
Aditya Jain
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
opmed.doximity.com | Chris van Eyck |Sarah Kim |Aditya Jain |Devika Rao
Every new administration brings with it broad, sweeping changes that affect us and our patients. As much as we like to separate politics and medicine, they are related. Politics affect our private lives, and our feelings about them can carry over to our professions. We are human, fallible, and imperfect.
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4 weeks ago |
opmed.doximity.com | Aditya Jain |Devika Rao |Brennan David Kruszewski |Bronson Ciavarra
House Call: Addressing Health Care’s Shortcomings Before AI Takes OverThe sutures holding the U.S. health care system together are fraying. Wait times have ballooned. The cost of care is rising. Clinician burnout is palpable. Financial challenges are compounding. And fraud is on the . But most worrisome of all: patient trust in physicians and the health care system as a whole has massively eroded.
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Aug 15, 2024 |
opmed.doximity.com | Melissa Schiffman |Giulia Faison |Aditya Jain |Jordan Frey
Thoughts of Love for Prior Authorization Staff, and other Meditations for the Modern Physician For mental health awareness month, my work offered a meditation challenge on a popular app. Hoorah: a job-approved procrastination! I downloaded the app and tried it for a few five-minute sessions. A whispery woman told me to banish negativity and let in more light. She dragged out her s’s like a snake. Ssssshe told me to breathe. And so I did. I breathed in. I breathed out.
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Aug 15, 2024 |
opmed.doximity.com | Giulia Faison |Aditya Jain |Jordan Frey |Hailey Roumimper
As a California-Italy cultural hybrid, I have always lived near the water. From being lulled to sleep by the gentle waves of the Adriatic Sea as an infant, to taking long walks along the Pacific Coast Highway accompanied by the crashing waves of the Pacific, to sitting on a bench at the Lido lost in contemplation while staring at the Venetian lagoon … the water has been my most constant guide and companion throughout my life.
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Aug 12, 2024 |
opmed.doximity.com | Aditya Jain |Jordan Frey |Hailey Roumimper |Mohini Dasari
Nuclear fusion is only 20 years away — and it has been for the last 50 years. So goes the joke in the physics community, reflecting the ever-elusive nature of this scientific breakthrough. In the realm of neurology, we face a similar paradox. For years, neurologists have anticipated a revolution in the understanding and treatment of neurological disorders, but progress has felt incremental.
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