Dr Charles L Christian arrived in New York City in 1953, having grown up in Wichita, Kansas, and graduating from medical school at Case Western Reserve in Cleveland, Ohio. In New York, Dr Christian embarked on training in internal medicine at Columbia's Presbyterian Hospital where he met an individual who would shape the course of his career, Dr Charles Ragan, a founder of the Arthritis Foundation. Dr Christian, or Chuck as he was usually called, went on to shape the developing field of rheumatology, advancing understanding of our most complex diseases as an investigator, master clinician, mentor, and academic leader. During an era when the cellular and humoral features of the immune system were just coming into focus, Chuck performed laboratory experiments with precision and creativity to achieve new understanding of 3 significant diseases: rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and vasculitis. Review of his publications from the 1950s and 1960s provides a window into a time when figures were hand drawn and papers often had a single author. While the tools of technology that we rely on today were not available to Chuck, his insights have had a sustained impact on how we understand and treat autoimmune rheumatic diseases. His talents and his dedication to patients, colleagues, science, and medicine supported a lifetime of remarkable contributions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rdc.2023.09.002 | DOI Listing |
Ecotoxicology
May 2013
Center for Healthy Environments & Communities (CHEC), Department of Environmental & Occupational Health, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, PA, 15219, USA.
Pollution from xenoestrogens has been discovered in the aquatic environment of the Greater Pittsburgh Area and is suspected to be caused by the failing sewer system. Personal care products and plasticizers have the potential to enter the water supply though treated and untreated sewage. Many of these compounds are suspected xenoestrogens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiol Manage
August 2009
Good Samaritan Hospital, Vincennes, IN, USA.
Combining CVIIS and PACS is a relatively new concept in healthcare, but the path to integration as described by Good Samaritan Hospital in Vincennes, IN can offer direction for how other facilities can obtain successful results and become more competitive. Integration is a win-win for both cardiologists and radiologists, since the focus is on increased operational efficiencies for all parties involved. It provides a method for each specialty to access the needed information for comparison and collation, without the need to swap between base applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthritis Rheum
February 2008
University of Florida Health Science Center, Jacksonville, FL 32209, USA.
J Healthc Inf Manag
March 2007
BearingPoint Inc., USA.
Today, healthcare annually invests billions of dollars in information technology, including clinical systems, electronic medical records and interoperability platforms. While continued investment and parallel development of standards are critical to secure exponential benefits from clinical information technology, intelligent and creative redesign of processes through path innovation is necessary to deliver meaningful value. Reports from two organizations included in this report review the steps taken to reinvent clinical processes that best leverage information technology to deliver safer and more efficient care.
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