PROJECT DETAILS:

  • CLIENT: American College of Radiology
  • PUBLICATION: Imaging 3.0
  • PROJECT: Case Study
  • INDUSTRY: Medical Radiology
  • FEATURING: Montefiore physicians, including:
    • Linda Haramati, MD, MS, FACR, director of cardiothoracic imaging
    • Anna Shmukler, MD, co-director of the lung screening program
    • Chirag Shah, MD, director of pulmonary and critical care fellowship
    • Maria Serrano, ANP-BC, AOCN, clinical coordinator 
  • READ IT: “Lung Screening in an Urban Setting”

Fanning the frets on stringed instruments has been done as early as Renaissance times. Now, the multiscale fretboard is gaining popularity again, as artists look for improved ways to get the best tone from their guitars.

To explain the benefits of fanned fret design, we ghostwrote this blog post for a local luthier at Strictly 7 Guitars (S7G). Based on an informative interview with the company president and plenty of additional research about multiscale guitar design, this blog describes the difference that fanned frets can make:

Pretend you’re holding a guitar. Without bending your wrist, slide your fretting hand up and down the neck. Notice how your arm naturally makes an arc like a windshield wiper blade? The fanned fret design mimics that ergonomic motion, which naturally makes a multiscale guitar more comfortable to play.

 

LungHealth's program manager, Lauren Taylor, RN, BSN, on the right, consults with a patient about lung cancer screening
Alexander A. Bankier, MD, PhD, medical director of LungHealth (on the left) with Lauren M. Taylor, RN, BSN, LungHealth program manager

Award-Winning Content

This case study received an APEX Award of Publication Excellence for Health & Medical Writing in 2020. These national awards, presented by Communication Concepts Inc., recognize exceptional editorial quality.

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