique.

But what about transitioning? The numbers are starting to increase in this trend.

Is it an effort to really identify, or could it be a way to stand out.

Also, since more biological males make the partial transition, is it a way for that biological male to feel they would stand out more if they were female?

Lets also explore the truth that these are not full-on transitions, or sex changes. Trans-women, for all intents and purposes, are full male from the waist down, even if they have taken hormone therapy to produce breasts and other emotions typically experienced by women.

The ultimate question is if a trans woman met a trans man, would either be satisfied with that pairing?

The answer is possibly, because according to pro-trans web site stonewall.org.uk, the gender you identify with has nothing to do with who you are attracted to.

Caitlyn Jenner, who was once Bruce Jenner, claims to be heterosexual, which means (s)he prefers to be with women even though (s)he chooses to live as a woman.

Jenner has also been a strong proponent of protecting biological women in sports.

This is why supporting biological women in sports is neither transphobic nor limiting the rights of others. It is highly likely that a trans woman (born male) is still attracted to women. If that is the case, why are they being allowed in locker rooms with other women?

If trans has nothing to do with attraction, as defined by the trans community, it is further evidence that biological women need their private spaces protected. Its not because I believe it to be so, but because their own definition demands it.

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Trans definitions make the best case for protecting biological women - Leader & Times

Chili peppers more deeply rooted in Colorado than previously thought – University of Colorado Boulder

Banner image: Abel Campos, majoring in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, examines a fossil in the Invertebrate Paleontology department at the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History. (Photo:Casey A. Cass / CU Boulder)

Botanists and paleontologists, led by researchers fromCU Boulder, have identified a fossil chili pepper that may rewrite the geography and evolutionary timeline of the tomato plant family.

The teams findings, published last month in the journal New Phytologist, show that the chili pepper tribe (Capsiceae) within the tomato, or nightshade (Solanaceae), family is much older and was much more widespread than previously thought. Scientists previously believed that chili peppers evolved in South America at most 15 million years ago, but new research pushes that date to at least 50 million years agoand suggests that chili peppers were in fact present in North America at that time.

Roco Deanna, a postdoctoral researcher in ecology and evolutionary biology, examines a chili pepper fossil that is at least 40 million years old. (Credit: R. Deanna)

Roco Deanna, a postdoctoral researcher in ecology and evolutionary biology, and Abel Campos, an undergraduate double majoring in evolutionary biology and molecular, cellular and developmental biology, weren't planning to rewrite history when they met up one afternoon at the CU Boulder Museum of Natural History in 2021. Yet among a group of specimens in its collections gathered from the Green River Formationgeological treasure trove in northwestern Colorado and southwestern WyomingDeanna spotted a specific, solanaceous trait embedded in one fossil: little spikes on the end of a fruiting stem.

At first, I thought No way! This cant be true, said Deanna, lead author of the study. But it was so characteristic of the chili pepper.

After they discovered two of these fossils in the CU Boulder collections, Deanna and Campos, a co-author of the study, found one more from the chili pepper tribe in collections at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science (DMNS). All three fossils are from the Green River Formation in Colorado: the CU specimens from Garfield County and the DMNS fossil from Rio Blanco County.

These chili pepper fossils from the Eocene geological epoch (34 to 56 million years ago) match the timeline of another nightshade fossil found in the Esmeraldas Formation in Colombia, revealing that the family was already distributed across all of the Americas by as early as 50 million years ago.

The family is way older than we thought, said Deanna, also a faculty member at the National University of Cordoba.

Talia Karim, Collection Manager for Invertebrate Paleontology at the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, works with Abel Campos, majoring in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology with the museums fossil collection. (Credit: Casey A. Cass / CU Boulder)

The nightshade family comprises 3,000 species and almost 100 different genera, including chili peppers. The ancient chili pepper was technically a fruitand a berry, at that. While tomatoes and peppers are commonly associated with vegetables, they have seeds on the inside, which officially categorizes them as fruits.

The researchers cannot be sure of the chilis exact shape or color, but it was probably on the smaller end compared to modern day chili peppers. And like its relatives, it could have been quite spicy, according to Deanna.

