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Gin Jones

USA Today bestselling author of traditional mysteries

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XLH BLOG

Reading the science

Posted on September 29, 2021September 12, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

So, you’ve read everything you can find about XLH at various reliable websites, but you want to know more. One option is to read what your health care providers are (or aren’t) reading about current research and the overall scientific understanding of XLH. But perhaps you don’t know where to start, so here’s a quick…

Coding for the future

Posted on September 22, 2021September 12, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

We’re in the really early days of artificial intelligence (AI) being used extensively in health care, and while I can see some great potential, I worry that it’s all built on flawed assumptions. Research by AI often depends with billing codes, known as ICD codes (the most current of which are known as ICD10). There’s…

Autosomals get some attention

Posted on September 15, 2021September 9, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

There’s a new journal article on Autosomal dominant hypophosphatemia that reports on one patient and collects the literature specific to that form of chronic hypophosphatemia. It’s useful to have the citations to the very limited relevant literature collected in one spot, but the article itself is problematic for the patient community (including both autosomal and…

Reliable sources

Posted on September 8, 2021September 5, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

The XLH community is an enticing one for both legit research and scammers. Researchers have been fascinated by FGF23 ever since it was discovered by, among others, Dr. Michael Econs, a prominent XLH researcher (and I’m told that researchers into another rare bone disorder, fibrous dysplasia, were simultaneously involved in that discovery). Excessive FGF23 production…

Bright future

Posted on September 1, 2021August 22, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

In recent years, with the development of a class of treatments called “monoclonal antibody,” a whole new world of treatment options has opened up, and much of that world is populated by rare disorders like XLH. A monoclonal antibody is an antibody (no kidding, right?) that’s is cloned from a single specific cell. It’s designed…

Words matter

Posted on August 25, 2021August 14, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

This is a plea to all who write or talk about XLH (and the other genetic hypophosphatemias), including patients, clinicians, researchers, editors, and academics (and anyone else I’ve forgotten): update your terminology to reflect current understanding of the disorder. First, stop calling the various chronic hypophosphatemic disorders “a form of rickets” or “hypophosphatemic rickets.” These…

Standard of care

Posted on August 18, 2021August 14, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

Lawyers use the term “standard of care” slightly differently from the medical profession, but in both cases, it refers to the bare minimum of care that one person owes to another to avoid liability. In the law, it’s usually based on a “reasonable person” test — what would a reasonable person do in the circumstances?…

Rare bedside manner

Posted on August 11, 2021July 29, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

Patients pay the price when clinicians don’t treat us like human beings deserving of respect. The frustrating thing is, it’s really not that hard to do better. Along with the rule of “First, do no harm,” just follow the Golden Rule: “Treat others as you wish to be treated yourself.” In my experience, clinicians break…

What’s my story?

Posted on August 4, 2021August 3, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

Some of you know me from the XLH listserv days when I was a frequent poster and also the subscription manager. But if you’re newer to the community, you may be wondering, who is this person who thinks she understands at least some of the XLH experience? So let me share a little of my…

Patient voice at ASBMR

Posted on July 28, 2021July 24, 2021 by giniajo@gmail.com

Back in 2003, The XLH Network, Inc., made history by presenting a poster at the annual conference of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR), entitled “Self-actualized Perceptions of X-Linked Hypophosphatemia Suggest a Pro-active role for Patient-Support Networks in Managing Patients with this Rare Metabolic Bone Disorder.” It was groundbreaking, since as far…

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Future releases

Old-Fashioned Holiday Homicide, November 19, 2024

Links to blogs, etc.

Day in the Life story at Dru’s Book Musings, November 20, 2024

Fresh Fiction, Twenty Questions, November 18, 2024

Day in the Life story at Dru’s Book Musings, January 2024

Cover reveal at Dru’s Book Musings, November 5, 2023

Quilts for Christmas, Kensington blog, December 2020 https://www.kensingtonbooks.com/between-the-chapters/quilts-for-christmas-and-more/

Day in the Life of Mabel Skinner April 2020  https://drusbookmusing.com/2020/04/22/mabel-skinner/

Kensington’s Between the Chapters bookclub, “Emergency Garlic Butter” March 2020 https://hobbyreads.wordpress.com/2020/03/25/emergency-garlic-butter-recipe/

Drusbookmusing.com January 2019, interview of Helen Binney.  https://drusbookmusing.com/2019/01/15/helen-binney-4/

Drusbookmusing.com November 5, 2018,  interview of Keely Fairchild. https://drusbookmusing.com/2018/11/05/keely-fairchild/

 

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