so just take that into your consideration jury at home. okay, thank you both so much. and some good news before we say good night. something extraordinary happened in california. a woman s ring helped save her from a stray bullet. 22-year-old was folding her laundry. she heard a loud bang. drop your phone and felt pain and hand. her middle finger started swelling. the next thing she realized that ring saved her. it was a bullet casing on the floor. it turns out there had been a shooting less than 50 feet away from our backyard fence. her advice is to tell your man want lots of rings. big rings. that s her advised to save your life. it worked, good for her, and boy was she blessed. going to take you to stillwater, oklahoma, for my good news good night. congratulations is in order to the team of physician scientists and animal lovers at oklahoma state university that
science? well, he was basically responding to a statement made by eight physician scientists including me, including the head of the fda and the head of the cdc, saying we have looked at the data and it looked as if boosters were going to be a good thing for americans to start to utilize, recognizing in that speech he did say cdc and fda a s advisory process those kick in first. i m a little troubled about all of the buzz happening right now about whether the process was perfect. of course, it s not perfect. no process ever is. the goals here are to try to protect americans from dying from this disease, 670,000 have already. it does look from the review of the data by people like myself that we are going to need to provide boosters for people at risk in order to keep this surge from beginning to affect even those who are fully vaccinated. we re trying to do the right thing, trying to look at the data as it evolves, recognize things are changing day by day. maybe we ought to talk more
well, he was basically responding to a statement made by eight physician scientists including me, including the head of the fda and the head of the cdc, saying we have looked at the data and it looked as if boosters were going to be a good thing for americans to start to utilize, recognizing in that speech he did say cdc and fda a s advisory process those kick in first. i m a little troubled about all of the buzz happening right now about whether the process was perfect. of course, it s not perfect. no process ever is. the goals here are to try to protect americans from dying from this disease, 670,000 have already. it does look from the review of the data by people like myself that we are going to need to provide boosters for people at risk in order to keep this surge from beginning to affect even those who are fully vaccinated. we re trying to do the right thing, trying to look at the data as it evolves, recognize things are changing day by day. maybe we ought to talk more about th
NHGRI appoints Oleg Shchelochkov as intramural training program director
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Dr. Shchelochkov will oversee the research training, fellowship and residency programs at the institute.
The National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), has appointed Oleg Shchelochkov, M.D., as the new director of Clinical and Laboratory Residencies and Fellowships.
Dr. Shchelochkov, a clinical geneticist and medical biochemical geneticist, takes the position with over a decade of experience teaching and training young professionals. He has been part of the NHGRI research community since 2015, starting as a staff clinician. Until recently, he was an associate research physician studying many aspects of organic acidemias.