Barnes-Jewish Hospital | Washington University Physicians

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RACIAL DISPARITY AND INFANT MORTALITY: WHEN DOING EVERYTHING RIGHT ISN’T ENOUGH

RACIAL DISPARITY AND INFANT MORTALITY: WHEN DOING EVERYTHING RIGHT ISN’T ENOUGH

BY ANDREA MONGLER
ILLUSTRATION BY ABIGAIL GOH | PHOTOS BY JAY FRAM

Every year in St. Louis, the infants who die before their first birthday could have one day populated 12 kindergarten classrooms. That’s according to Flourish St. Louis, an infant mortality reduction initiative supported by the Missouri Foundation for Health.

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ALZHEIMER’S REPORT: THE SEARCH FOR DIAGNOSTIC TOOLS

ALZHEIMER’S REPORT: THE SEARCH FOR DIAGNOSTIC TOOLS

BY JIM DRYDEN

Significant brain damage from Alzheimer’s disease can occur years before symptoms such as memory loss and cognitive decline appear. Scientists estimate that Alzheimer’s-related plaques can build up in the brain two decades before the onset of symptoms, so researchers have been looking for ways to detect the disease sooner. Currently, physicians use PET scans and lumbar punctures to help diagnose Alzheimer’s, but these tests are expensive and invasive.

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WOMEN’S HEALTH: OBESITY AND EARLY-ONSET COLORECTAL CANCER

WOMEN’S HEALTH: OBESITY AND EARLY-ONSET COLORECTAL CANCER

BY JULIA EVANGELOU STRAIT

In the United States, overall rates of new colorectal cancer cases and deaths from the disease have decreased steadily since 1980, largely owing to recommended colonoscopy screening starting at age 50. However, for reasons that remain unknown, new cases of, and deaths due to, both colon and rectal cancers have been increasing for younger adults ages 20 to 49.

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LABOR AND DELIVERY STRATEGIES

LABOR AND DELIVERY STRATEGIES

BY KRISTINA SAUERWEIN

Two new studies answer important questions about the process of giving birth. The findings may help pregnant women, working with their obstetricians, make choices that will benefit their health and that of their babies.

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THE CHAIR NEXT TO THE BED

THE CHAIR NEXT TO THE BED

The patient room I enter is quiet. It’s late morning, and I’ve walked here from my desk at the other end of the hospital after receiving a text message that says I’m needed. I feel uneasy at first, an interloper in a space that’s unfamiliar. But the nurse I meet in the room is grateful I’ve arrived and tells me so. Then she talks with me about her patient, who is in the bed near where we stand. His name is Frederick. His eyes are closed, his body still, his breaths shallow.

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