Author: William Trick
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Toxic Burgers, Toxic Shock, & Vaccine Talk
Public health expert Mike Osterholm discusses outbreak investigations, pandemics, and the risky path the US is taking abandoning innovative vaccine technology and issuing poorly-informed recommendations. Mike’s motivation to leave his small town in Iowa to become a disease detective was driven by a steady diet of “The Medical Detectives” by Berton Roueche. As an epidemiologist, he helped solve hamburger-associated thyrotoxicosis, a tampon-related epidemic of toxic-shock in 1980, and a decades-old cluster of mysterious pneumonia cases called “Austin pneumonia”. Recently, he directed his energy toward filling the gap created when CDC’s science-backed Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices was dismantled and replaced with political appointees. Mike’s new book “The Big One: How We Must Prepare for Future Deadly Pandemics” was published in September, 2025.
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Ruth Rothstein—Effective Advocate
In Wind Beneath Their Wings: Improving a County Health System, Caryn Stancik and Elizabeth Reidy describe their work as the Chief Communications Officer and General Counsel for a large and expanding government-run urban health system. They credit Ruth Rothstein, former CEO of the Cook County Hospital, for establishing a culture that promoted women into leadership positions. Rothstein had a remarkable life, progressing to CEO of Mt. Sinai Hospital in Chicago and Cook County Hospital by demonstrating competence and an unwavering belief in justice. Her noteworthy accomplishments included building a new hospital to replace the old Cook County Hospital, acquiring funding for the eponymous Ruth Rothstein Core Center to provide HIV-AIDS care, and expanding the ambulatory clinic network to provide longitudinal healthcare. At Mt. Sinai Hospital, after being denied a job in medical administration because she did not have a college degree, Rothstein refused a secretarial position saying “I don’t type”. Her humor is evident when under a photograph of her with Golda Meir, the caption was added, “But can she type?”
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cook_County_Hospital.jpg, Jeff Dahl
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Drug Packaging Protects Patients
Professor Laura Bix, the Director of the School of Packaging at Michigan State University, is a national leaders in designing solutions for drug packaging that improves medication safety. Two catastrophic events, young children dying of aspirin toxicity during the 1940s and 1950s, and deaths due to intentional contamination of Tylenol with cyanide in the 1980s, prompted Federal agencies, industry, and academic partners to design child-resistant and tamper-evident drug packaging. The slogan for Professor Bix’s department speaks to their work, “It’s the industry that no one thinks about, but saves lives”.
The Tylenol Murders: Their Impact on Packaging
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Leadership With Laughter: The Triple Threat Doctor
Dr. Robert (Bob) A. Weinstein, former Chair of Medicine at Cook County Hospital, describes a career formed early as an Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer investigating hospital outbreaks at the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention. A single investigation led to decades of research & inquiry, and international leadership. With characteristic humor, he provides advice on life and leadership. Epilogue by Denise Cardo, former Director of the Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion at CDC.
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Essential Items for Your Medical Bag
When asked, “What is the one item, literal or figurative, that you would put in your medical bag?”, seventeen former Cook County Hospital healthcare workers provided responses that sustained them during challenging but fulfilling, mission-oriented careers. Collectively, they distill hundreds of years of patient care into advice that is critical to pack with you during a healthcare career.
Laryngoscopy: From Head Mirrors to Fiberoptics
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Running Toward Chaos: Emergency Medicine
Dr. Jeff Schaider thrived in his career as an emergency medicine physician in Cook County Hospital’s storied Emergency Department. From the “routine” chaos of a Friday night in the ER to the stress of resuscitating a dying patient, he enjoyed having his brain activated by the rapid pace of medical care and his hand on the pulse of the city. Jeff reflects on his career, the patients, the hospital, and Hollywood’s adaptation of the original “ER”. Epilogue provided by Dr. Steve Aks, toxicologist and emergency department colleague.
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