Harefuah
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A growing interest in the realization, understanding and lessons of medicine and physicians' behavior during the Holocaust, is noted in the last two decades. In this incomprehensible time, the dark and enlightened faces of medicine reached an unprecedented (and hopefully will not ever recur) climax. We learn of the criminal conduct of Nazi medicine and Nazi physicians on the one hand, and the noble, faithful to the Hippocratic oath, behavior of some prisoner physicians and nurses on the other hand. ⋯ In the present paper we will briefly delineate the historical background, its place in the professional discourse, describe a seminal conference that took place in Israel in 2017 that also launched the Galilee Declaration, and thoughts for the future. In Israel, Professor Shaul Shasha's initiative to hold a yearly meeting on medicine and health in the Holocaust in the Medical Center for the Galilee in Naharia, for the last 20 years, is central to this important subject. This paper is dedicated to him with profound gratitude.
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Neutrophilic dermatosis of the hands (NDH) is a rare localized variant of Sweet's syndrome occurring predominantly over dorsa of hands. Both Sweet's syndrome and its dorsal hand variant have been reported in association with malignancies, inflammatory bowel diseases, and drugs. We report a patient with neutrophilic dermatoses of dorsal hands associated with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).
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A tremendous paradigm shift is occurring in the field of medicine. This is because the forward momentum in the evolving sphere of digital medicine has opened up new worlds of discovery that all fuse together to form a tsunami of innovation, along with sociological and social changes. The exponential rate of technological change creates profound sociological changes and these dynamics affect the medical field. ⋯ Careful strategic thinking is required, not only to adjust to the change but also to promote it in a patient-centered manner. The role of the medical doctor, the utilization of exponential technologies and finding new uses for existing hospital infrastructures are only secondary challenges with the primary consideration being improving people's health and decreasing medical costs. The best minds and talents should be involved in preparing for this shift and in planning "home hospitalizations" supported by technologies that will give the new patient - consumer exactly what they want and need.