Dawnette Lewis MD,MPH

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Dawnette Lewis MD,MPH

Dawnette Lewis MD,MPH

@hourdawn

Katılım Mayıs 2014
477 Takip Edilen97 Takipçiler
Dawnette Lewis MD,MPH retweetledi
New York Yankees
New York Yankees@Yankees·
We're headin' to the World Series. #RepBX
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Barack Obama
Barack Obama@BarackObama·
Today is National Voter Registration Day! Take a few minutes to visit IWillVote.com/Obama and make sure you’re registered and have a plan to vote. Then check in with your friends and family and make sure they’re registered, too. Let’s get it done.
Barack Obama tweet media
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President Biden Archived
President Biden Archived@POTUS46Archive·
At the first-ever White House Brunch in Celebration of Black Excellence, we honored the generations of Black Americans who have pushed our nation closer to our founding ideals of freedom, justice, equality, and dignity for all.
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Will Buxton
Will Buxton@wbuxtonofficial·
The power of this moment resonates so strongly. A reminder that our heroes are human, that they question and doubt themselves in spite of all they have achieved. That even the greatest need validation. A humbling honour to witness first hand what it truly means.
Will Buxton tweet media
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Dawnette Lewis MD,MPH
Dawnette Lewis MD,MPH@hourdawn·
It’s crucial to address the alarming rates of Black maternal mortality. The Center for Maternal Health is a step towards improving care and reducing disparities. The work does not stop after #BlackMaternalHealthWeek. Continuous efforts are needed to ensure equity.
Dawnette Lewis MD,MPH tweet media
Katz Institute for Women's Health@KatzWomensHlth

The rates of Black maternal mortality are staggering–and unacceptable. To address the racial disparities, we created the Center for Maternal Health to improve care. For #BlackMaternalHealthWeek, see how we're working to raise health for all mothers 👉 bit.ly/3MAlu5x

