Barnes-Jewish Hospital | Washington University Physicians
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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COMPASSIONATE ADVOCATES FOR THE UNBORN

COMPASSIONATE ADVOCATES FOR THE UNBORN

BY PAM MCGRATH

Sarah Smith, RN, BSN, CLC, (at left, in the purple shirt) and Heather Weiler, RN, (in the colorful skirt) began their nursing careers in their 40s after working in other fields. Smith was an elementary and preschool teacher, sold real estate and worked in institutional development. Weiler held positions in physicians’ offices and worked as a medical claims processor. Both were working moms and both experienced the loss of a young child: Smith, a twin son after a difficult pregnancy; Weiler, the sudden, tragic death of a young nephew.

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THE STORY OF TRANSPLANT AT BARNES-JEWISH HOSPITAL

THE STORY OF TRANSPLANT AT BARNES-JEWISH HOSPITAL

BY JOYCE ROMINE

Scientists and physicians experimented with organ transplantation using animals and humans as early as the 18th century. And though replacing a failing organ with a foreign organ has always been a significant surgical feat, it alone couldn’t save lives. Once the new organ was in place, the recipient’s body strenuously objected, mounting a deadly response. For decades, organ rejection was the stumbling block, the thing that drove researchers back to their labs, where they worked for decades looking for answers.

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COLLABORATION HELPS DIAGNOSE BRAIN CONDITION

COLLABORATION HELPS DIAGNOSE BRAIN CONDITION

BY ANDREA MONGLER

Difficulty walking. Memory problems. Urinary incontinence. Alone or in combination, these symptoms can indicate a variety of diseases and conditions. That’s why making a definitive diagnosis for a collection of symptoms such as these isn’t always easy.

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SOLVING MEDICAL MYSTERIES

SOLVING MEDICAL MYSTERIES

BY PAM MCGRATH

Despite today’s advanced state of medical diagnosis and treatment, there are people with challenging medical mysteries who, even after referrals to multiple specialists and seemingly endless testing, have no answers for the cause of their sometimes-debilitating symptoms.

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