Rhode Island Medical Journal
Overview
Rhode Island Medical Journal is a scientific journal, published since 2013 in English. The journal's country of origin is United States and its primary focus area is general medicine.
Details
Details
Abbr.
R I Med J (2013)
Start
2013
End
Continuing
Frequency
Monthly
e-ISSN
2327-2228
Country
United States
Language
English
Specialty
General Medicine
Recent Articles
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Nair A, Pathak M, Chand S, Aluisio A, Kharel R
R I Med J (2013)
. 2025 Feb;
108(3):38-42.
PMID: 40009102
Background: Triage, the process of organizing and prioritizing patient interventions, is a fundamental aspect of emergency departments. This study focuses on the implementation of the recently developed triage tool for...
5.
Liu J, Smith N, Gilreath N, Cohen E
R I Med J (2013)
. 2025 Feb;
108(3):35-37.
PMID: 40009101
No abstract available.
6.
Prakash D, Allister L
R I Med J (2013)
. 2025 Feb;
108(3):33-34.
PMID: 40009100
No abstract available.
7.
Stump M, McCrary M, Shafi F
R I Med J (2013)
. 2025 Feb;
108(3):30-32.
PMID: 40009099
Narrative Medicine is an international discipline at the intersection of humanities, the arts, clinical practice and healthcare justice. This discipline aims to deepen skills of self-awareness, presence, attention and creative...
8.
Brewer J, Antico L
R I Med J (2013)
. 2025 Feb;
108(3):27-29.
PMID: 40009098
Physician burnout is a pressing issue in healthcare that demands effective wellness interventions. Enhancing wellness resources is challenging and this article highlights key insights for successful initiatives. It emphasizes the...
9.
Catanese S
R I Med J (2013)
. 2025 Feb;
108(3):25-26.
PMID: 40009097
Physicians and advanced practice providers often lack structured opportunities to develop personal and professional skills, critical for reducing burnout and enhancing job satisfaction. To address this, Brown Medicine's Division of...
10.
Agarwal G, Vaidyanathan M, Brandon E, Beidas R
R I Med J (2013)
. 2025 Feb;
108(3):21-24.
PMID: 40009096
Improving the well-being of healthcare workers (HCWs) requires embedding well-being into healthcare operations. However, limitations of current well-being metrics serve as barriers for healthcare systems to address well-being in the...