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A collection of news and information related to Otolaryngology published by this site and its partners.

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    Apr 28, 2013 |Story| Hartford Courant
  1. READER SUBMITTED: Connecticut Children's Medical Center Welcomes Four New Physicians

    Hartford
    Connecticut Children's Medical Center is pleased to announce the recent appointment of four new physicians to its Divisions of Otolaryngology, Endocrinology and Emergency Medicine. Valerie Cote, MD, FRCSC, has joined the Division of Otolaryngology at...

    Tags: General Practitioners, Medical Specialization, College of the Holy Cross , Yale University, Colleges and Universities

  2. Aug 21, 2012 |Story| Reuters
  3. Do athletes make better doctors?

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - It may not be the first quality that most programs evaluate in their applicants, but a new study suggests athletic achievement could be the best indicator of how well a doctor-in-training will do as a resident.
    Reuters
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - It may not be the first quality that most programs evaluate in their applicants, but a new study suggests athletic achievement could be the best indicator of how well a doctor-in-training will do as a resident. When...

    Tags: Medical Research, Science and Technology, Medical Specialization, School Examinations, Head

  4. Aug 15, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  5. Hopkins to begin performing face transplants

    <a href=&quot;http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/" target="_blank">Johns Hopkins</a> doctors have received approval from the university&rsquo;s institutional review board to begin doing face transplant surgeries, becoming the second hospital in Baltimore to offer the complex procedure.
    Johns Hopkins doctors have received approval from the university’s institutional review board to begin doing face transplant surgeries, becoming the second hospital in Baltimore to offer the complex procedure. There have been only 22 such...

    Tags: Plastic Surgery, Cleveland Clinic, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, Surgery, Personal Service

  6. Jul 19, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Hopkins provost to become dean of Stanford medical school

    The No. 2 academic official at Johns Hopkins University is leaving to become dean of Stanford University's School of Medicine.
    The No. 2 academic official at Johns Hopkins University is leaving to become dean of Stanford University's School of Medicine. Lloyd B. Minor, who has served as Hopkins provost for three years, will leave the university at the end of August. Minor said...

    Tags: Stanford University, Education, Drugs and Medicines, Colleges and Universities, Johns Hopkins University

  8. Jul 17, 2012 |Story| Reuters
  9. Blacks with throat cancer get harsher therapy

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Blacks in the U.S. with throat cancer are more likely than whites to have surgery that leaves them unable to speak than to get gentler voice-preserving treatments, a new study finds.
    Reuters
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Blacks in the U.S. with throat cancer are more likely than whites to have surgery that leaves them unable to speak than to get gentler voice-preserving treatments, a new study finds. Previous research has found a similar...

    Tags: Medical Research, Medical Specialization, Head, Breast Cancer, Cancer

  10. Aug 9, 2012 |Story| KTLA-LTV
  11. Spider Found Living in Woman's Ear Canal

    Doctor's made a nightmarish discovery in the ear of a woman complaining of an itchy sensation.
    KTLA News
    Doctor's made a nightmarish discovery in the ear of a woman complaining of an itchy sensation. To the surprise, and no doubt, horror of all, doctor found that a spider had crawled inside the woman's ear canal and lived there for five days. The woman,...

    Tags: China

  12. Aug 10, 2012 |Story| KTLA-LTV
  13. Spider Lives Inside Woman's Ear Canal for Five Days

    Doctors made a nightmarish discovery in the ear of a woman complaining of an itchy sensation.
    KTLA News
    Doctors made a nightmarish discovery in the ear of a woman complaining of an itchy sensation. To the surprise, and no doubt, horror of all, doctor found that a spider had crawled inside the woman's ear canal and lived there for five days. The woman,...

    Tags: China

  14. Jun 1, 2012 |Story| KIAH-LTV
  15. Music makes your brain function in unique ways

    Michael Jackson was on to something when he sang that "A-B-C" is "simple as "Do Re Mi." Music helps kids remember basic facts such as the order of letters in the alphabet, partly because songs tap into fundamental systems in our brains that are...

    Tags: Arts and Culture, Music Theater, Music, Michael Jackson, Johns Hopkins University

  16. May 29, 2012 |Story| WPIX-LTV
  17. Dr Adam Schaffner

    Adam D. Schaffner, M.D., F.A.C.S., is a New York City plastic surgeon who specializes in aesthetic plastic surgery of the face, breast and body.&nbsp; Dr. Schaffner is unique in that he is also board certified and fellowship-trained in facial plastic surgery and head and neck surgery.&nbsp; He is highly sought after by patients because of his knowledge and expertise which gives him the ability to deliver quality care and beautiful results using proven techniques which require minimal downtime.
    Adam D. Schaffner, M.D., F.A.C.S., is a New York City plastic surgeon who specializes in aesthetic plastic surgery of the face, breast and body.  Dr. Schaffner is unique in that he is also board certified and fellowship-trained in facial plastic surgery...

    Tags: Health, Surgery, Georgetown University, Facelift, Hospitals and Clinics

  18. Mar 22, 2012 |Story| Reuters
  19. Voice, throat problems common after anesthesia

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A fresh look at past research suggests voice and throat problems are common in patients who've had a breathing tube placed during general anesthesia.
    Reuters
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A fresh look at past research suggests voice and throat problems are common in patients who've had a breathing tube placed during general anesthesia. Researchers pooled a dozen studies that looked at complications following...

    Tags: Science and Technology, General Practitioners, Health, University of Michigan, Medical Specialization

  20. Apr 15, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Good plastic surgery, bad plastic surgery

    Like it or not, plastic surgery is here to stay.
    Special to the Los Angeles Times
    Like it or not, plastic surgery is here to stay. Sure, some people will tout the virtues of self-acceptance and aging gracefully and lament that the rise of cosmetic procedures (including fillers, Botox and the like) signifies the swift decline of...

    Tags: Health, Priscilla Presley, Medical Specialization, Dermatologists, Janice Dickinson

  22. Dec 2, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  23. Dr. Duane Anthony Sewell, head and neck surgeon

    Dr. Duane Anthony Sewell, a highly regarded head and neck surgeon and researcher who was also a member of the faculty of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, died Nov. 26 of gastric cancer at his Mount Washington home.
    Dr. Duane Anthony Sewell, a highly regarded head and neck surgeon and researcher who was also a member of the faculty of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, died Nov. 26 of gastric cancer at his Mount Washington home. Dr. Sewell was 44. "I...

    Tags: General Practitioners, Health, Medical Specialization, Radiation Therapy, Triathlon

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Otolaryngology Photos
Dr. Geoffrey R. Keyes has been elected president of the...
(November 18, 2012)
Dr. Geoffrey Keyes, President, American Association for the Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities, Inc.