December 29th, 2011 by BobDoherty in Health Policy, News
Tags: ACP, Bill, Congress, Government, Insurance, Medicare, Pay Cut, Payments, Payroll, President Obama, Senate, Speaker of the House, Tax Break, Unemployment Benefits
No Comments »
Last week, Speaker Boehner announced that the House and Senate have agreed on a two month extension of current Medicare payment rates, the payroll tax cut, and unemployment benefits.
My understanding is that the agreement has the House accepting the Senate’s proposal to extend the payroll tax break, unemployment insurance benefits, and current Medicare payment rates through the end of February, along with an agreement with the Senate to appoint a House-Senate conference committee to begin negotiations on a longer-term extension. It remains unclear exactly when the votes in the House and Senate will take place, and at least in the Senate, it will require unanimous consent by all Senators. If it passes both the House and Senate, Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at The ACP Advocate Blog by Bob Doherty*
December 28th, 2011 by BarbaraFederOstrov in News, Research
Tags: Bloomberg School of Public Health, Controversy, Fukushima, Infant Deaths, Johns Hopkins, Journal of International Health Services, Michael Moyer, Mortality, Nuclear plant, Peer-Reviewed, Scientific American, Vicente Navarro
No Comments »
Last week, I wrote about controversial research linking fallout from Japan’s earthquake-damaged Fukushima nuclear plant to infant deaths in the United States.
The research, which was harshly criticized by Scientific American’s Michael Moyer and others, was published in the peer-reviewed Journal of International Health Services, and I had asked the journal’s editor-in-chief Vicente Navarro for his response to the criticisms.
Navarro, professor of health policy at Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg School of Public Health, emailed me this comment today: Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Reporting on Health - Barbara Feder Ostrov's Health Journalism Blog*
December 26th, 2011 by BarbaraFederOstrov in News, Research
Tags: Abuse, Adolescent Health, Birth, C-Section, Domestic Violence, Governor, Health Reform, Heart Attacks, Hurricane Katrina, Marijuana, New Orleans, News, Nikki Haley, Research, South Carolina, Stress, Teen Health, Teenagers
No Comments »
Domestic Violence: 25 percent of women surveyed by the government say they were violently attacked by their husbands or boyfriends in a finding one federal official called “astounding,” the Associated Press reports.
C-Sections: The number of births by Cesarean section in Calif. has risen 50 percent in the past 10 years, new research shows, but it isn’t because of the health benefits over vaginal delivery. Researchers cite financial incentives for doctors and an “awareness gap” of the procedure’s risks among the explanations, Stephanie O’Neill reports for KPCC public radio.
Health Reform: South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley predetermined the findings of a state committee working on health reform even before Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Reporting on Health - The Reporting on Health Daily Briefing*
December 26th, 2011 by Medgadget in News
Tags: Abiomed, Cardiac Surgery, Cardiology, Cath Lab, Catheter, cVAD, hemodynamic support, Impella, left ventricular assist device, LVAD, Percutaneous, Radiology
No Comments »
Abiomed‘s Impella left ventricular assist device, an endovascular percutaneously-delivered LVAD, will soon be getting a more powerful new model. The current model is capable of delivering an augmentation of cardiac output by up to 2.5 liters a minute, but the new Impella cVAD should do around 3.5 L/m, and possibly up to 4 L/m in the not too distant future.
The new device, and above numbers, were announced at Abiomed’s investor day conference and the company hopes to have the device available to clinicians by the Summer of 2012.
Here are the bullet points about Impella cVAD that were provided to us by Abiomed: Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Medgadget*
December 25th, 2011 by ChristopherChangMD in News, Opinion
Tags: Device, Distraction, Doctor, Documentation, Electronic, Electronic Devices, Forms, Health, healthcare, Hospital, Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, Mandatory, New York Times, NYT, Paperwork, Time-consuming
No Comments »
I admittedly snorted out loud when I read a New York Times article earlier last week regarding increased physician distraction due to electronic devices, especially with the advent of the smartphone with its emails, text messages, calls, and other alerts that ping intermittently throughout a typical work day.
There is no question that electronic devices distract physicians as the article pointed out… But that’s like complaining about a leaky faucet when there’s a flooded basement and a hole in the roof.
The bigger problem that should be mentioned is hospital bureaucracy which probably creates just as much if not more unintended distractions for physicians and nurses.
What many patients and lay public may not realize is that Read more »
*This blog post was originally published at Fauquier ENT Blog*