Hunter Roark

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Hunter Roark

Hunter Roark

@RoarkHunter

Husband and father, Christian, Fitness, PGY-5 neurophysiology fellow, Video Games, ENTJ, Libertarian

Durham, NC Katılım Ağustos 2013
206 Takip Edilen361 Takipçiler
Hunter Roark
Hunter Roark@RoarkHunter·
@RenoDrew @DrJMarine Myelopathy is around 100. I am open to being wrong as I haven’t looked into the primary literature in quite a while, and didn’t dive too deeply into them. ARR with these numbers should be around 30% and 1% respectively since the vaccine is 100% effective.
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Hunter Roark
Hunter Roark@RoarkHunter·
@RenoDrew @DrJMarine It’s been a while since I dug into the data but I believe the IM polio vaccine is 99.9% effective at preventing infection. I believe naive human hosts have a rate of illness around 30% and the rate of myelopathy is like 1%. So NNT to prevent infection is around 3, and to prevent
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Thor
Thor@ThorDG·
I will not get back into heavy lifting.. I will not get back into heavy lifting ... I will...
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Thor@ThorDG·
I am in this video and I do not like it
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IMCrit
IMCrit@IM_Crit_·
ICU Facts: In my experience, in any decent size ICU (~15 beds), at any point in time there is at least 1 patient with unequal pupils (anisocoria). People are often freaking out & rush to get a CT brain to rule out intracranial bleeding. Just think hard before reflexively do this
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Hunter Roark
Hunter Roark@RoarkHunter·
@AnilMakam I usually follow that with talking about how there is no good evidence that any lifestyle changes slow or prevent progression of disease. I then also tell them to not spend a lot of money on unproven therapies haha.
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Hunter Roark
Hunter Roark@RoarkHunter·
@AnilMakam Daily,families of patients with dementia (or people that worry they’ll develop it) ask me what lifestyle changes, or exercises,vitamins, etc they can do/take to slow or prevent. My approach is “do things that you enjoy, that make you happy. Be active. Be with friends and family.”
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Anil Makam
Anil Makam@AnilMakam·
the entirety of the evidence is compelling against any meaningful benefit and now with serious harm signal I know it sucks and we want treatments but let's not disguise it as gold
Adam Feuerstein ✡️@adamfeuerstein

For many Duchenne families, halt to Sarepta $SRPT gene therapy treatments is heartbreak upon heartbreak statnews.com/2025/07/24/duc… My colleague @Jasonmmast with more reporting on the patient/physician perspective.

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Jason Ryan
Jason Ryan@jasonryanmd·
My dean in medical school told us that the best thing you can do when asked to give a lecture or talk is to end five minutes early. Always makes the audience happy at the end no matter how well or poorly you've done. The opposite is also true: run over ten minutes and you'll get scowls regardless of anything you've said.
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Vinay Prasad MD MPH
Vinay Prasad MD MPH@VPrasadMDMPH·
Lecture 1 of our 9 part series is out now on @Sensible__Med All the other parts will come every other week and available to subscribers This is the best course on critical appraisal you will ever see @adamcifu @drjohnm Subscribe now!
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Hunter Roark
Hunter Roark@RoarkHunter·
Credentials) a couple months later. PCP says it’s not Parkinson’s and then orders a bunch of blood work to see if it’s “something else.” They ordered CMP, CBC, B12, CK, liver enzymes. It’s fine to have a differential but I’m confused as to the thought process here. #neurology
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Hunter Roark
Hunter Roark@RoarkHunter·
~ 80 year old patient with 6-8 months of resting tremor, shuffling gait, and hypophonia. Also some increasing pre-syncopal symptoms. I diagnose #parkinsons by bedside exam. She opts to not take treatment since symptoms are mild. She goes to see PCP (not sure their training/
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Ed Livingston
Ed Livingston@ehlJAMA·
The problem here is who decides what is misinformation? Almost every Noble-worthy discovery was rejected by contemporary experts when the new ideas were proposed. If we limit information by allowing experts to control it-scientific advances will stop. Looking back on the pandemic, we now know that most of what we were told by experts was not true. Do we lock those wrong ideas in place byu not allowing discussion of dissenting opinion? The best solution is to maintain compeltely free speech and allow people to derive their own conclusions from data presented. We, as scientists, need to educate and convince the public with data and not maxims of what we call the 'truth'. Language such as 'climate denier' needs to go away. Dataless ad hominem criticisms like these have no role in scientific debate. In real science, alternate ideas are considered and the truth determined via experimentation and convincing others with data.
The Lancet@TheLancet

The spread of health misinformation and disinformation poses a serious threat to public health. How can we respond to the danger and combat the tide of misinformation and disinformation to protect public health? Find out more in our latest Editorial: hubs.li/Q032YWZ40

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Hunter Roark
Hunter Roark@RoarkHunter·
@VPrasadMDMPH Wait til she finds out that screening mammograms don’t have evidence of decreasing all-cause mortality…
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Vinay Prasad MD MPH
Vinay Prasad MD MPH@VPrasadMDMPH·
Anecdotes aside, data suggest USA has shorter wait times for non-emergent surgery (like replacing joints, which lots of people care a lot about) but longer for new PCP visit Very unsure why an epidemiologist would rely on an anecdote when data is readily available.
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Dr Ellie Murray, ScD@EpiEllie

Opponents of universal health care in the US love to point to wait times in Canada and the UK as the reason why universal health care is bad. But I just tried to schedule a screening mammogram for this month & the first available date in Boston is mid-July. Wait times are bad everywhere.

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Vinay Prasad MD MPH
Vinay Prasad MD MPH@VPrasadMDMPH·
The true cause of the epidemic is the unsexy part of public health Poverty, mistrust of medicine, ineptitudes and coverups
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