Deanna and Campos identified the fossil by the unique shape of its calyx teeth: spikes on the end of the fruiting stem that hold on to the pepper, like those which hold a gemstone in a ring.

The world has maybe 300,000 plant species. The only plants with that kind of calyx is this group of 80 or 90 species, said Stacey Smith, senior author of the paper and associate professor of evolutionary biology at CU Boulder.

Paleontologists collected the CU Boulder fossil from the Green River Formation in the 1990s. But its exact identity remained a mystery for years, in part because there are only a handful of solanologists, botanists who study the nightshade family, in the world. When Deanna found these Colorado-based fossils, she had just returned from a global search for tomato family fossil specimens, only to find some just ripe for the picking right on campus.

A lot of discoveries happen decades after the specimens have been collected, said Smith. Who knows how many other new fossil species are sitting in any of these museums? They're just waiting for the right eyes to look at them.

Deanna and Campos identified this chili pepperfossil in theCU Boulder Museum of Natural History collectionsby the unique shape of its calyx teeth: spikes on the end of the fruiting stem that hold on to the pepper. (Credit:R. Deanna)

These chili pepper fossils were around during the Eocene, a geologic epoch that lasted from about 34 to 56 million years ago as the continents drifted toward their present positions. During this balmy time in Earths history, carbon dioxide levels ranged between 700 and 900 parts per million (twice as high as they are today), and palm trees grew as far north as Alaska. Because little to no ice was present on Earth, sea level was as much as 500 feet higher than it is today.

Top: The first chili pepper fossil identified by the researchers atthe CU Boulder Natural HistoryMuseum, shown next to aportion of measuring tape.(Credit:R. Deanna) Bottom: Another chili pepper fossil from the CU Bouldercollections.(Credit:S. Manchester)

Scientists had assumed that the origins of chili peppers began in South America roughly 10 to 15 million years ago, where they then dispersed over land and water to the other continents. While Colorado today is home to very few native nightshades and no chili peppers, this new discovery hints that a plethora of plants from the tomato plant family may have existed in North America 40 to 50 million years ago, which have since largely disappeared.

But how did these peppers first get to North America? Its now a case of the chicken or the chili pepper?

Experts have theorized that fruit-eating birds, which existed as early as 60 million years ago, may have carried seeds and plants around the world with them in their guts, stuck to their feathers or in the mud on their feet. But these birds also had to be eating something to fuel their journeysand fleshy berries, or peppers, make the perfect fuel. Birds may have distributed peppers from continent to continent, but peppers may also have been crucial to the success of those same birds.

So the nightshade family could have easily started in North America instead of South America, then dispersed in the other directionand with this discovery, scientists can no longer say for sure, said Smith.

These chili peppers, a species that we thought arose in an evolutionary blink of an eye, have been around for a super long time, said Smith. We're still coming to grips with this new timeline.

Additional authors on this publication include: Camila Martnez, Universidad EAFIT and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute; Steven Manchester, Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida; Peter Wilf, Pennsylvania State University; Sandra Knapp, Natural History Museum, London; Franco E. Chiarini, Gloria E. Barboza, and Gabriel Bernardello of the Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biologia Vegetal, IMBIV (CONICET-UNC); Herve Sauquet, National Herbarium of New South Wales and Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, University of New South Wales; Ellen Dean, Center for Plant Diversity, University of California; Andres Orejuela, Grupo de Investigacion en Recursos Naturales Amazonicos GRAM, Facultad de Ingenieras y Ciencias Basicas, Instituto Tecnol ogico del Putumayo, and Subdireccion cientfica, Jardn Botanico de Bogota Jose Celestino Mutis.

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Chili peppers more deeply rooted in Colorado than previously thought - University of Colorado Boulder

Bryan Manzano selected as Eberly College of Science spring 2023 … – Pennsylvania State University

Bryan Manzano of Glen Mills, Pennsylvania, will be honored as the student marshal for the Penn State Eberly College of Science during the Universitys spring commencement ceremonies on Sunday, May 7, on the University Park campus. His escort for the commencement exercises is Cornelia Osbourne, graduate student in biology.

