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March 2024 Memphis Medical News

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FOCUS TOPICS CARDIOLOGY • ANESTHESIOLOGY • LEGISLATIVE ISSUES

March 2024 >> $5 ON ROUNDS

Stern Cardiovascular Foundation Director of Clinical Research Touts Research Trials for Best Clinical Care Clinical trials help reduce illnesses, hospitalizations and death

Legislative Update from the Memphis Medical Society 2024 will (and already has been) a year focused on taking care of the medical community. Taking care in the sense of making sure our physicians and all healthcare providers feel supported, safe, and unthreatened – physically, legally, and financially. TMA, MMS, and MGMA have already travelled to Nashville on March 5 to advocate for better healthcare for Tennesseans and a better environment to practice medicine in our state. Still yet, calls to action will be submitted to our stakeholders to impact bills that affect our profession. This article was written March 7, so the status of these could be changed by the time you read this.

By BECKY GILLETTE When your life or the life of a loved one is at stake due to difficult-to-treat cardiovascular problems, you want the best possible care to prevent hospitalization and maximize quality of life. That means seeking out clinical trials that have the advantage of offering the latest, most promising treatments and interventions. Cardiologist Frank A. McGrew, MD, director of Clinical Research at the Stern Cardiovascular Foundation, said the best clinical care is done in the setting of a research trial. “When you are in a trial, you have a condition that isn’t completely taken care of and cured by conventional medicine,” McGrew said. “In the case of almost any

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PhysicianSpotlight

Medical Anesthesia Group’s, Emily Coursey, Notes it’s about More Than Surgery

Article on page 4 See more local news in Grand Rounds on page 6

ONLINE: MEMPHIS MEDICAL NEWS.COM

cardiovascular trial, you basically will have your own private nurse to communicate with any time there are concerns. Because of that kind of care and attention in most of our trials, even patients in the

placebo group will have better outcomes than the general population. We have ample evidence of that. The subjects in the trial will do better than the general population because of the opportunity to access advanced technology and medicines usually several years before they reach the general population.” These kinds of clinical trials are not available everywhere. That leads to many cardiac patients in the region surrounding Memphis seeking treatment at the Baptist Heart Institute. “We get a lot of patients from all over Tennessee and from Arkansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Southwest Kentucky and Northwest Alabama,” said McGrew, who also does trials for patients at Baptist

Emily Coursey

By JAMES DOWD As one of the newest board members of the Memphis Medical Society (MMS), Emily Coursey, MD, is excited about collaborating across professional disciplines to promote stronger relationships between lawmakers, healthcare providers and patients. Reinvesting in her community is a passion for Coursey, who was born in Memphis,

grew up in Corinth, Mississippi, earned an engineering degree from Ole Miss and an M.D. from the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson. She spent years crisscrossing the country, gaining experience and expertise in medical facilities from on both coasts before returning to her native Mid-South for a position with Medical Anesthesia Group (MAG) in Memphis. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 3)

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