Jay P. Greene

6.3K posts

Jay P. Greene banner
Jay P. Greene

Jay P. Greene

@jaypgreene

Director of Research, Do No Harm. Senior Fellow, Defense of Freedom Institute. All opinions are my own.

Katılım Ekim 2010
770 Takip Edilen7.8K Takipçiler
Jay P. Greene retweetledi
Do No Harm
Do No Harm@donoharm·
Medicine may be nearing an antisemitism crisis, with declining American medical school acceptances playing a major role. 🚨 In 1981, just 9% of new residencies went to foreign medical graduates. By 2024, that figure hit 25%, due to AMA and AAMC restrictions until 2005 fearing a physician "glut," forcing reliance on overseas talent. 📉 This shift imports antisemitism into U.S. healthcare, where half of profiled antisemitic doctors trained abroad. Read the full analysis in Tablet Magazine.
Do No Harm tweet media
English
9
109
328
8.5K
Jay P. Greene retweetledi
Stu Smith
Stu Smith@thestustustudio·
Jessica is probably one of my favorite people on X. Bigger accounts steal her work all the time, but she is the one actually doing the work. Case in point: she is live on the ground at the Piker x El-Sayed rally at MSU. Give her a follow. She rules.
Jessica Costescu@JessicaCostescu

JUST IN: Twitch streamer Hasan Piker, who has said America deserved 9/11, is on stage for Democratic Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed’s packed rally at Michigan State University. Piker said “smear campaigns started shortly after Oct. 7.” @FreeBeacon

English
41
812
3.8K
161.1K
Jay P. Greene retweetledi
Jason Locasale
Jason Locasale@LocasaleLab·
This is a fantasy version of how places like Harvard actually work. When I was there, it was entirely pay-to-play. You brought in grant money in exchange for attaching the Harvard brand to your title. The institution itself contributed very little to the actual science. When something meaningful did come out of the work, Harvard was quick to take credit. The reality is that the research could have been done almost anywhere. The idea that Harvard is the driver of these discoveries—not the individual scientists and federally funded grants—is exactly backwards.
Steven Pinker@sapinker

NIH-funded research at Harvard led to understanding and treatment of migraines — A reminder of why the Trump administration's attempts to cripple Harvard based on hyperbolic accusations of rampant wokeism and antisemitism (real but exaggerated) are damaging to the country. (And contrary to the misunderstanding that the US "supports Harvard," it actually just pays for research with grants that Harvard faculty compete for - not the same thing.) news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/…

English
47
231
2K
120.1K
Jay P. Greene
Jay P. Greene@jaypgreene·
The clearest evidence that @sallypipes is wrong—the number of residencies per US med school applicant is at its highest in 5 decades. Also note that the # of residencies has grown despite Congress not subsidizing more of them. heritage.org/education/repo…
Jay P. Greene tweet media
Jay P. Greene@jaypgreene

The argument Pipes is making is based on a gross misrepresentation of the basic facts about the supply of graduates of US med schools relative to the demand for residencies. The doctor shortage in the US is driven by too few med school spots, not too few residencies. 🧵1/

English
0
0
5
325
Jay P. Greene
Jay P. Greene@jaypgreene·
Plus, expanding the number of residencies does not require more subsidies from Congress because residencies are financially lucrative for hospitals. According to the House Judiciary Committee, residents generate far more value than their cost. 4/end judiciary.house.gov/sites/evo-subs…
Jay P. Greene tweet media
English
0
0
6
177
Jay P. Greene
Jay P. Greene@jaypgreene·
Because we have a surplus of residencies, we have to import 12K foreign doctors every year to fill them. Creating more residencies would not fix the shortage of med school spots in the US and would only force us to import more foreigners. 3/ nrmp.org/about/news/202…
English
1
0
7
247
Jay P. Greene
Jay P. Greene@jaypgreene·
The argument Pipes is making is based on a gross misrepresentation of the basic facts about the supply of graduates of US med schools relative to the demand for residencies. The doctor shortage in the US is driven by too few med school spots, not too few residencies. 🧵1/
Sally Pipes@sallypipes

America could be short 86,000 doctors by 2036. So why are we turning away qualified medical graduates? Because the federal government capped residency funding back in 1997 — and barely expanded it since. washingtonexaminer.com/restoring-amer…

English
6
7
26
3.1K
Jay P. Greene retweetledi
Corey Walker 🇺🇸
Corey Walker 🇺🇸@CoreyWriting·
Vanderbilt has been making a push to distinguish themselves from the Ivies by becoming an explicitly Jewish-friendly institution. This is a smart move which will help their university grow prestige over time as families start to see it as preferable to Harvard.
Vanderbilt University@VanderbiltU

For the first time ever, Chabad of Vanderbilt hosted its annual Passover seder inside FirstBank Stadium, bringing hundreds of students together for an unforgettable on-field celebration. Read more in the @Tennessean: vu.edu/knt33

English
133
676
6.7K
358.7K
Jay P. Greene retweetledi
Do No Harm
Do No Harm@donoharm·
A new report raises serious questions about how the Association of American Medical Colleges interpreted the research it cited to support claims about racial concordance in pain treatment. According to the report written by @jaypgreene, none of the four studies referenced in the AAMC’s legal brief actually examined whether Black physicians were more likely to accurately assess and treat Black patients’ pain, calling the scientific basis of that claim into question. This raises serious concerns about how evidence is being used to justify ideology in medical education and policy. Full report is in the replies 👇👇
Do No Harm tweet media
English
1
4
14
824
Jay P. Greene retweetledi
Tablet Magazine
Tablet Magazine@tabletmag·
This week, a complaint filed with HHS accuses major residency programs of systematically excluding American-trained physicians in favor of foreign-trained candidates. This raises a basic question: how did some of the country’s most competitive medical programs end up with almost no American graduates at all? And what are the consequences? tabletmag.com/sections/news/…
English
6
50
132
8.6K
Jay P. Greene retweetledi
Do No Harm
Do No Harm@donoharm·
"Three internal medicine residency programs are being accused of favoring foreign-trained doctors over American-trained doctors, with more than 90% of the most recent cohort of residents across the three programs coming from overseas, according to a civil rights complaint. Medical watchdog Do No Harm filed a complaint Tuesday with the Department of Health and Human Services against healthcare providers Corewell Health, Texas Tech University and HCA Healthcare, raising concerns over the demographics of their internal medicine residency programs." Full article in the replies👇👇
Do No Harm tweet mediaDo No Harm tweet media
English
43
455
1.1K
20.5K
Jay P. Greene retweetledi
Ian Kingsbury
Ian Kingsbury@PeerReReview·
Today marks 1 year since it was revealed that the infamous & debunked infant mortality race concordance study buried findings that "undermine the narrative." The study was published in @PNASNews (the journal of the National Academy of Sciences). It still hasn't been retracted.
Ian Kingsbury tweet media
Mark Meadows@MarkMeadows

It’s past time we cut off the woke National Academies. They receive massive funding from @USDOT while attacking President Trump and undermining his policies. Let’s get it done!! washingtonexaminer.com/op-eds/4501615…

English
8
138
901
155.4K