DR. CHRISTINE KO, Physician/Researcher/Professor/Author (5-24-23)

Published: May 24, 2023, 5:05 p.m.

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DR. CHRISTINE KO, a Physician, Dermatologist, Author, Researcher, and Yale Professor from Connecticut, will join us to discuss her work with patients, as well as her newest release, "How to Improve Doctor-Patient Connection: Using Psychology to Optimize Healthcare Interactions".

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FROM HER WEBSITE:

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"Christine J. Ko, MD is a Professor of Dermatology and Pathology at Yale University. She is board certified in dermatology with a specialty certificate in dermatopathology. Her research interests include squamous cell carcinoma and keratoacanthoma as well as clinicopathologic correlation of skin disease. Dr. Ko received her AB at Princeton University and MD from New York University School of Medicine. She completed her internship in internal medicine at UCLA, her dermatology residency at University of California, Irvine, and her dermatopathology fellowship at UCLA. She has published numerous articles and chapters in dermatology and dermatopathology and is the creative mind behind\\xa0Dermatology: Visual Recognition and Case Reviews\\xa0and\\xa0Dermatopathology: Diagnosis by First Impression. As an authority in dermatology, she has authored chapters on the skin in\\xa0Goldman-Cecil Medicine,\\xa0Brenner and Rector\\u2019s The Kidney, and\\xa0Braunwald\\u2019s Heart Disease.

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Her first book for the general audience,\\xa0How to Improve Doctor-Patient Connection: Using Psychology to Optimize Healthcare Interactions, was inspired and driven by her own experience as the mother of a patient whose condition went undiagnosed for longer than it should have.

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SELECT ARTICLES

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  • Visual perception, cognition, and error in dermatologic diagnosis: Key cognitive principles
  • Visual perception, cognition, and error in dermatologic diagnosis: Diagnosis and error
  • Relationship-Centered Care in the Physician-Patient Interaction: Improving Your Understanding of Metacognitive Interventions
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When I was a teenager, my grandfather was hospitalized for a short time as a terminal patient. I remember being tasked with suctioning the phlegm from his lungs with a special cannula. That brief experience gave me a sense of the power of healthcare, reinforcing my career goal of being a doctor. Much later, as a medical student and then fully-minted MD, the in-hospital battle waged against death combined with the knowledge of its ultimate inevitability, created the first stirrings of existential confusion \\u2013\\xa0Was what I did enough? Did what I do matter?\\xa0The answers can be simple and complicated at the same time, a truth known to anyone who interacts with toddlers and their\\xa0Whys.\\xa0

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\\u200bRegarding kids, I am a changed (and better) person through being a mom, and though that role raises more existential questions than ever before, I am graced with that identity by two little ones (no matter how big they are!)."

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https://christinejko.com

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