Josh Davis

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Josh Davis

Josh Davis

@MedFactChecks

EM doctor, personal trainer/fitness instructor, research nerd -- views here are my own and are not medical advice

Beigetreten Nisan 2020
235 Folgt673 Follower
Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
What do you think about hospice and palliative care in Emergency Medicine? Have you seen it? New paper I coauthored: Emergency Department-Initiated Palliative Care Screening Among Older Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocol pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12…
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@Mindpump Love the show. Great advice overall. In this one I’m confused how @mindpumpsal can say a good trainer increases your chances of success 5-10x from 10%. 10x would be 100% and you’ve previously said a GREAT trainer can MAYBE be 30% successful. Where’s the data and which is right?
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@EverydayMed there’s a weird pause on the most recent Frontline podcast 2/18 PEM Stim. Check it out.
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
A little multi-specialty collaboration to publish this work on pediatric critical care ultrasound. Hope to do more! Proposing Entrustable Professional Activities for Pediatric Critical Care Ultrasound: A Modified Delphi Consensus Approach journals.lww.com/pccmjournal/fu…
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@EMedPhys Really sad to hear outdated and stigmatizing terms like ”alcoholic” and “alcohol abuse” in a podcast I value for up to date info Also that drug testing is helpful in these cases when we know it is more stigmatizing (and biased) than helpful
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Sam Ashoo
Sam Ashoo@EMedPhys·
New EB Medicine podcast episode is out. TR Eckler and I dig into the November 2025 Emergency Medicine Practice issue on alcohol withdrawal, with real shift-level tips and practical takeaways. Listen here: foamed.ebmedicine.net/podcast/alcoho…
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ʎuooɯ 📡
ʎuooɯ 📡@rcwbyers·
@MillerParker_ perceba que todo o laboratório tem arco iris e so as pessoas mais homossexuais tem poderes, no final o laboratório era lacrador e queria criar criancas gays poderosas e o governo nao deixa, a licao da série é sobre gays na verdade terem poderes e é uma metafora sobre servir
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Luiz🐍| rep stan
Luiz🐍| rep stan@MillerParker_·
ele ganhando poderes no momento em que descobre que é gay foi o momento mais foda da série inteira
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Ken Jaques (Jakes) 🇨🇦 💜 🦁🦉
Marivic Villa, MD, FCCP@MarivicVillaMD5

I concur with Dr. Makis @MakisMedicine The discourse around ivermectin has become polarized to the point of obscuring the actual pharmacology. The literature demonstrates: - Antiproliferative effects across multiple cancer cell lines, mediated through WNT/β-catenin, STAT3, and PAK1 pathways. - Immunomodulation via NF-κB suppression and cytokine balancing. - Broad-spectrum antiviral properties through importin α/β1 inhibition, inhibiting nuclear transport of viral proteins. - A favorable safety profile with a 40-year global pharmacovigilance history. Whether or not clinicians choose to use it is a separate discussion; however, dismissing all existing data as “none” is scientifically inaccurate. Texas’ OTC pathway simply aligns access with the drug’s known therapeutic index and established global utilization. Ivermectin’s safety profile is not theoretical; it’s one of the most extensively documented in the world. Global reality: -Over 4 billion doses administered since the 1980s. - Used in Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia for decades across all ages. - Listed as an WHO Essential Medicine. - Serious adverse events: extremely rare, mostly with mass dosing in high-parasite regions. - Toxicity threshold is high; therapeutic index is wide. A drug with this history being OTC in Texas is not radical, it’s consistent with international norms. What is radical is insisting that a medication with a 40-year safety record and hundreds of mechanistic studies has “zero evidence.” In short, Dr. Jake Scott @jakescottMD comment is not only a willful ignorance but an absolute irresponsible rhetoric.

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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@DrAkhilX None. It is essentially unheard of
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Dr. AK 🇮🇳
Dr. AK 🇮🇳@DrAkhilX·
Which vitamin deficiency will you anticipate in a patient who is on this for past 5 years❓️
Dr. AK 🇮🇳 tweet media
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@ABsteward The question remains whether most of these patients needed antibiotics at all. I see wildly incorrect diagnoses and treatments happen at urgent care — I guess 5 is a move in the right direction when most of these should be 0
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@DrAkhilX Frequency illusion and recency bias
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Dr. AK 🇮🇳
Dr. AK 🇮🇳@DrAkhilX·
You read about a medical topic and you get a patient of the condition next day at the hospital. This has happened multiple times with all physicians. Is there a name for this phenomenon❓️
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@DrAkhilX This is awful inaccurate generic advice. Harrison’s says only for healthy elderly pts with mod/severe pain. NICE says “role of corticosteroids in the treatment of shingles is even less clear than antiviral treatment”. . . unlikely to significantly benefit in the majority of pts
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@JAMA_current I’m confused at how “racial derivation” is a risk factor for melanoma and if that is in line with JAMA’s editorial policies on race in science @KBibbinsDomingo
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JAMA
JAMA@JAMA_current·
JAMA Review author John Kirkwood, MD, discusses the epidemiology, risk factors, treatment, and prevention of #melanoma with JAMA Deputy Editor Kristin Walter, MD, MS. 🔗 Listen now: ja.ma/3HIFenw
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JAMA
JAMA@JAMA_current·
The incidence and prevalence of #melanoma, the fifth most common cancer in the US, have increased over the last 5 decades. 📌 This Review summarizes the epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of cutaneous melanoma. 🔗 ja.ma/3UHIgeI
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Josh Davis
Josh Davis@MedFactChecks·
@smithECGBlog Spontaneous Reperfusion of a high risk lesion. In this case it is the LAD so it is “Wellens syndrome”.
GIF
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Stephen W. Smith
Stephen W. Smith@smithECGBlog·
Severe chest pain, Resolved. Serial troponins nearly undetectable at 3 ng/L
Stephen W. Smith tweet media
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Dr Abdul Hameed 🩺
Dr Abdul Hameed 🩺@drabdulhameed07·
@Gastronaut___ 🚨Normal Saline 0.9% NaCl) preferred in hyperkalemia✅ Contains no potassium, so it won’t raise K⁺ further. ❌ Ringer’s Lactate – not ideal Contains about 4 mEq/L K⁺, which can worsen hyperkalemia. Therefore, in suspected hyperkalemia → Normal Saline is the fluid of choice.
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Dr Aditya Gudheniya
Dr Aditya Gudheniya@Gastronaut___·
If you’re suspecting hyperkalemia in a patient who needs IV fluids, which fluid would you choose? Normal Saline or Ringer’s Lactate? And why?
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