Workforce
The Syrian-American dream

BAKR ALKASEM/AFP via Getty Images
When M. Ihsan Kaadan came to the U.S. after finishing his medical degree in Syria, he recalls, "I quickly realized that the American dream is real." He got a master's degree in international health policy and management and did his residency and fellowship at highly respected hospitals in Boston. While at Massachusetts General Hospital, his research group included an Israeli and an Iranian in addition to himself — three people who would never work together elsewhere. The U.S. accepted him regardless of his background or religion.
He's not sure all that could happen today.
In a STAT First Opinion, Kaadan lays out the problems the "Muslim ban" of the first Trump administration caused for international doctors helping to fill gaps in the U.S. physician workforce. He's excited to use his American medical training to help rebuild the Syrian health care system, but fears for immigrant doctors like him if there's a new travel ban in the new administration. Read more, including the statistics on international doctors in the U.S. workforce, here.
Cancer
'Another can to kick' for leukemia
Eventually, no matter what therapy patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia get, the expectation is that they will relapse if they live long enough. STAT's Angus Chen reports that there's a new hope — including compete remission — for patients whose cancer is resistant to other therapies.
In a small phase 1/2 trial, 61% of 23 patients responded to AbbVie's drug Epkinly that's already approved for some lymphomas, and 39% had a complete response. This is a very significant achievement, said Alexey Danilov, a hematologist-oncologist and cancer researcher at City of Hope, because this is a very difficult population of patients to treat.
"I'd be lying to say I don't always hope that this will be the last therapy, no more swings at the bat," said Brian Koffman, a patient who has relapsed multiple times. "The reality is you kick the can down the road. But you hope, by the end, there's another can to kick." He's now in remission due to the new therapy.
Read more here.
Correction: In yesterday's edition, the name of public health officer for Marin County Lisa Santora was misspelled.
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