Manzano will graduate with a 4.0 grade-point average and bachelors degrees in biology and music performance. He is a Schreyer Scholar in the Schreyer Honors College and has been a member of the deans list every semester. Manzano was honored with an Evan Pugh Scholar Award in 2022 and a School of Music Scholarship in 2019. He also will be recognized as the student marshal for the Penn State College of Art of Architecture.

I am extremely humbled to be selected for this honor and am happy that my hard work as a double major has paid off, he said.

While at Penn State, Manzano conducted research with Illiana Baums, then a professor of biology, as well as Osbourne. He used the hybrid coral species Acropora prolifera to study the mismatch that can occur between the genome in the nucleus of a cell and the separate genome within mitochondria in the cell, called mitonuclear conflict. He wrote a literature review about the effects of this conflict on the second-generation offspring of these coral hybrids. He later developed computer code using a gene coexpression network analysis approach to compare the genome of the coral hybrid to that of its two parental species to look for evidence of mitonuclear conflict, which could impact future offspring viability. Manzano also worked with the lab to carry out a protocol to extract genetic material called RNA from the tissues of various species of corals.

In addition to his research activities, Manzano served as a teaching assistant for the course BIOL 220W: Ecology and Evolution. He was also the president of the School of Musics Encore Benefiting THON organization as well as a member of the Penn State Horn Society, the Penn State Symphonic Wind Ensemble, and the Penn State Philharmonic Orchestra. Manzano also performed as a part of the Nittany Valley Symphony and the Pennsylvania Chamber Orchestra.

I think my most important experience was going to Carnegie Hall as part of the presidents concert for the Symphonic Wind Ensemble in March 2020, he said. It taught me that when one studies at university, it is important to be able to take advantage of any travel experience you can in order to make memories that you will never forget.

After graduation, Manzano plans to work as a research technician in the lab of Song Tan, Verne M. Willaman Professor of Molecular Biology. He is excited to join this lab and help them work towards gaining further understanding of gene regulation, which could have implications for the development of future cancer treatments.

A graduate of Garnet Valley High School in Glen Mills, Pennsylvania, Manzano will be accompanied at commencement by his father, Patrick; sister, Alyssa; and partner, Carson Bechdel.

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Bryan Manzano selected as Eberly College of Science spring 2023 ... - Pennsylvania State University

Qualitative Research Increasing Throughout Dermatology – MD Magazine

Lucinda L. Kohn, MD, MHS

Credit: Children's Hospital Colorado

Qualitative research that which better helps contextualize health outcomes based on societal and demographic factors have become more prevalent in dermatology, according to a new scoping review from a team of dermatology investigators.1

The new assessment, led by Micah G. Pascual, BS, and Lucina L. Kohn, MD, MHS, of the department of dermatology at the University of Colorado Aurora School of Medicine, showed that nearly 1 in 5 dermatology research articles identified in their analysis included qualitative outcomesand that a majority of said qualitative studies investigated the patient experience regarding the key topic.

The findings highlight an increasing interest to include patient perspective in dermatologya specialty particularly burdened with assuring improved quality-of-life and comprehensive wellness for its patient populations.

Pascual, Kohn and colleagues conducted their review to accomplish both an assessment of the current approaches of qualitative investigation in dermatology, as well as to interpret qualitative trends and their impact and applicability on dermatology. At its most optimal use, qualitative research may help dermatologists and researchers in the field come into better understanding of individuals impacted by skin diseases based on their cultures and backgrounds.

Qualitative research can elicit narratives from participants to capture the unique experiences of health care stakeholders (ie, patients, health care clinicians, and caregivers) that would otherwise remain hidden with quantitative investigation alone, they noted.

Among the 6 common methodologies of qualitative research are content analysis, grounded theory; phenomenology, ethnography; discourse analysis; and case study. Each methodology provides a unique utility for researchers and goals for execution, as well as data collection methodsincluding interviews, focus group discussions, observations, and document analyses.

However, to our knowledge, the extent to which researchers have conducted qualitative studies in dermatology is unknown, investigators wrote.

