Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #cmgsays

Most recents (4)

#CMGsays: Join here tomorrow for the launch of a new accredited tweetorial on optimal management of diabetic and other high-risk patients with stable CAD, particularly those with previous PCI, to reduce the risk of MI or stroke. Expert faculty is the incomparable @CMichaelGibson
And you’ll learn how these data should impact your practice: Image
Read 27 tweets
Stop tweeting

Start vaccinating

Heading out to vaccinate “people” in Rhode Island today

It may not be a big stadium, it may only be a VFW, it may only be 450 little shots, but these “people” are somebody’s world ... let’s give their community a big shot in the arm
#cmgsays
The COVID vaccination is an intramuscular injection. It is NOT a subcutaneous injection. To give a #COVID19 IM injection DO NOT pinch the skin & Do NOT angle the needle at 45 degrees. This will cause the injection to go into the subcutaneous fat rather than the deltoid muscle.
To give an IM injection, aim the needle perpendicular to or at 90 degrees to the skin. The CDC does not recommend that you draw back on the needle (there are no big vessels in the deltoid muscle),
Read 11 tweets
Text message from friend in California:

“Could you do a large abstract painting / splatter to match my horse and the colors in my living room”

Me: “It is 90 degrees out & perfect weather to do a splatter painting which allows the layers to dry quickly. I’ll start immediately!”
The first thing we need to do is cover up that sterile soul less white canvas.

Let’s quickly throw down some acrylic paint which dries really quick and allows us to lay down lots of layers ...
20 years of splatter / drip painting has taught me that the key to a good painting is knowing when to STOP ✋

It’s best to stop when you have the right balance of colors, size of drips, balance of shapes and a perfectly randomly random assembly of all the above.
Read 16 tweets
Why we might not get a coronavirus vaccine | The Guardian theguardian.com/world/2020/may…
The Dengue fever virus was discovered in 1943 and it was not until last year that the first vaccine was approved

30 years after scientists isolated HIV, there is no vaccine
#COVID19 is a #coronavirus & this type of virus does not tend to trigger long-lasting immunity.

About 1 out of 4 common colds are caused by a coronavirus, but because immunity fades so quickly, people get reinfected year after year.

There is no vaccine to the common cold.
Read 15 tweets

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