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Tagged With "Zoom"

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TIHCER April Zoom meeting - 4/27/20, 3-4pm CST

Martina Jelley ·
Please join in to our next scheduled TIHCER Zoom meeting - Monday, April 27 th at 3pm Central. Our guest speaker will be Courtney Barry, PsyD (meeting will be recorded and available on our ACEs Connection Community site for those not able to join live) Dr. Barry is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine and the Department of Family and Community Medicine. She is a licensed Clinical Psychologist, with a specialization in Health Psychology. She completed...
Blog Post

TIHCER March Zoom meeting tomorrow!

Martina Jelley ·
Our TIHCER March Zoom meeting will feature Dr. Megan Gerber presenting "Is SoMe for me? Academic Use of Twitter" Megan ("Meegan") Gerber is a general internist and Associate Professor of Medicine at the BU School of Medicine. She serves as Medical Director of Women's Health at VA Boston where she is also the fellowship director and as a Senior Consultant, Comprehensive Health, Women's Health Services, VHA (VA Central Office). Megan's academic focus has been on improving outcomes and care for...
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Re: TIHCER April Zoom meeting - 4/27/20, 3-4pm CST

Megan Gerber MD MPH ·
@Courtney Barry excellent presentation so grateful this was recorded so I could attend post-hoc. Have you considered retooling review as either a scoping review or an evidence map? Sometimes for areas with less published that format flies better with journals. JGIM accepts narrative reviews and is daily high impact for a primary care journal. Just a thought. Best, Megan
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Re: TIHCER Zoom meeting 2-27-20

Martina Jelley ·
Recording starts about 5 minutes into the presentation - technical difficulties! Will also post the slide set.
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TIHCER May 2020 Zoom

Martina Jelley ·
TIHCER May 2020 Zoom
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TIHCER March Zoom meeting

Martina Jelley ·
TIHCER March Zoom meeting
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TIHCER June Zoom 2020

Martina Jelley ·
TIHCER June Zoom 2020
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Re: TIHCER June Zoom 2020

Vincent J. Felitti, MD ·
This is a very interesting presentation, and I look forward to reading Dr. Strait's article in The Permanente Journal. The subject has great relevance for the military because there is highly suggestive evidence that ACE Scores and their generally not-understood sequelae may be more common in a volunteer military that in a draft military. Attached as Item 3 is an article describing how routine ACE screening was carried out on a very large scale in one Kaiser Department, and its effects and...
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Re: TIHCER June Zoom 2020

Joshua S Strait ·
Thank you Dr. Felitti for your kind words and helpful attachments. Your paper is so important, especially in light of the military families I work with. Your words are inspiring and transformative: "We realized that asking , initially via an inert mechanism with later followup in the exam room, coupled with listening and implicitly accepting the person who had just shared his or her dark secrets, is a powerful form of doing ."
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Re: TIHCER June Zoom 2020

Joshua S Strait ·
This is a very important article! Thanks for sharing!
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Re: TIHCER June Zoom 2020

Megan Gerber MD MPH ·
Great presentation @Joshua S Strait - In VA we often cite this paper from Blosnich et al 2014: "Differences in the prevalence of ACEs were more pronounced among men by history of military service in the all-volunteer era than among men by history ofmilitary service in the draft era (Table 2)." Blosnich JR, Dichter ME, Cerulli C, Batten SV, Bossarte RM. Disparities in Adverse Childhood Experiences Among Individuals With a History of Military Service. JAMA Psychiatry. 2014;71(9):1041–1048.
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Re: TIHCER June Zoom 2020

Megan Gerber MD MPH ·
@Joshua S Strait my colleague Jodie Katon also did a cite we cite often (when we try to argue for TIC in VA) but it did not look at era of service in the same way. BRFSS data. Katon JG, Lehavot K, Simpson TL, et al. Adverse Childhood Experiences, Military Service, and Adult Health. Am J Prev Med . 2015;49(4):573-582. doi:10.1016/j.amepre.2015.03.020 "Results: Those with military service had more total ACE than civilians. Higher ACE was associated with poorer HRQOL among women (physical...
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Re: TIHCER June Zoom 2020

Vincent J. Felitti, MD ·
These findings fit in with the fact that in Gulf War 1, which was virtually all air combat with only 170 hours of ground combat, there was a remarkably high prevalence of PTSD, but no prolonged ground combat for the causal explanation. Given the fact that GW1 was the first time an all-volunteer Army was in the field, I remembered my days as an Army doctor when I repeatedly saw that the Army was a powerful metaphor for a supportive family. The thought then crossed by mind that an...
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TIHCER ZOOM JULY 2020

Martina Jelley ·
TIHCER ZOOM JULY 2020
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Re: TIHCER ZOOM JULY 2020

Jeoffry Gordon ·
Well done Drew and Mike. There is almost a total lack of attention to the pathophysiological impact of child hood trauma on adult physical as well as mental disease. The medical establishment has a tremendous inertia as you learned...from the clinic to the medical group to the professional society to medical schools and graduate training to clinical research there is a near ubiquitous resistance to considering the impact of childhood abuse and neglect on adults. A large CDC study showed that...
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TIHCER Zoom January 2021

Martina Jelley ·
TIHCER Zoom January 2021
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TIHCER Zoom February 2021

Martina Jelley ·
TIHCER Zoom February 2021
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