A new clinical trial aims to find out if sentinel lymph node biopsy or elective neck dissection is the best management option for early-stage oral cancer.
Cognitive Screening at Otolaryngology Practices: Good Idea or Waste of Time?
As evidence linking hearing loss to cognitive decline mounts, researchers and clinicians are starting to explore whether automated, self-administered cognitive screening tests should be added to routine workups of patients seen in busy otolaryngology practices.
How COVID-19 Has Impacted Medical Research
The pandemic has had far-reaching effects on research and may affect protocols for years to come.
Letter from the Editor: Expressing Ourselves in Positive Ways to Patients
Finding common ground with our patients and colleagues should take priority over any perceived differences between us.
How to Facilitate Patient Engagement in Otolaryngology
Phone-based technologies can make it easier for patients and providers to communicate on a variety of issues, ranging from reminding patients of clinical visits to more novel uses that facilitate intervention for specific conditions.
How to Improve Inequities in Head and Neck Cancer
Most cases of oropharyngeal cancer are positive for the human papillomavirus, but among Blacks, 55.3% of cases are HPV-negative, and HPV-negative cases are, to say the least, understudied, said Babak […]
How to Educate Otolaryngology Residents and Fellows on Social Determinants of Health
Being Asian American: My Emotions Following the Mass Shooting in Atlanta
I didn’t realize the intensity and depth of the emotions I had been suppressing for the past several decades as an Asian American.
Challenges of Getting Otology Care in Socioeconomically Impacted Areas
Letter from the Editor: Where are the Surgeries Going in Otolaryngology?
A look at a trend that predates the COVID-19 pandemic.
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