The team conducted a scoping review of 2 medical research databases to identify dermatology qualitative studies. They excluded articles that which were published in a language other than English; involved mixed, quantitative, systematic review or meta-analysis methods; or were not specific to general, medical, pediatric, invasive, pathologic dermatology or education and training in the field.

Among the 1398 articles reviewed by the investigators, 249 (17.8%) were defined as qualitative dermatology studies. The most commonly observed methodologies were content analysis (n = 58 [23.3%]) and grounded theory (n = 35 [14.1%]). Case studies comprised only 5 (2.0%) of all qualitative studies.

The most prevalent data collection methods included individual interviews (n = 198 [79.5%]) and focus groups (n = 45 [18.1%]). Patients were the primary participants of qualitative studies (n = 174 [69.9%]), followed by health care team members (n = 68 [27.3%]). Sample sizes were primarily 21 participants (n = 127 [51.0%]).

The most prominent topics of the qualitative studies were patient experience (n = 137 [55.0%]), clinician experience (n = 30 [12.0%]), and skin care comprehension (n = 18 [8.8%]).

Investigators observed that 120 articles (48.2%) were published between 2020 2022, versus 98 (39.4%) published from 2010 2019 and just 29 (11.7%) from 2000 2009.

The team concluded that qualitative research is on the rise in dermatology, featuring topical focuses on quality-of-life instrument development and utility; clinician experience with disease treatment; consumer opinion on skin care productions and pharmacotherapeutic options; and perspective on policies regarding skin health care.

As use of qualitative methods grows in dermatology research, it is increasingly important that dermatologists and researchers become familiar with these techniques, they wrote. Many universities offer in-person or online workshops detailing an introduction to qualitative research that typically span a few days to a week.

Investigators expressed hope their research highlights the impact and benefit of qualitative research, as well as the increasing opportunities for said research for dermatologists.

References

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Qualitative Research Increasing Throughout Dermatology - MD Magazine

U.S. Dermatology Partners Announces The Opening Of Sulphur … – EastTexasRadio.com

U.S. Dermatology PartnersJoanna Alters-PA C

U.S. Dermatology Partners expands access to dermatology care to patients in Hopkins County with the opening of their newest office location

WHAT:U.S. Dermatology Partners, one of the leading dermatology groups in the country, is pleased to announce the opening of its newest office location in Sulphur Springs, Texas. The new office marks the organizations 100th location and is part of their Outreach Program serving rural communities and offers convenient access to dermatology and skin cancer treatments. The new office provides treatment in Hopkins County for patients of all ages for dermatologic conditions, including acne, psoriasis, eczema, and skin cancer.Celebrating this achievement, The newU.S. Dermatology Partners Sulphur Springswill provide FREE Skin Cancer Screenings by appointment onlyat their new location to help residents who may have never had a skin check before know if they are at risk for skin cancer. Additionally, they will provide free sunscreen to help people continue their preventative care outside of the dermatologists office.

Certified Physician Assistant,Joanne Alters, will be the primary practitioner at the Sulphur Springs office with oversight from Board-Certified Dermatologist Dr. Martha McCollough. Joanne is a Diplomate of the Society of Dermatology Physician Assistants and is a member of the American Academy of Physician Assistants. Her clinical interest includes skin cancer screening and treatment and other dermatological conditions such as acne, rashes, rosacea, and eczema.

Joanne and her husband are thrilled to be in East Texas to raise their son near the family ranch. They enjoy being outdoors, spending time with family, and attending church.

For questions or to make an appointment for the FREE Skin Cancer Screening, please call the office at (903) 582-4424 ext. 6350.

WHEN:Wednesday, April 26th, from 1:00 pm until 4:00 pm. by appointment only

WHERE:U.S. Dermatology Partners Sulphur Springs

601 Airport Rd #140

Sulphur Springs, TX 75482

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U.S. Dermatology Partners Announces The Opening Of Sulphur ... - EastTexasRadio.com

Apex Dermatology opens new office in Avon – Crain’s Cleveland Business

Apex Dermatology continues its steady expansion across the region with a new location in Avon this month, the practice's 13th location.