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Katz Institute for Women's Health
Katz Institute for Women's Health@KatzWomensHlth·
The rates of Black maternal mortality are staggering–and unacceptable. To address the racial disparities, we created the Center for Maternal Health to improve care. For #BlackMaternalHealthWeek, see how we're working to raise health for all mothers 👉 bit.ly/3MAlu5x
Katz Institute for Women's Health tweet media
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Northwell Health
Northwell Health@NorthwellHealth·
Dr. Kristina Deligiannidis, a researcher for Northwell's Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research and @KatzWomensHlth clinician, is saving lives by revolutionizing women’s behavioral health care—here's how ⤵️
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
The world lost a beautiful soul over the weekend. My grandmother lived a beautiful life—leaving behind a rich tapestry of family, friends, and loved ones. As I reflect on her beautiful life, I want to share a few lessons I learned from her that changed mine: 1. Don’t fear sadness, as it tends to sit right next to love. This is part of the fundamental balance and tension of life. The pain of loss comes in the same package as the joy of love. If you fear the former, you'll never experience the latter. 2. Life isn't about avoiding chaos, but making the chaos beautiful. My grandparents flew over from India to visit my family in Boston in the spring of 1997. On April 1, there was an enormous blizzard that knocked out power for a week. It was chaos, because our house had an electric stove, so we were left with no way to cook. I'll never forget coming downstairs one morning and seeing my grandmother, fully put together in a sari, cooking us a hearty breakfast over an open flame in the fireplace. I don't remember all of the calm, normal days we spent together that spring, but I do remember those chaotic days that were made so beautiful by her presence and attitude. Life, it turns out, isn't about the moments of calm, but about the moments of chaos that we make beautiful. 3. Never lose the mischievous 10-year-old you have inside you. Life Rule: Make decisions that your 80-year old self and 10-year-old self approve of. The former cares about the long-term compounding of actions, while the latter reminds you to have some fun along the way. My grandmother had a mischievous streak to the end. She would act lost in a game of Scrabble, then smile wryly as she delicately placed a 7-letter word on a triple world score, ending your hopes of a comeback. Most of us lose sight of that inner 10-year-old. To paraphrase a friend, inside every 80-year-old is a 10-year-old wondering, "What the f*** just happened?" Never let that be you. 4. Your relationships keep you healthy. My grandfather passed away in 2007. For 13 years, my grandmother didn't go a single day without having someone visit and spend time with her. It wasn't until the COVID lockdowns of 2020 when she was forced into isolation that stopped this daily routine of social connection. She aged more in the next two years than she had the prior 13. When my parents and I visited her in January of this year, she was nearly catatonic when we arrived. By the second day, she was up and about, getting dressed and beating us in Scrabble. Human connection may be the ultimate medicine. Cultivate relationships for life. Be there for people during their times of darkness and they will be there during yours. 5. Get your 10,000 brain steps in daily. My grandmother was whip smart until the end. Fun fact, at 90-years-old, she beat a professional Scrabble player in a game when he visited the Scrabble club she had started. Her secret: Daily brain exercise. She swore by a routine of daily Scrabble games and simple guided meditations that kept her sharp. As a result, long after her body had started to fail, her mind, charm, humor, and wit were still abundant. Exercise the brain daily and it will remain strong for years to come. 6. If you can keep your head, the world is yours. One summer when I was a kid, my grandmother came to stay with us for a few months. We were having dinner one evening when a bat somehow got into the house and started flying around the kitchen. Naturally, all of us dove under the table and screamed while my dad chased the bat around with a dish towel trying to whack it out of the air. All of a sudden, I heard fwaaaaap followed by silence. I looked out from under the table to see my 80-year-old grandmother, in a beautiful red sari, holding a tennis racket in her right hand, with the invading bat on the ground next to her. Without saying a word, she put the tennis racket down, calmly adjusted her sari, and sat back down in her chair. In chaos, she was calm. She was a fan of Rudyard Kipling: "If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs...yours is the Earth and everything that's in it." 7. Dynamism is the most important human trait. When the COVID pandemic struck and locked down the world, my family did a Zoom call with my grandmother in India to see how she was doing. It was a period when most people were complaining about the situation, but my 91-year-old grandmother was taking it in stride. She smiled and shrugged off the latest twist of fate, though admitted she was frustrated at not being able to see us or her friends. The ability to roll with life's punches—to be dynamic and adaptable—is the most important human trait. If you can find the light in the darkness, you'll always make it. 8. Take pride in the details. My grandmother believed that looking presentable was a matter of self-respect. No matter the occasion, she would always take pride in wrapping her sari and putting herself together. She took pride in the details. After all, how you do anything is how you do everything. 9. Create stories your grandchildren will love to hear someday. A few years ago, my mom hired a writer to sit down with my grandmother and document stories from her life. They met weekly for two years. The process brought my grandmother immense joy—the result will bring my family joy for years to come. One realization from reading and listening to these stories: Life was way more interesting back then. I generally think technology is great, but it’s definitely made life less wild and adventurous. The stories from her childhood and young adult years in the early-mid-1900s just hit different. We all need to create some stories that our grandchildren will love to hear someday. 10. Your heart will rarely lead you astray. My grandparents' relationship was not acceptable to their families—she was from noble birth, and he was not. But at a time in India when most marriages were arranged, my grandparents threw their family's concerns to the wind and married for love. Years later, when my mother wanted to marry an American man she had met at Princeton—a relationship that might have been viewed as rather unacceptable—my grandmother saw a journey come full circle. She had learned, and now had to embrace, that the heart will rarely lead you astray. My grandfather passed away 16 years ago, and my grandmother missed him terribly ever since. I hope they are together again, reunited, side by side, and smiling down on all of us. Goodbye for Now, Avva So, I guess this is goodbye...at least for now. I hope you're getting the good Scrabble letters wherever you are. Thank you for everything. I'll miss you dearly, until we meet again.
Sahil Bloom tweet mediaSahil Bloom tweet mediaSahil Bloom tweet media
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Michael J. Dowling
Michael J. Dowling@MichaelJDowling·
It was a pleasure to join and speak about opportunities on the horizon for our field. Thank you very much for having me!
The Conference Board@Conferenceboard

In a recent episode of #CEOPerspectives, @MichaelJDowling, President & CEO of @NorthwellHealth, spoke about combatting #COVID19, #AI’s opportunities for #healthcare, & more. Dowling is a CED Distinguished Leadership Awards honoree. Listen to the episode: ow.ly/vX2950PSX6S

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The Nobel Prize
The Nobel Prize@NobelPrize·
Congratulations to one of our new medicine laureates: Katalin Karikó (@kkariko)! 🎉 An interview with her will be coming soon.
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The Nobel Prize
The Nobel Prize@NobelPrize·
BREAKING NEWS The 2023 #NobelPrize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman for their discoveries concerning nucleoside base modifications that enabled the development of effective mRNA vaccines against COVID-19.
The Nobel Prize tweet media
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NBA
NBA@NBA·
“There’s no failure in sports. There’s good days, bad days, some days you are able to be successful, some days you are not, some days it is your turn, some days it’s not. That’s what sports is about. You don’t always win.” Giannis comments on “failure”
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