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Page 5 - Musculoskeletal Institute News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Dr Anthony Romeo, Author at MedCity News

Dr. Anthony Romeo Anthony Romeo, M.D., is one of the nation’s leading shoulder, elbow, and sports medicine surgeons with more than 27 years of clinical experience 15 of which were spent as a team physician for the Chicago White Sox, the Chicago Bulls, and as a consultant for numerous NFL, NCAA, and Olympic-level athletes. Having spent his career in the pursuit of excellence for his patients, Dr. Romeo has pioneered new approaches to shoulder replacement surgery and developed advanced orthopaedic implants and surgical procedures that are supported by cutting-edge research and patient-focused outcomes. Dr. Romeo is also the Executive Vice President of DuPage Medical Group’s state-of-the-art Musculoskeletal Institute and Chief Medical Editor of Orthopaedics Today.

Remote Work Platforms Use Gaming Technology to Spawn Unlimited Possibilities

Remote Work Platforms Use Gaming Technology to Spawn Unlimited Possibilities Photo : Jason English COVID-19 has hit most businesses hard, but one industry that continues to experience exponential growth, despite the pandemic, is gaming. According to the Global Games Market Report from Newzoo, the games market saw 19.6% growth in 2020, and is expected to generate over $217 billion in 2023. In the early days of global lockdowns, it made perfect sense that many turned to video games to pass the time and keep themselves entertained. Even as parts of the world slowly begin to return to some sort of normality, gaming trends look set to continue their surge well into the next decade.

I m So Excited, I m Like Shaking : Austin Health Care Workers Receive First COVID-19 Vaccines

Medical Assistant Esmerelda Torres receives the COVID-19 vaccine at Dell Medical School on Tuesday. Esmeralda Torres’ eyes lit up above her mask as she talked about the COVID-19 vaccine she’d gotten in her right arm Tuesday morning. “I’m so excited, I’m like shaking,” she said. “I’m so happy.” Torres, a medical assistant at UT Health Austin’s Musculoskeletal Institute, was one of the first people in Austin to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. On Tuesday morning, front-line health care workers stood 6 feet apart on designated orange squares placed on the floor inside the Dell Medical School’s Health Discovery building downtown. They waited anxiously, some said, to received the first of 2,295 COVID-19 vaccines UT Health Austin has been given to administer. By the end of the day today, 325 people are expected to be inoculated with the first of two doses.

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