Items Tagged ‘Dr. Robert Cima’


March 14, 2014

Mayo Clinic in the News Weekly Highlights

By Karl Oestreich Karl Oestreich (@KarlWOestreich)

  Mayo Clinic in the News is a weekly highlights summary of major media coverage. If you would like to be added to the weekly distribution list, send a note to Emily Blahnik with this subject line: SUBSCRIBE to Mayo Clinic in the News. Thank you. Karl Oestreich, manager enterprise media relations Twin Cities Business Mayo’s Operating Profits Climb […]

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Tags: 000 steps, 10, 2013 Mayo Clinic Performance Report, ABC News, Abilene, Adirondack Enterprise NY, Advertiser-Tribune, airborne fungus, Albert Lea Tribune, alzheimer's disease, antibacterial soap, antibiotics and weight gain


November 1, 2013

Mayo Clinic in the News Weekly Highlights

By Karl Oestreich Karl Oestreich (@KarlWOestreich)

    November 1, 2013 Mayo Clinic in the News is a weekly highlights summary of major media coverage. If you would like to be added to the weekly distribution list, send a note to Emily Blahnik with this subject line: SUBSCRIBE to Mayo Clinic in the News. Thank you. Karl Oestreich, manager enterprise media […]

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Tags: : ABC News Radio, AERO-News Network, Affordable care act, ANI News, Arc Minnesota, arthritis, Arthritis Today, Augusta Chronicle, autism, Aviation International News, Aynsley Smith, BEAUTFY


March 25, 2013

Anal cancer may be on the rise in the U.S.

By Logan Lafferty Logan Lafferty (@loganlafferty)

The number of people in the U.S. with anal cancer has tripled since the 1970s, according to a new study…Dr. Robert Cima, a surgeon in the department of colon and rectal surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said that could also mean the number of squamous cell carcinomas did not change that much […]

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Tags: anal cancer, carcinoma, diagnosis increase, Dr. Robert Cima, Reuters, squamous cell cancer


March 8, 2013

What surgeons leave behind costs some patients dearly

By Logan Lafferty Logan Lafferty (@loganlafferty)

A separate study published the same year by doctors at Minnesota’s Mayo Clinic found that counts failed to show anything amiss in 68% of cases where a sponge was lost. “When you’re counting multiple objects over a longer course of time, such as an operation, and you have significant competing priorities and tasks that need […]

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Tags: Dr. Robert Cima, leave behind, lost sponge, sponge, surgeons, USA Today


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