September 1st, 2013
A World Conference in My Backyard
M. Louis Handoko, MD PhD
A hometown fellow plunges headfirst into the 2013 ESC Congress.
September 1st, 2013
ESC.13 Headquarters
CardioExchange Editors, Staff
Find all of our ESC.13 coverage here.
May 14th, 2013
Presenting at HRS — Benefits Before the Session, During, and Afterwards
Amit Mehrotra, MD, MBA
This is why we hold conferences — to share in the value of research and to promote enthusiasm to continue with new endeavors.
May 13th, 2013
Things I found at HRS 2013: Education, Science, Friends, and Mentors
Sandeep K Goyal, MD
Looking back at the knowledge gained and friendships kindled at HRS 2013, this Fellow looks forward to HRS 2014.
May 10th, 2013
Blogging at HRS 2013: Great Takeaways on Day 2
Luis Garcia, MD
HRS yields useful insights, both personal and professional.
May 10th, 2013
Blogging from HRS 2013: Excitement at the Convention Center and Outside
Sandeep K Goyal, MD
An emotion-raising debate, a late-breaker session, and technological innovations focus this fellow, despite Denver’s many attractions.
May 9th, 2013
Blogging from HRS 2013: VT/VF Summit, and Bill Clinton Too!
Luis Garcia, MD
A fellow experiences one exceptional presentation after another at the first day of HRS 2013.
April 11th, 2013
Journals, Journals, Everywhere
Tariq Ahmad, MD, MPH
Does creating more subspecialty journals contribute to the creation of too much information, about small aspects of the field, such that specialists move closer to “knowing everything about nothing”?
March 11th, 2013
Diversity in Cardiology: Blogging from ACC.13
Tariq Ahmad, MD, MPH
What can be done to increase the numbers of women and minorities at ACC.13 and in cardiology in general?
November 28th, 2012
The End of Fellowship: What Happens Next?
John Ryan, MD
Our training programs have a uniform deficiency — they do not prepare fellows on how to leave. I know this well, as I am currently transitioning from cardiology fellow to faculty member. Fellows typically enter medical school in their twenties and over the next ten years become institutionalized into full-time understudies. Part of this is nice, […]