Aaisha Ferkh
@aaishaferkh
Cardiologist. Combined advanced cardiac imaging fellow at St Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver.
ID: 264091539
11-03-2011 09:28:29
43 Tweet
93 Followers
244 Following
Professor Clara Chow discussing the differences in heart attack management and outcomes for men and women, now published in MJA bit.ly/2zXKqjR Sydney Uni Media @SydUni_Research
Congratulations to Sujitha Thavapalachandran and Pierre Qian for winning The Ralph at #csanzet18! Go team Westmead! @USyd_Westmead Westmead_Arrhythmia The Westmead Institute for Medical Research Westmead Applied Research Centre #WARC_USYD CSANZ
Review: #Myocarditis with #COVID19 mRNA vaccines - epidemiology, mechanisms and risk vs benefit BiykemBozkurt Prof Peter Hotez MD PhD DSc(hon) ow.ly/uZDd50FKlmS #AHAJournals #AHACOVID19
ESC Congress 2021 - The Digital Experience | Late Breaking Trials in Hypertension digital-congress.escardio.org/?c=274 Amazing results! Congratulations Clara Chow and Westmead Applied Research Centre #WARC_USYD !!
QUARTET shows the strategy of starting with ultra-low dose combination therapy is superior to the common one of starting mono therapy and up titration.. and much simpler to implement . The quadpill approach achieved BP control in 80% NSW CVRN Sydney Health Partners authors.elsevier.com/a/1dfNb_3CjG7l…
Should we tailor dietary guidelines 4 heart disease prevention in women versus men? Is it one size fits all? In Heart_BMJ, in middle aged 🚺, carbohydrate and Not saturated fat correlates w/ CVD heart.bmj.com/content/early/… Westmead Applied Research Centre #WARC_USYD Monash University
Textme2 about customised text message in primary prevention, led by PhD student now graduated Harry Klimis
smh.com.au/healthcare/wom…. A great editorial by Clara Chow on why #cvd in women & men need a whole of govt response to address the underlying social, commercial, economic & geographical determinants of risk. This is not for health to solve alone. Heart Foundation
Strength training is important with age to maintain #fitness, independent living & prevent disease (I do it often). Meta-analysis found power training (fast lift, slow lowering) led to modest gains over strength training in older adults JAMA Network Open: bit.ly/3wtfzpe
Unacceptable The Royal Australasian College of Physicians smh.com.au/national/hundr…