Helen Ouyang
@drhelenouyang
ER Doc + Prof @Columbia, Contributing Writer @NYTmag, Fellow @TypeMediaCenter
ID: 1382620231
https://helenouyang.com 26-04-2013 18:43:09
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Stabbed. Kicked. Spit On. The violence in American hospitals, especially affecting emergency room physicians and nurses nytimes.com/2023/10/24/opi… (w/video) by Helen Ouyang Medical student "I earned today that I don't want to go into emergency medicine"
Bariatric Surgery at 16 nytimes.com/2023/10/31/mag… Terrific in-depth reporting from Helen Ouyang about the challenges and imperfect solutions to the epidemic of obesity in children.
This stunning New York Times Opinion essay and photos about the opioid crisis will open your eyes and break your heart. Gorgeous writing by Judith Surber. Thank you Pulitzer Center for supporting this type of work nytimes.com/interactive/20…
My NYT Magazine story on pediatric obesity and bariatric surgery is The Sunday Read on The New York Times ‘The Daily’ today. Beautifully narrated by Soneela Nankani with short intro by me. Thanks especially to Tally Abecassis & audio team! nytimes.com/2023/12/17/pod…
Type Media Center is pleased to announce Helen Ouyang and Jessica Valenti as the inaugural Ernst Abelin and Pamela Bevier fellows. Valenti and Ouyang join Type thanks to the generous support of Pamela Bevier. typemediacenter.org/2024/02/21/typ…
I wrote this week's @nytmag cover story about ECPR - a new way of treating cardiac arrest. Currently cardiac arrest has dismal survival rates. ECPR could dramatically change that. But can health care systems implement this complex intervention? Should they?nytimes.com/2024/03/27/mag…
"Patients with certain types of cardiac arrest who are treated with a new procedure, called ECPR, have a nearly 100 % chance of being revived, with their brain function intact, if treatment is administered within 30 minutes of collapse." nytimes.com/2024/03/27/mag… Helen Ouyang
Wastewater monitoring was so useful for COVID-19, some places are now using it to track drug use. But many researchers and public-health officials worry that such monitoring could be used against the people it’s intended to help. Helen Ouyang reports: theatlantic.com/health/archive…
We’ve heard about wastewater surveillance for COVID. But it’s increasingly being used to track drug use. This leads to so many questions for public health folks, all wonderfully explored by the remarkable Helen Ouyang in The Atlantic Gift link below 👇 theatlantic.com/health/archive…
“For people to truly be healthy, modern medicine must prioritize the prevention of mental ailments alongside physical ones,” writes Helen Ouyang. Read: nyti.ms/3TcFVYy