Ed (@rx_ed) 's Twitter Profile
Ed

@rx_ed

Professor, Author & Researcher - Internal Medicine, Infectious Diseases & Clinical Pharmacology

ID: 445879553

calendar_today25-12-2011 01:07:44

30,30K Tweet

43,43K Followers

35 Following

Ed (@rx_ed) 's Twitter Profile Photo

DOACS are better than warfarin for pulmonary embolism. The ONLY time warfarin is used instead of DOACs in pulmonary embolism is in the setting of...? Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH)!

Ed (@rx_ed) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Over 30 internal medicine residents, chief residents, and interns from 9 different countries got to see us summarize dozens of medical journals, articles and guideline updates in one the most contemporary medical education lectures in the world! New York STRONG!

Conrad Fischer (@seefisch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

interesting effect of USMLE step 1 going pass/fail in 2022. 2021 fail rate in US MD: 5% DO 6% IMG 18% 2022 fail rate in US MD: 9% DO 11% IMG 26% So, basically, the failure rate nearly double in US MD and DOs and went up by about 50% in IMGs Great job! FSMB AAMC

Ed (@rx_ed) 's Twitter Profile Photo

ثُمَّ لَتُسْأَلُنَّ يَوْمَئِذٍ عَنِ النَّعِيمِ חַנּוּן יהוה וְצַדִּיק וֵאלהֵינוּ מְרַחֵם MedGlobal.Org/DONATE

Doctors w/o Borders (@msf_usa) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"[The baby's] name is Amal, meaning “hope”, because hope is what encourages Palestinians to get up every morning despite the horrors they have lived through." What it's like to be pregnant in Gaza: doctorswithoutborders.org/latest/what-it…

Ed (@rx_ed) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Miscarriages in Gaza increased 𝟑𝟎𝟎% after Israel started the bombardment in October. Truly telling to see the “women rights warriors” and “medical twitter” folks so silent.

Ed (@rx_ed) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You do not have to be Palestinian or Muslim to feel the pain. You only have to be human. Remember: we will have to answer for our deeds when we meet our Creator on Judgement Day.

Christiane Amanpour (@amanpour) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Children with… open fractures, partial amputations, open chest wounds, horrendous lacerations… and burns. And that was every day.” Dr Deborah Harrington recently spent 2 weeks in a Gaza hospital. “I feel ashamed and shocked that we’re doing this to fellow humans,” she told me.