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Sandeep Jauhar is an Indian-American cardiologist and author based in Long Island. He has written four memoirs on medicine, including the national bestseller Intern: A Doctor's Initiation . [ 1 ] His 2018 book, Heart: A History was shortlisted for the Wellcome Book Prize in 2019.
978-0-374-53159-1. Intern: A Doctor's Initiation is a 2007 nonfiction autobiographical account of Sandeep Jauhar's first year as a medical intern, immediately following medical school. At New York Hospital, he kept journals about his daily activities regarding patients and interaction with other doctors.
ISBN. 9780374168650. Heart: A History is a 2018 book by Sandeep Jauhar. In the book Jauhar discusses the historical experiments and procedures done in the past and how innovations can be taken for granted. [1]
Radio Rounds is a medical radio talk show produced and hosted entirely by medical students.. With an official tagline stating "Today's Stories / Tomorrow's Doctors" and targeting an audience that includes the general public, medical students, and physicians, Radio Rounds is the first radio program in the United States produced entirely by medical students.
978-1-60714-055-9. The Soul of Medicine: Tales from the Bedside is a 2009 book by Sherwin B. Nuland. [ 1] It was first published on April 14, 2009, through Kaplan Publishing. [ 2]
The Rajput ceremony of Jauhar, 1567, as depicted by Ambrose Dudley in Hutchinsons History of the Nations, c.1910. Jauhar, sometimes spelled Jowhar or Juhar, [1] [2] was a Hindu Rajput practice of mass self-immolation by females, both adults and children, [3] in the Indian subcontinent to avoid capture, enslavement, [4] and rape by invaders [5] when facing certain defeat during a war.
Marianne Legato. Bruce Lerman. Michael Lesch. Samuel A. Levine. Daniel Levy (physician) Robert Levy (physician) Robert L. Levy (cardiologist) Peter Libby. David Littmann.
Masonic Medical Research Institute. Masonic Medical Research Institute (MMRI) is a non-profit medical research center located in Utica, New York. The Institute's research and staff are independent, but gets its name from its original funding in 1958 by the Masonic Grand Lodge of New York. [1]