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Jokes aside, hiring Jay was an amazing business move, ESPECIALLY in the Florida private market.
If you think the vitriol is high from radonc towards urology from time to time, wait until they start giving systemic treatment for metastatic prostate cancer like they do in this town. That gives medical oncologists the big mad.
They're already doing Abi/Xtandi relatively poorly and anecdotally making patients CRPC faster than Med Oncs.
Sometimes people just don't think it through the whole way, logically speakingIf "Fewer treatments = good for society = likely less number of RO needed", then
"likely less number of RO needed" = "good for society"?
If "Fewer treatments = good for society = likely less number of RO needed", then
"likely less number of RO needed" = "good for society"?
If "Fewer treatments = good for society = likely less number of RO needed", then
"likely less number of RO needed" = "good for society"?
@evilbooyaa @Neuronix ?I vote that with rando posts about rando tweets, must provide some analysis.
Medgator do you guys do weekly
How about we keep this thread rad onc focused? We can post about the bad job market in other specialties in their respective forums?I vote meh on this one. We try to be light on the censorship. If someone is being disruptive by posting weird out of context stuff let me know.
Noted disparities expert Dan Spratt
I mean he is kind of an expert on the disparities between all the incorrect opinions and his own.
Disparities in Muscle mass. Maybe that’s his next talk
His next big paper: body comp / morphometric analysis as a predictor for grade 3 toxicity.
I save at least 200 hours a year by not applying ketchup/catsup to food.Disparities in condiment use among radiation oncology department chairs and academic productivity: a case-control study
I'm writing up a study comparing Qalys of no ketchup vs glass bottle ketchup vs squeeze bottle ketchup vs ketchup packet use. No ketchup and packets neck and neck for worst outcomes.I save at least 200 hours a year by not applying ketchup/catsup to food.
“A six-year study of 48,000 male health professionals, conducted by Harvard Medical School in 1995, found that consuming tomato products more than twice a week, as opposed to never, was associated with a reduced risk of prostate cancer of up to 34 per cent.”I save at least 200 hours a year by not applying ketchup/catsup to food.
That is such an odd behavioral quirkI save at least 200 hours a year by not applying ketchup/catsup to food.
Did they do subgroups? Wondering the role race played.“A six-year study of 48,000 male health professionals, conducted by Harvard Medical School in 1995, found that consuming tomato products more than twice a week, as opposed to never, was associated with a reduced risk of prostate cancer of up to 34 per cent.”
Pretty hypocritical Dan
Did they do subgroups? Wondering the role race played.
IDK! But I legit had a prostate attending in residency who was Richard Nixon level pro-ketchup with his patients.Did they do subgroups? Wondering the role race played.
Po or pr?IDK! But I legit had a prostate attending in residency who was Richard Nixon level pro-ketchup with his patients.
That's called job security.“A six-year study of 48,000 male health professionals, conducted by Harvard Medical School in 1995, found that consuming tomato products more than twice a week, as opposed to never, was associated with a reduced risk of prostate cancer of up to 34 per cent.”
Pretty hypocritical Dan
Disparities in condiment use among radiation oncology department chairs and academic productivity: a case-control study
I save at least 200 hours a year by not applying ketchup/catsup to food.
Sticking with simpsons, also think radonc twitter/sdn meme potential here:Huge meme potential here. Unfortunately I am far too technology inept/lazy.
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The swamp is overflowing out of the toxic sludge toilet and the boomer “leaders” unable to stop it. Love it!
That is such an odd behavioral quirk
Low dose bath and malignancy risk is a common argument made by proton enthusiasts/****s
I am gonna push back on this one...The ideas that second malignancy risk is correlated with dose and that secondary malignancy risk is higher because of increased low dose region volume can not mathematically peacefully coexist.
Ok thanks for push back 🙂Secondary malignancy risk is likely (roughty) proportional to both dose and the volume of tissues irradiated
Ok thanks for push back 🙂
What is the data for the bolded. Intuitively it makes sense. But sometimes intuition regarding "volume of tissues" (ie number of cells) is not correct:
hmmm... I am to find data supporting the notion that tissues that see radiation dose are more likely to get radiation-induced cancers than tissues that don't.
Can I cite stochastic statistics? Or this paper (off the top of my search engine)
I am gonna push back on this one...
Secondary malignancy risk is likely (roughty) proportional to both dose and the volume of tissues irradiated.
If two plans have the same volume in the high dose region, but one has minimal (if any) dose elsewhere, while the other has a large volume getting 2-5 Gy... the second plan likely has a higher chance of causing a secondary malignancy.
Just because the risk increases with dose, it doesn't mean that low dose is irrelevant, especially if there is a large volume impacted. Otherwise, why would we even bother having the X-ray techs go in another room?
Altogether, IMRT is likely to almost double the incidence of second malignancies compared with conventional radiotherapy from about 1% to 1.75% for patients surviving 10 years. The numbers may be larger for longer survival (or for younger patients), but the ratio should remain the same.