Showing 5011-5020 of 8207 results for "".
- Parents Just Don't Understand Risks of Sun Exposure in Springhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/parents-just-dont-understand-risks-of-sun-exposure-in-spring/2457791/Slightly more than 90 percent of parents underestimate the sun’s strength in spring and as a result, don’t adequately protect their children, according to a survey by parent magazine Kinderzeit.org. Specifically, 90.6 percent of parents polled tend to forget to apply sun
- First Androgenetic Alopecia Patient Dosed in a Pilot Study with Aclaris' ATI-502 Topicalhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/first-androgenetic-alopecia-patient-dosed-in-a-pilot-study-with-aclaris-ati-502-topical/2457795/Aclaris Therapeutics, Inc. initiated a Phase 2 open-label study of ATI-502, a topical Janus Kinase (JAK) 1/3 inhibitor (ATI-502 Topical), in patients with androgenetic alopecia (AGA), a condition characterized by a genetically determined male/female-pattern baldness. This trial will
- Physician Assistant Groups Respond to JAMA Dermatology Study: "Fundamentally Flawed"https://practicaldermatology.com/news/physician-assistant-groups-respond-to-jama-dermatology-study-fundamentally-flawed/2457798/The American Academy of PAs (AAPA) and the Society of Dermatology PAs (SDPA) have issued a statemen
- Marriage May Reduce Risk of Dying from Melanomahttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/marriage-may-reduce-risk-dying-from-melanoma/2457797/Married folks are more likely to spot a melanoma early, compared with individuals who were never married, divorced or widowed, a new study shows. Researchers tracked data from more tha
- Study: Derms More Likely than PAs to Catch Early Skin Cancerhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/study-derms-more-likely-than-pas-to-catch-early-skin-cancer/2457800/Physician assistants may be more likely than dermatologists to perform unnecessary skin biopsies to check for cancer and are less likely to accurately diagnose early stage skin cancers, according to new research conducted by the University of Pittsbur
- News You Can Use: Simple One-Page Tool Improves Patient Satisfaction with Doctor Visithttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/news-you-can-use-simple-one-page-tool-improves-patient-satisfaction-with-doctor-visit/2457805/A simple, one-page form given to patients ahead of time can significantly improve satisfaction with care, according to a study by Duke Health researchers. The low-tech tool, which asks for a list of the topics patients wants to discuss during their visit, helps patients focus on what&rsqu
- New JAMA Dermatology Publication Features AID Accelerator Fund to Enable Progress of Promising Early-stage Scientific Technologieshttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/new-jama-dermatology-publication-features-aid-accelerator-fund-to-enable-progress-of-promisingearly-stage-scientific-technologies/2457810/A new article, "Catalyzing Future Drug, Device, and Information Technology Breakthroughs in Dermatology", in JAMA Dermatology features the Advancing Innovation in Dermatology (AID) Accelerator Fund. AID has created this mechanism to help enable and speed the product development
- Ortho Dermatologics' DUOBRII Improves Psoriasis Symptoms As Early As Two Weekshttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/ortho-dermatologics-duobrii-improves-psoriasis-symptoms/2457811/DUOBRII (halobetasol propionate and tazarotene) (IDP-118) lotion demonstrated significant superiority over vehicle as early as two weeks, according to new research in Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology</
- Take That, Kim and Kylie : Most Millennials Don't Want Your Advice on Cosmetic Surgeryhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/take-that-kim-and-kylie/2457812/When it comes to deciding on nips and tucks, millennials are not inclined to trust social media or celebs, a new
- DefenAge® Skincare Trio Performs Well in New Studyhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/defenage-skincare-trio-performs-well-in-new-study/2457818/Progenitor Biologics’ DefenAge® Skincare, a-three-step system “globally improves the visual appearance of aging skin without irritation, dryness, or inflammation,” according to new research in the