When Monique Hinchcliff, MD, MS, associate professor of medicine (rheumatology, allergy & immunology) and director of the Yale Scleroderma Program, first came to Yale, the only way to care for patients with severe, treatment-resistant Raynaud phenomenon--whose fingers were turning black--was to send them to the emergency department for hospitalization and treatment.

Outpatient Raynaud Treatment Saves Fingers and Toes
Yale School of Medicine