Now in its 12th year, the physician-owned and locally managed practice held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Tuesday, April 25, for the newest office, located at 6855 American Way.

The plan is to gradually roll out all of Apex's offerings in Avon as volumes grow, said Dr. Jorge Garcia-Zuazaga, Apex founder and president.

"It's designed so that we can do aesthetic, medical and surgical dermatology just like our other offices," he said. "So you know, as we grow in that office, and the community, then we'll start adding all those services."

He hopes to have Mohs Surgery a specialized procedure Apex offers to remove certain types of skin cancers and the full range of Apex's aesthetics dermatology offerings online at the Avon office within the next year.

"We realized that, you know, the Avon population is growing (and) that community is in need of a lot of these procedures," Garcia-Zuazaga said. "And we feel that if we educate patients, and we provide the services, then the patients will come in and take a look at Apex."

Dr. Cynthia Lavery Henry, a board-certified dermatologist who has been practicing in Apex's Westlake office, will serve patients in the new Avon location, along with board-certified nurse practitioner Debi Sorg.

The Avon location, which has been seeing patients since early April, has a staff of about 10, including Henry, Sorg, their team of medical assistants and office staff.

"We anticipate that we're going to hire probably another four or five people in the next year to that office," Garcia-Zuazaga said.

Apex also is on track to open its corporate headquarters in Mayfield Heights in July, and is on budget for the $8 million project at the corner of Landerbrook Drive and Cedar Road. The 18,000-square-foot, single-story facility will include a clinical office, lab, research center, dedicated aesthetic clinic and the practice's corporate headquarters. Apex's current Mayfield Heights practice will move into the new building, adding to the overall square footage but not office count for the practice that has been pacing at roughly one new location a year.

"One of the things we do at Apex is we concentrate on quality rather than quantity, right?" Garcia-Zuazaga said. "We want to make sure that we do the right thing."

Henry, who grew up in Medina, is passionate about treating general and cosmetic dermatology for all ages, as well as patient education particularly around sun protection and early skin cancer detection, according to the release.

Sorg, who was raised in Avon, discovered her love for dermatology while working in the field as a medical assistant before becoming a registered nurse. She worked in clinical research as an RN while completing her master of science degree in nursing at Walsh University, according to the release. Her interests span general and cosmetic dermatology for patients of all ages.

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Apex Dermatology opens new office in Avon - Crain's Cleveland Business

Four Abstracts on Eblasakimab and Farudodstat to be Presented at … – Dermatology Times

Gennady Danilkin/AdobeStock

The 1st International Societies for Investigative Dermatology (ISID) Meeting takes place next week, May 10-13, 2023, in Tokyo, Japan. ASLAN Pharmaceuticals will present 2 late-breaker presentations and 2 published abstracts on eblasakimab for atopic dermatitis and farudodstat for alopecia areata.

Late-breaker presentation:

Late-breaker poster presentation:

Published abstracts:

1. Eblasakimab monotherapy improves moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis symptoms across anatomical regions in a phase 1 study (abstract ID: 657)

ASLANs first published abstract at ISID explores eblasakimab as monotherapy for moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis across varying regions of the body. According to the background of the study, the clinical presentation of atopic dermatitis varies by anatomical location due to differences in skin area sensitivity and can therefore limit a patients long-term treatment options. New research shows that interleukin-4 (IL-4) and IL-13 signal through a type 2 receptor complex composed of IL-4R1 and IL-13R1 to mediate the pathogenesis of atopic dermatitis.

Eblasakimab obstructs the signaling cascade by binding to the IL-13R1 subunit. The phase 1b subgroup analysis analyzed the effects of eblasakimab on Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) across varying anatomical regions compared to placebo. Investigators found that patients treated with 400mg or 600mg of subcutaneous eblasakimab once a week showed notable improvement in percent change from baseline in EASI scores across 4 anatomic regions of the head/neck, trunk, upper extremities, and lower extremities, compared to placebo.

