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Mashup Score: 0Recombinant von Willebrand factor use in obstetric anesthesia - 7 hour(s) ago
In pregnant patients with von Willebrand disease who have reduced von Willebrand factor (VWF) activity but normal factor VIII activity, recombinant VWF may be considered to supplement VWF.All patie…
Source: www.tandfonline.comCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 31Reframing Success in a Holistic Way - 9 day(s) ago
By Ariela Marshall, MD, Adult Classical Hematologist, University of Minnesota You are not the only architect of your success, but you DO need to be the only one to define what success means to you, and that definition can change throughout your life. Like many in medicine, I previously had no defini
Source: www.linkedin.comCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 3To Get What You Want, Be Both Assertive and Warm - 23 day(s) ago
This combination is key to building status.
Source: hbr.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 5Qualtrics Survey | Qualtrics Experience Management - 2 month(s) ago
The most powerful, simple and trusted way to gather experience data. Start your journey to experience management and try a free account today.
Source: ycci.co1.qualtrics.comCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 23
One of the oldest erroneous gender stereotypes is that women are too emotional to be effective leaders, especially in uncertain times. Contrary to this belief, research on 137 leader-report pairs in Europe during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic indicates that women may actually be less likely to let their emotions negatively influence their leadership behaviors compared to men. During this time, women leaders reported higher anxiety levels but did not translate these emotions into abusive behaviors, unlike their male counterparts who exhibited more hostile supervision when anxious. Women typically engaged in family-supportive behaviors regardless of their emotional state. The research emphasizes the importance of recognizing the unique strengths women bring to leadership roles, especially their capacity to lead compassionately and prioritize others, but also notes that caring leadership behaviors are evaluated differently based on the gender of the leader. The study calls for
Source: hbr.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 5Qualtrics Survey | Qualtrics Experience Management - 2 month(s) ago
The most powerful, simple and trusted way to gather experience data. Start your journey to experience management and try a free account today.
Source: ycci.co1.qualtrics.comCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 7Prophylactic red cell transfusions for sickle cell disease pregnancy: increased use of therapy could transform outcomes - PubMed - 3 month(s) ago
Given the low risk classification, lack of alternative therapies, dismal, stagnant pregnancy outcomes and the potential for profound treatment benefit, wider use of chronic transfusion therapy for SCD pregnancy is likely indicated. This review discusses the benefits and potential risks of prophylact …
Source: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.govCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 26
Multidisciplinary collaboration to create formal education/training programmes in women’s thrombosis and haemostasis will ideally lead to improved knowledge and health equity and potentially improve …
Source: onlinelibrary.wiley.comCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 9How Biases About Motherhood Impact All Women at Work - 4 month(s) ago
Women’s experiences as parents in the workplace are completely different from men’s. Men get a “fatherhood wage premium,” while mothers encounter a “motherhood penalty” in wages and advancement opportunities. One might think that women without children have workplace advantages on a par with their male counterparts. But they don’t. The maternal wall hinders all women’s careers, whether they plan to have children or not. Women without children face four biases. First, they face the “maybe baby” bias, when women ae not hired or promoted due to an assumption that they would become mothers. They also experience a “do more” bias, where women with no children found that they were expected to work longer and harder than their peers with children. Third, they face a “pay less” bias, where they are seen as less deserving financially because they were “not working to support a family.” Finally, there is a “never quite right” bias, where women are perceived as less worthy of positions, promotions
Source: hbr.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 0How to Improve Women’s Advancement Programs - 4 month(s) ago
Most corporate women’s advancement programs center on teaching women a predefined slate of skills purported to give them more control over their careers. But by taking this approach, companies may be unintentionally communicating a culture of conformity by asking women to change who they are to succeed. This leaves many women, especially senior women, feeling stuck, because strong leaders need to have the ability to set expectations, not just fulfill them. The authors surveyed 310 corporate workers in the U.S. about their understanding of power. They found that empowering and advancing women requires more than a confidence curriculum, updated lists, or empty KPIs because these strategies don’t address the deeper issues of belonging, hidden barriers, or broken culture.
Source: hbr.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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