October 15th, 2010 by Happy Hospitalist in Better Health Network, Health Policy, Opinion, True Stories
Tags: Barrier To Patient Care, Cardiologist, Childhood Illness, Children's Health, Doctor-to-Doctor Communication, Doctors' Decisions, Doctors' Experience, Fear of Medical Malpractice, Happy Hospitalist, Healthcare Bureaucracy, Healthcare Politics, Heterotaxy Syndrome, ICU, Intensive Care, Lack of Communication, Medical Licensure, Pediatrics, Team-Based Patient Care
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I read this article about a young child with heterotaxy syndrome with great interest. Not because I find heterotaxy syndrome something of great fascination, but because of the lack of communication — on both ends of the spectrum:
Even though 5 other Dr. all came in and listened to his lungs and said that he didn’t sound like he was wheezing and that his lungs sounded really good. But because this hospital is overly political, process driven, bureaucratic, and in a constant state of litigious fear they are unable to make any conclusions based on actual medicine and patient care. Common sense is blown out the window when you have a system were a hospitalist one year out of medical school has an opinion that is as valuable as a cardiologist with 25+ years experience.
But in fairness, they all had to “really consider her opinion.”
So they went and got a pulmonologist to evaluate him, which Scott and I were very happy about because there was nothing in the world that would’ve made me more happy in that moment than to have her proven wrong. Which she was.
The whole article is a case study in stress, distrust, and legalism. Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at The Happy Hospitalist*
October 15th, 2010 by DrWes in Better Health Network, Health Policy, News, Opinion
Tags: Aetna, BCS Insurance, Cigna, Dr. Wes Fisher, Emergency Physicians Monthly, EP Monthly, General Medicine, GruntDoc, Health Insurance Companies, Health Insurance Coverage, Healthcare Costs, Healthcare Law, Healthcare Policy, Healthcare Premiums, Healthcare reform, Insurance Industry, Obamacare, Un-Insurance Reform, WesMusings
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Who doesn’t need insurance reform? Why, the insurers like Aetna, Cigna, and BCS Insurance, that’s who! From Emergency Physicians Monthly:
By threatening to raise health care premiums by 200 percent or threatening to drop coverage altogether, the companies got the Department of Health and Human Services to cave. Now the companies have our government’s blessing to continue offering “insurance” to their employees that is capped at a few thousand dollars per year instead of the $750,000 required in the health care law.
Perhaps GruntDoc said it best:
“I am not an Obamacare fan, and would like it repealed, with smaller, more focused Bipartisan fixes, but if the government is going to pass something then roll over this easily to special interests… it’s already worse than useless.”
-WesMusings of a cardiologist and cardiac electrophysiologist.
*This blog post was originally published at Dr. Wes*
October 15th, 2010 by Jeffrey Benabio, M.D. in Better Health Network, Health Tips
Tags: Animal Health, Bacterial Infection, Dr. Jeff Benabio, Hand Hygiene, Handwashing, Harmful Germs, Infections From A Pet, Infectious Disease, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylcoccal Auerus, MRSA, Pet Safety, The Dermatology Blog, Veterinary Medicine
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Can your dog give you MRSA? Sharing with your dog is wonderful — unless you’re sharing bacteria. Pets can harbor harmful germs to pass on to you.
Staphylococcus bacteria is a common cause for skin infections in people and animals. A virulent strain of staph, called MRSA, has made headlines for school outbreaks and fatal infections. MRSA infections are usually blamed on dirty locker rooms and contaminated gym clothes, but the source for an infection might be in your lap right now.
Here are five ways to avoid catching an infection from your pet:
1. Your pet’s mouth is not clean. It’s teeming with bacteria. Don’t let your pet lick your wounds. A dialysis patient once contracted a life-threatening pasturella bacteria infection from his beautiful golden retriever this way.
2. Keep open wounds covered. Contact between your wound and your pet could spread bacteria such as MRSA. Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at The Dermatology Blog*
October 15th, 2010 by Bryan Vartabedian, M.D. in Better Health Network, Opinion
Tags: 33 Charts, Companionship Over Content, Doctor Anonymous, Doctor Tweets, Doctors and Social Media, Doctors On Twitter, Doctors Who Tweet, Dr. Bryan Vartabedian, Dr. Michael Sevilla, General Medicine, Healthcare Social Media, MDChat, Phil Baumann RN, Physicians On Twitter, Social Media In Medicine, Social Media Standards, Tweetchat For Doctors, Tweetchat For Physicians, Unease About Social Media
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[Recently] some of us participated in the flagship physician Tweetchat (MDChat). Or better, I tried to participate between finishing up some calls and choking down a bean burrito.
When the idea was initially proposed to me I committed only to supporting its initiation with the occasional role of host. I’m simply overcommitted, but wanted to support Phil Baumann and those who were willing to try to break new ground. So I lurked, chewed, and pondered.
Doctors or not, everyone knows I’ve been a pretty lukewarm proponent of the tweetchat. I think they’re noisy, difficult to follow, and too abbreviated for constructive dialog. As early adopters I think we tend to put the novelty of the medium above its practicality.
With that said, chats can be fun. It’s a situation where I feel comfortable while at once restless. Kind of like at a medical staff meeting where the agenda doesn’t hold me quite as much as just being among my friends.
At the end of the day I might agree with Dr. Anonymous that the average physician new to social media might not find a twitter chat as the best way to spend a precious hour. For me that hour represents the better part of a blog post which, over the course of a month, will influence hundreds of readers and live forever.
But I suspect that there will always be those among us looking for companionship over content. And it’s hard to argue with that.
*This blog post was originally published at 33 Charts*