2. Neuromodulation beyond itch is blocked by targeting IL-13R1 with eblasakimab (abstract ID: 1594)

The second published ASLAN abstract at ISID evaluated whether IL-4 and IL-13 exert redundant or distinct functions in human sensory neurons, and whethereblasakimabcanattenuate cytokine-enhanced neuronal responses to itch andreduce spontaneous neuronal activity. According to the abstract, Human dorsal root ganglia neurons were treated with IL-4, IL-13, or their combination with or withouteblasakimaband subsequently either challenged with pruritogens (BAM8-22 and PAMP-20) or tested for spontaneous neuronal activity. Neuronal responses to pruritogens and spontaneous neuronal activity were measured via live-cell calcium imaging.

IL-4, IL-13, and their combination treatments enhanced neuronal responses to the non-histaminergic pruritogen (BAM-822) when applied to human dorsal root ganglion, and IL-13 treatment increased neuronal responses to the histaminergic pruritogen (PAMP-20) through amplifications of the activity of MRGPRX2. Investigators noted that this suggests a novel neuroimmune pathway besides its mast cell specific function

Updates

Eblasakimab, a potential first-in-class antibody targeting the IL-13 receptor in moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis is being studied in a global phase 2b trial of patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis with topline data expected in early July 2023. Farudodstat, a potent oral inhibitor of the enzyme DHODH and potential first-in-class treatment for alopecia areata is also under development. ASLAN plans to initiate a proof-of-concept trial in 2Q 2023.

Reference

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Four Abstracts on Eblasakimab and Farudodstat to be Presented at ... - Dermatology Times

Dermatology Publications in Saudi Arabia: A Fast-Growing Pattern – Cureus

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Dermatology Publications in Saudi Arabia: A Fast-Growing Pattern - Cureus

Assessing the Ability of Non-dermatology Physicians to Recognize … – Cureus

Specialty

Please chooseI'm not a medical professional.Allergy and ImmunologyAnatomyAnesthesiologyCardiac/Thoracic/Vascular SurgeryCardiologyCritical CareDentistryDermatologyDiabetes and EndocrinologyEmergency MedicineEpidemiology and Public HealthFamily MedicineForensic MedicineGastroenterologyGeneral PracticeGeneticsGeriatricsHealth PolicyHematologyHIV/AIDSHospital-based MedicineI'm not a medical professional.Infectious DiseaseIntegrative/Complementary MedicineInternal MedicineInternal Medicine-PediatricsMedical Education and SimulationMedical PhysicsMedical StudentNephrologyNeurological SurgeryNeurologyNuclear MedicineNutritionObstetrics and GynecologyOccupational HealthOncologyOphthalmologyOptometryOral MedicineOrthopaedicsOsteopathic MedicineOtolaryngologyPain ManagementPalliative CarePathologyPediatricsPediatric SurgeryPhysical Medicine and RehabilitationPlastic SurgeryPodiatryPreventive MedicinePsychiatryPsychologyPulmonologyRadiation OncologyRadiologyRheumatologySubstance Use and AddictionSurgeryTherapeuticsTraumaUrologyMiscellaneous

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Assessing the Ability of Non-dermatology Physicians to Recognize ... - Cureus

sunscreens dermatologists recommend and use themselves – Yahoo News

Youve heard it before: You should wear sunscreen often, and ideally every day. Dermatologists dont just talk about the importance of wearing sunscreen they practice what they preach. I wear it every day, 365 days a year, Dr. Gary Goldenberg, assistant clinical professor of dermatology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, tells Yahoo Life. (His top pick for daily wear is EltaMD's Sunscreen Sport Lotion). "Even in winter, you still get some UV that can cause skin damage."

And they make it easy to remember: I actually incorporate sunscreen into my daily grooming routine and apply it right after shaving, Dr. Joshua Zeichner, a New York Citybased dermatologist, tells Yahoo Life. These are the best sunscreens that dermatologists recommend and actually use themselves. We've got something in the mix for every skin type, whether you have sensitive skin, dry skin, oily skin, skin-type blends or something in between.

Originally published April 26, 2023 at 1:25 AM

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sunscreens dermatologists recommend and use themselves - Yahoo News