
Madeline Cohen
Articles
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Jul 17, 2024 |
statnews.com | Madeline Cohen |Sarah O'Connor |Nicole Huberfeld
Taking the oral examination is the final step in becoming a board-certified obstetrician and gynecologist (OB-GYN). It is a challenge in the best of circumstances. But instead of worrying about how to respond to questions about the management of uterine cancers or peripartum hemorrhage, test candidates are worried about the legal risks of taking this exam, which must be done in Dallas, home of the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ABOG).
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Jul 17, 2024 |
flipboard.com | Madeline Cohen |Sarah O'Connor |Nicole Huberfeld
PoliticsNowA new kind of Republican Party is forming at the RNCPOLITICO - By Adam Wren, Olivia Beavers and Megan Messerly • NowThe GOP is dramatically transforming. Just listen carefully to the RNC. MILWAUKEE — A new kind of Republican Party is revealing itself at its national convention.
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Dec 20, 2023 |
kevinmd.com | Sogol Pahlavan |Amanda Xi |Sheila Nazarian |Madeline Cohen
Being a first-generation immigrant growing up in the conservative South, I followed the “traditional” vision board. At the age of 40, I reached the American dream: successful mommy doctor entrepreneur, married, raising three kids, living in an affluent neighborhood, driving an environmentally friendly vehicle, investing in real estate, traveling the world, and making yearly charitable contributions. I made it! OK, great, now what? My knee-jerk reaction was: Now you do more.
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Aug 8, 2023 |
ajws.org | Madeline Cohen
For generations, Indigenous communities within Chiapas — the southernmost region of Mexico — have enjoyed a symbiotic relationship with the land they inhabit. The people nurture and support their ancestral lands, and in return, the land provides them food, shelter and clean water. But in recent decades, mining companies have descended upon the region, poisoning water and ripping up forest land.
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Jun 26, 2023 |
ajws.org | Madeline Cohen
Mohamad Mohamud lives in Garissa County — a remote, arid region of Kenya that spans hundreds of miles with little vegetation. Many who live there are pastoralists: people who rely on goats, sheep and camels to provide them with meat, milk and a means to support themselves. Most years, two rainy seasons are a welcome reprieve from this hot and dry climate, allowing vegetation to grow and helping pastoralist communities maintain their way of life. Life can be difficult here.
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