health
One clinic’s unusual strategy to save limbs

Lucy Lu for STAT
At a Massachusetts General Hospital vascular surgery clinic held every three months in Boston, there is no typical day. Run in partnership with one of the city’s prominent mobile clinics for the city's unhoused, the program aims to keep patients without adequate access to preventive care out of the emergency room. People come in with what could be blocked carotid arteries, peripheral artery disease, abdominal aortic aneurysms, or infected sores that could seed sepsis, the overwhelming full-body infection.
Elizabeth Cooney recently visited the clinic. Read her story to understand the doctors’ unique approach to meeting patients where they are. In one case, a surgical resident escorted a patient out onto the street so he could smoke a cigarette — then petitioned passersby and drivers in parked cars for a lighter.
public health
Two experts on the Ebola outbreak response
We have a couple of First Opinion essays from experts with real experience working during the 2014-2016 West Africa Ebola epidemic. Consider reading them:
As STAT’s Helen Branswell has reported, the U.S. plans to send exposed or infected Americans to facilities in third countries like Kenya. In an essay published Friday, infectious disease doctor and former WHO medical officer Krutika Kuppalli argues that Americans with Ebola deserve to come home. She deployed to Sierra Leone during the outbreak a decade ago. “I understood the risks,” she said. But there was also an understanding that, if the worst happened, she’d be taken home to receive the best possible care. “That assumption now appears to be changing,” she wrote. And that change will have consequences.
Tom Frieden was the CDC director while Kuppalli was in Africa, meaning he led the response to that epidemic. It wasn't perfect, and in an essay published Saturday, he recalls a mistake he made that nearly cost him his job and people’s lives. Still, the last epidemic “showed the route to success,” he argues. The new outbreak requires a massive, immediate, and meticulous plan. “The virus has a running head start, and every minute counts.” Read more.