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In the last episode of our Nursing Grand Rounds series, ‘Bringing Inquiry to the Bedside,’ Stephanie Al-Adhami and Deborah Tildsley present their research project ‘Impact of Gaming on Critical Thinking and Assessment Skills Among New-to-Practice Nurses.’ Their research project examined the impact …

Episode 78: Nursing Grand Rounds – Impact of Gaming on Critical Thinking and Assessment Skills Among New-to-Practice Nurses | Johns Hopkins Center for Nursing Inquiry Read more »

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The ICU is a high-stress environment that can strain the most functional team. Learn how the Neurocritical Care Unit at Johns Hopkins undertook a comprehensive culture transformation to repair team dynamics, why culture change is difficult and risky, and how …

Ep 22: A Risk Worth Taking: The Hard Work and Reward of Culture Change| Johns Hopkins Medicine Office of Well-Being Read more »

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It can be hard to distinguish symptoms from a common cold, the flu, or even COVID-19, but it’s important to know they aren’t treated the same way. Dr. Christine Krueger explains what it means to have an “upper respiratory infection," …

Ep 9: Your Guide to Cold & Flu Season | Medicine Made General Read more »

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Cognitive speed training using a computer to generate images and accelerate task completion was able to reduce the likelihood that an older person would receive an Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis by 25%, a study by Johns Hopkins Alzheimer’s expert Marilyn Albert …

Will brain training data change policy when it comes to Alzheimer’s prevention? Elizabeth Tracey reports Read more »

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A novel study has shown that training the brain with cognitive speed training seems to reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. Johns Hopkins Alzheimer’s disease expert and study author Marilyn Albert says that previous research simply compared what people who …

One type of brain training seems to be important in reducing Alzheimer’s disease risk, Elizabeth Tracey reports Read more »

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If you were asked to learn a computer based task that would require an hour twice a week for six weeks, and it was something you would largely have to learn to master on your own, would you sign up? …

Can cognitive speed training make your brain more connected? Elizabeth Tracey reports Read more »