Life Hacks to Handle Difficult People
Publisher’s note: This is part 2. Part 1 ran in MDU #116 You Can Be Right and Happy How can we cultivate our ability to
ISSUE 155: Special Section
Publisher’s note: This is part 2. Part 1 ran in MDU #116 You Can Be Right and Happy How can we cultivate our ability to
“The guiding principle in building the new facility was to put the patient’s needs squarely in the center of the process,”— Joseph Flynn, D.O., MPH
If you’re like me, you’ve likely experienced a sense of regret or disappointment at some time in your life. All too often shame, guilt, and
LEXINGTON Betty Simms, MAEd, RD, LD, outpatient oncology dietitian with Baptist Health Lexington, graduated from the University of Kentucky with a bachelor’s degree in dietetics,
Change is in the air for federal laws that restrict physician compensation. Recent requests for information from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
NEW ALBANY, IN. David Dresner, MD, gastroenterologist with Gastroenterology Health Partners in New Albany, Indiana, speaks to his patients in clear and simple terms, no
LOUISVILLE Jessica Hata, MD, says she feels like a detective. A pathologist for Norton Healthcare in Louisville, Hata breaks the stereotype of a meek and
BARDSTOWN According to the American Cancer Society, there will be nearly 26,000 new cancer cases in Kentucky in 2018. Many of these occur in rural
It has long been known that the chemotherapy drugs and radiation needed for the treatment of cancer can damage one’s hearing. And, hearing loss interferes
LOUISVILLE At “Colors of Courage,” the annual fundraising event for the Louisville based non-profit Hope Scarves, Jason Chesney, MD, PhD, said, “Kentucky is ground zero
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