Skip to main content
  • Management
      |Management
    • Compensation
    • Economics
    • Leadership
    • Legal News
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Patient Care
    • Policy & Regulations
    • Practice Management
    • Professional Associations
    • Quality
    • Staffing
  • Imaging
      |Imaging
    • CT
    • MRI
    • Nuclear Medicine
    • Ultrasound
    • Women's Imaging
    • X-ray
  • Technology
      |Technology
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Enterprise Imaging
    • Imaging Informatics
    • Informatics
    • PACS
  • Videos
  • Conferences
      |Conferences
    • ACR
    • AHRA
    • ARRS
    • ASRT
    • RBMA
    • RSNA
    • SBI
    • SIIM
    • SIR
    • SNMMI
  • Custom Content
      |Custom Content
    • Experience Stories
    • Webinars & Videos
  • Subscribe
  • Forty Under 40 Award
      |Forty Under 40 Award
    • Class of 2025
    • Class of 2024

Search form

Home

More women are going into medicine, but radiology remains a boys' club

News You Need to Know Today
More women are going into medicine, but radiology remains a boys' club
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
Link to Twitter Link to Facebook Link to Linkedin Link to Vimeo

Today's News and Trends

More women are going into medicine, but radiology remains a boys’ club

The current generation of medical students are closing a well-established gender gap, but radiology still ranks 11th on women’s preferred specialty lists, while it falls fifth on men’s, researchers have reported in Academic Radiology.
READ MORE >
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network has published new patient-friendly breast cancer screening guidelines
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin

More women are going into medicine, but radiology remains a boys’ club

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network has published new patient-friendly breast cancer screening guidelines
The current generation of medical students are closing a well-established gender gap, but radiology still ranks 11th on women’s preferred specialty lists, while it falls fifth on men’s, researchers have reported in Academic Radiology.
READ MORE >

MRI could help transgender teens struggling with identity

The structure and activity in transgender teens’ brains more closely resemble their desired gender than their biological sex, according to research presented at the European Society of Endocrinology’s annual symposium in Barcelona.
READ MORE >
women-149577_960_720.png
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin

MRI could help transgender teens struggling with identity

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin
women-149577_960_720.png
The structure and activity in transgender teens’ brains more closely resemble their desired gender than their biological sex, according to research presented at the European Society of Endocrinology’s annual symposium in Barcelona.
READ MORE >

ACR elects new officers, including McGinty as 1st woman chair in history

The American College of Radiology, at its 2018 Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., announced results of an election for its new Board of Chancellors. Geraldine McGinty, MD, MBA, previously the vice chair of the ACR Board of Chancellors, is the first woman elected chair of the board in the organization’s history.
READ MORE >
Geraldine McGinty, MD, MBA, FACR
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin

ACR elects new officers, including McGinty as 1st woman chair in history

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin
Geraldine McGinty, MD, MBA, FACR
The American College of Radiology, at its 2018 Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., announced results of an election for its new Board of Chancellors. Geraldine McGinty, MD, MBA, previously the vice chair of the ACR Board of Chancellors, is the first woman elected chair of the board in the organization’s history.
READ MORE >

Language barrier: 60% of oncologists routinely confused by radiology reports

Referring physicians are increasingly struggling to understand radiologists’ jargon in written imaging reports, a trio of California physicians wrote in the Journal of the American College of Radiology this week. That lack of communication could result in misguided treatment.
READ MORE >
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin

Language barrier: 60% of oncologists routinely confused by radiology reports

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin
Referring physicians are increasingly struggling to understand radiologists’ jargon in written imaging reports, a trio of California physicians wrote in the Journal of the American College of Radiology this week. That lack of communication could result in misguided treatment.
READ MORE >

'Active surveillance' for cancer diagnosis may leave some feeling too passive

In a May 20 essay in the Washington Post, Steven Petrow takes a look at his sister’s battle with ovarian cancer. He described how, after 18 weeks of chemotherapy, she is faced with a decision: Enroll in clinical trials or sit back in and opt for “active surveillance.”
READ MORE >
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin

'Active surveillance' for cancer diagnosis may leave some feeling too passive

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin
In a May 20 essay in the Washington Post, Steven Petrow takes a look at his sister’s battle with ovarian cancer. He described how, after 18 weeks of chemotherapy, she is faced with a decision: Enroll in clinical trials or sit back in and opt for “active surveillance.”
READ MORE >

Brain MRI could ID metastases in breast cancer patients, but guidelines don’t recommend it

Though not the guideline-recommended route for treatment, select breast cancer patients could benefit greatly from MRI screenings designed to identify brain metastases, according to a research letter penned this month by Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women’s Cancer Center experts and published in JAMA Oncology.
READ MORE >
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin

Brain MRI could ID metastases in breast cancer patients, but guidelines don’t recommend it

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin
Though not the guideline-recommended route for treatment, select breast cancer patients could benefit greatly from MRI screenings designed to identify brain metastases, according to a research letter penned this month by Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women’s Cancer Center experts and published in JAMA Oncology.
READ MORE >

Innovate Healthcare thanks our partners for supporting our newsletters.
Sponsorship has no influence on editorial content.

Interested in reaching our audiences, contact our team

*|LIST:ADDRESSLINE|*

You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from Innovate Healthcare.
Change your preferences or unsubscribe here

Contact Us  |  Unsubscribe from all  |  Privacy Policy

© Innovate Healthcare, a TriMed Media brand
Innovate Healthcare

Recent Newsletters

IR procedure relieves clot-related pain | Doc launches IR-specific decision support platform | IRs uninformed on supply costs
GE imaging CEO resigns amid mixed results | Aidoc raises $150M more | Women confused about mammography screening | AI bests rads
Radiologists implore HHS to punish payers | Rad group teams with urologists | Imaging AI vendors merge | Device tied to 3 deaths
Prenuvo ramps up radiologist recruitment | Radiology dept. scans 10-foot-long reptile | A low-cost burnout solution | CRC CTC AI
New cancer screening recs include AI-based risk analysis | FDA denies request to expedite AI review | AI absent in rad job posts
Cancer 'cluster' among imaging staffers | Radiologists optimistic about short-term future | New bill targets prior authorization
Best of the Week: Radiologists among medicine's richest | State the 1st to require BAC notifications | Rads high on burnout list

Pagination

    • First page « First
    • Previous page ‹‹
    • Page …5
    • Page 6
    • Page 7
    • Page 8
    • Current page 9
    • Page 10
    • Page 11
    • Page 12
    • Page 13 …
    • Next page ››
    • Last page Last »
  • Home
  • News
  • Article Archive
  • Custom Content
  • Webinars
  • Press Releases
  • Content Studio
  • Advertising
  • Submit Press Release
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cardiovascular Business
  • HealthExec
  • Radiology Business
 
© 2026 Innovate Healthcare | All Rights Reserved. | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
 
Design by Adaptive Theme