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February 2014

Medical Student Perspectives: How & Why I Chose Internal Medicine

We all go into medicine because we want to help people. In the midst of my residency interviews, I was able to delve deeper and reflect on this chosen career path and really understand why and how I have chosen internal medicine. I want to provide this as a guide to students who have not yet decided on a specialty.

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My Kind of Medicine: Real Lives of Practicing Internists: Aysha H. Khoury, MD, MPH, FACP

The process of discovery is what stimulated Dr. Khoury's interest in medicine as a child. Fascinated by what she was learning in her 5th grade health class, Dr. Khoury says she loved the idea that a physician is a medical detective, studying evidence and figuring out what is wrong.

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Analyzing Annals: Video Learning: The Consult Guys: Atrial Fibrillation: How Controlled Is Well-Controlled?

Watch the new The Consult Guys video: Atrial Fibrillation: How Controlled Is Well-Controlled? More

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IMIG Update: Final Results & the Top 5 IMIG Clubs of 2013-2014

The IMIG Sponsorship Program recruitment period closed on December 31, 2013, and IMIG clubs will be receiving reward funding soon! See if your medical school reached the 30% recruitment goal.

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Advocacy Update: Affordable Care Act Issues Physicians Need to Know

The bulk of the Affordable Care Act's coverage provisions went into effect on January 1, 2014, including tax credits for Marketplace-based coverage, Medicaid expansion, and insurance industry reforms such as prohibitions on pre-existing condition coverage limits.

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Winning Abstracts from the 2013 Medical Student Abstract Competition: Flatbush Diabetes or Idiopathic Type-1 Diabetes or Atypical Diabetes

Flatbush Diabetes or Idiopathic Type-1 Diabetes or Atypical Diabetes is an emerging subtype of Diabetes Mellitus that is prevalent in obese, middle age, minority patients, with a higher male predominance. It has a unique presentation with features of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes.

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Subspecialty Careers: Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism

Endocrinology is the diagnosis and care of disorders of the endocrine system. The principle endocrine problems include goiter, thyroid nodules, thyroid dysfunction, diabetes mellitus, hyper- and hypocalcemia, adrenal cortex dysfunction, endocrine hypertension, gonadal disorders, disorders of sodium and water balance, manifestations of pituitary disorders, disorders of bone metabolism, and hyperlipidemia. While not strictly an endocrine disorder, obesity is considered part of the spectrum of endocrinology because it often enters into the differential diagnosis of endocrine disease and is a major element in the management of type 2 diabetes. Prevention focuses on the complications of obesity, diabetes, hyperlipidemias, thyroid disease, and the iatrogenic effects of glucocorticoids.

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In the Clinic: Hyperthyroidism

In the Clinic

Hyperthyroidism is a clinical state characterized by excessive serum concentrations of thyroxine (T4), triiodothyronine (T3), or both with suppression of serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels. Some observers prefer the term thyrotoxicosis for this condition and restrict the term hyperthyroidism to the types of thyrotoxicosis that are caused when the thyroid gland synthesizes and secretes too much thyroid hormone. To avoid confusion, however, we will consider hyperthyroidism and thyrotoxicosis to be the same and will use only the term hyperthyroidism.

In the Clinic is a monthly feature in Annals of Internal Medicine that focuses on practical management of patients with common clinical conditions. It offers evidence-based answers to frequently asked questions about screening, prevention, diagnosis, therapy, and patient education and provides physicians with tools to improve the quality of care. Many internal medicine clerkship directors recommend this series of articles for students on the internal medicine ambulatory rotation.

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Highlights from ACP Internist庐 & ACP Hospitalist

Highlights from ACP Internist庐 & ACP Hospitalist


Medical practice is becoming increasingly team-based, which is leading to a renegotiation of the roles each clinician brings to patient care.


Doctors use the patient's medical chart as a notepad of sorts, to record clinical impressions and thinking. But the record's increasingly open nature requires physicians to reconsider how they document the patient's history and what they might be willing to share with the patient.


CMS' attempt to redefine the difference between inpatient and observation status may create new problems.


Effort by Holston Medical Group in Virginia and Tennessee aims to provide inpatient-level care without the negative effects of hospitalization.

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