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In the third and final episode from the 2023 SHINE Conference, expert panelists Kristina Burger, DNP, RN, Suzanne Dutton, DNP, RN, GNP-BC, Lisa Klein, MSN, RN, AGCNS-BC, and Tania Randell, MS, RN, ACCNS-AG, join the Johns Hopkins Health System’s Nurse …

Episode 50: Engaging Staff in Inquiry Work | Johns Hopkins Center for Nursing Inquiry Read more »

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In the second episode in our series of leadership panels from the 2023 SHINE Conference, inquiry experts Holley Farley, MSN, RN, Kim Kuperman, MSN, RN, Rossana Oakley, MSN, RN, Gosia Ryan, MSN, RN, and Amy Sawyerr, MPH, BSN, RN, RNC-LRN …

Episode 49: How QI can Improve you Scores—HCPAPs, CAUTI, CLABSI and More! | Johns Hopkins Center for Nursing Inquiry Read more »

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In this episode, we’re beginning a special series, featuring our leadership panels from the 2023 SHINE Conference. Heather Watson, PhD, RN, Nurse Scientist for the Johns Hopkins Health System, discusses next steps after a project has been presented at a …

Episode 48: Your Unit Presented at SHINE, Now What? | Johns Hopkins Center for Nursing Inquiry Read more »

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Using bacteria and viruses to gain access to cancers in the body has a number of advantages, as several recent studies show. Kimmel Cancer Center director William Nelson at Johns Hopkins says one recent effort to use viruses against prostate …

What are the barriers to using infectious agents for cancer treatment? Elizabeth Tracey reports Read more »

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Salmonella, a bacteria that normally makes people ill, is being used as one part of a multipronged approach to treat certain cancers. William Nelson, director of the Kimmel Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins, says the range of disease-causing microorganisms, known …

Can an infectious agent be used for cancer therapy? Elizabeth Tracey reports Read more »

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A mouse model for colon cancer has identified a gene that is carried on the Y chromosome, so it only affects males. Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer director William Nelson says understanding this gene’s impact may point the way to new …

Are there cancers that disproportionately affect men? Elizabeth Tracey reports Read more »

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Aspartame is just the latest artificial sweetener to be implicated in an increased risk for cancer, according to the WHO. William Nelson, director of the Kimmel Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins, says teasing out the role of obesity in this …

What is the relationship between artificial sweeteners and cancer? Elizabeth Tracey reports Read more »