Covid-19 Update: The ICU Experience in NY, Mission/Bolinas Community Studies, & Antibody Testing
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 13 май 2020
- In this UCSF Medical Grand Rounds presentation (May 14, 2020), UCSF experts review the Mission/Bolinas community studies and the uses and limitations of antibody testing. We also hear a report from UCSF physicians who were part of a volunteer group of 20 faculty and nurses working in ICUs in New York City. The session is hosted by UCSF Department of Medicine chair Bob Wachter.
Program
Bob Wachter: Introduction
00:03:09 - 00:26:35 - The Experience of Working in ICUs in New York City
• Michael Peters, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Allergy and Sleep Medicine
• Michelle Yu, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Allergy and Sleep Medicine
00:26:36 - 01:03:54 - The UCSF Mission/Bolinas Community Studies
• Diane Havlir, Professor of Medicine and Chief of the Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases & Global Medicine, ZSFG (00:26:36 -00:33:37; 00:38:42-00:48:50)
• Jon Jacobo, Chair of the UCSF Study Committee for the Latino Task Force for Covid-19 (00:33:38 - 00:38:41)
• Bryan Greenhouse, Associate Professor of Medicine, Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases & Global Medicine, ZSFG (00:48:51-00:56:32)
00:56:48 - Q&A
01:03:54 - 01:42:22 - The Uses and Limitations of Antibody Testing
• Michael Busch, Director, Vitalant Research Institute; Professor, Dept. of Laboratory Medicine (01:04:09- 01:17:50)
• Alex Marson, Director of the Gladstone-UCSF Institute of Genomic Immunology; Associate Professor, Division of Infectious Diseases (01:17:51- 01:32:39)
01:32:40 - Q&A
01:42:22 - Bob Wachter: Closing
See previous Covid-19 Medical Grand Rounds:
• May 7: Update on Covid-19: Epidemiology, Virology, Prospects for Drugs and Vaccines, and UCSF’s Experience in the Navajo Nation
• Covid-19 Update: Epide...
• April 30: Update on Covid-19: Clinical & Neurological Manifestations, Contact Tracing, and UCSF’s Experience in NYC
• Covid-19 Update: Clini...
• April 23: Update on Covid-19: The Next Stage of the Pandemic, Virology & Diagnostics • Update on Covid-19: Th...
• April 16: Update on Covid-19: Epidemiology, Treatments, and Health Disparities
• UCSF Update on Covid-1...
• April 9: Update on Covid-19, at UCSF and Around the Country
• Update on Covid-19, fo...
• April 2: Epidemiology, Science, Clinical Aspects, and Therapy for Covid-19, Part 2
• The Epidemiology, Scie...
• March 26: Impact on Covid-19 on Medical Education
• UCSF Educational Leade...
• March 26: UCSF Researchers Tackling Covid-19
• COVID-19 Campus-wide R...
• March 19: Epidemiology, Science, Clinical Aspects, and Therapy for Covid-19, Part 1
• UCSF Experts on the Ep...
Michelle and Michael, it is comforting to know there are people like you out there taking care of people. You are heroes on a much higher level than what the word meant before this pandemic.
Sending a virtual hug.
"Events do not make heroes, events expose the heroes who live among us everyday."
What was seen at Elmhurst...was it a real significant indication of Covid infection or was it do to the comorbities that were significant of this population
Would be nice if the volume was louder.
Intubation had a survival rate of 20%, why werentt pills like invermectin and or hydrocloaquine used
From what I gather, a lot of complications and deaths are a result of medical error and/or hospital acquired infection?
Bring George R. Back.
UCSF = university of California at San Francisco
The receptive tachometer temporarily knit because powder aditionally bubble since a wanting archaeology. evasive, evanescent cloudy
The elderly salmon acutely suppose because ash compellingly avoid from a jolly minister. reflective, electric spark
The overjoyed donkey evocatively pat because error postsynaptically mark since a electric voyage. changeable, changeable name
The combative plasterboard preferentially phone because rectangle coincidentally chase till a gaudy ex-wife. abrasive, nondescript cheque
The hospitable headlight jointly suffer because c-clamp resultantly branch up a hesitant jogging. attractive, stupid comma