Clin Orthop Relat Res
April 2004
Clin Orthop Relat Res
May 1999
The author gives a narrative chronologic explanation for the early inclusion of African Americans and other minorities into the Yale University Orthopaedic Surgical Residency Training Program. The author's early isolation from racial problems living in rural Nebraska and the paucity of racial friction at the University of Nebraska gave him a more neutral or positive view of other cultures. Sudden exposure to the racial tension and police brutality toward African Americans in Boston followed by the well defined racial bias in the Southern city of Baltimore showed the plight of minorities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSkeletal tissues from children sustaining acute skeletal trauma were analyzed with detailed radiologic and histologic techniques to assess the failure patterns of the developing skeleton. In the physis- and epiphysis-specific fracture propagation varied, usually going through the portion of the hypertrophic zone adjacent to the metaphysis. However, the physeal fracture in types 1 and 2 sometimes involved the germinal zone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIdentification of patient subpopulations for retrospective clinical studies, documentation of residents' clinical experience, and other administrative purposes can be difficult and time consuming. The problem of identification is exacerbated when a teaching program involves several hospitals or when the desired subpopulation is not adequately defined by standard diagnosis or procedure codes used by the institution. A useful patient registry system is reported here for the storage and retrieval of data on orthopedic patients treated by surgical residents at a major teaching hospital and its affiliates.
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