Authors


Gina Shaw

Latest:

The Doctor is in… the Kitchen

Dr. Tim Harlan didn't come to medicine the traditional way. At age 22, when most of his colleagues were plunging into their first year of medical school and comparing their impressive pre-med resumes, Harlan was opening a restaurant.


Jared Kaltwasser

Latest:

Systematic Review Suggests Oral JAK Inhibitors Effective in AD

Oral doses of 3 Janus kinase inhibitors show the therapies out-performed placebo in all outcomes measured in patients with moderate-to-severe AD.




Shaula Woz, MS IV

Latest:

Annual Mammography Not Superior to Standard Care on Breast Cancer Mortality

Mammography screening has conflicting efficacy results in the medical literature, as some clinical studies have shown little or no effect, while others have demonstrated decreased mortality in women aged 40 and older, with the largest effect in those aged 50-59 years.




Stephen W. Bernstein, McDermott, Will & Emery, LLP

Latest:

OCR Issues Proposed Modifications to HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules to Implement HITECH Act

On July 14, 2010, the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), issued a proposed rule containing modifications to the privacy standards, security standards, and enforcement regulations under HIPAA.


Marc Cohen, MD, Chief of Cardiology, Newark Beth Israel Medical Center

Latest:

Adherence to ACS Medications: A Path Forward for Improved Patient Care

One study has shown that 90-day prescriptions can increase adherence over 30-day prescriptions.


Alison McCallum, FFPH

Latest:

Large-scale clinical epidemiology of stable angina in women and men

We performed a whole-country study using linked health care records in Finland and showed that stable angina as the initial symptomatic manifestation of coronary disease occurs as frequently in women as it does in men. Among easily recognized subgroups, the absolute rates of prognostic outcomes were similarly high in women and men.



Simon Douglas Murray, MD

Latest:

Cancer-Killing Virus Looks Promising

In March, the television news show 60 Minutes devoted a segment to a clinical trial using polio virus to treat glioblastoma multiforme. The segment called "Killing Cancer" did a good job of illustrating the potential power of this new treatment as well as the problems associated with glioblastoma multiforme which typically kills patients in a matter of months.


American Academy of Pediatrics

Latest:

AAP 2011: Minority Children Less Likely to Wear a Car Seatbelt, Putting Them at Greater Risk of Severe Injury

Less than half of pediatric car passengers suffering injuries from motor vehicle crashes were restrained, with the lowest rates among blacks, Hispanics and Native Americans, according to a research abstract presented at AAP 2011.





Lauren Green

Latest:

After House Passage 21st Century Cures Act Awaits Senate Approval

With funding meant to bolster basic research and help make advances for a variety of conditions the fate of the 21st Century Cure Act is anything but secure even after passage by the US House of Representatives.




Leslie Cantu

Latest:

MUSC Pilot Program Shows Success in Treating Opioid Users

Research demonstrates that medication-assisted treatment for opioid addiction works, yet few have adopted it.


Linda Rogers, RN, MBA, CPA

Latest:

Our Move to an EHR

The initial capital outlay for transitioning to an EHR is not small. In fact, cost is one of the main reasons practices have been slow to adopt EHRs.



Don Poldermans, MD3: From the 1Department of Vascular Surgery, 2Department of Cardiology, 3Department of Anesthesio

Latest:

Are statins cardioprotective in patients undergoing major vascular surgery?

We evaluated the cardioprotective effects of intensive statin therapy before major vascular surgery in a prospective study of 359 subjects. After multivariate analysis, lower low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol was associated with decreased myocardial ischemia, troponin T release, and 30-day and late cardiac events. Furthermore, higher doses of statins were associated with better cardiac outcome, even after adjusting for LDL cholesterol.


Stephen C. Vlay, MD is professor of medicine at State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York.

Latest:

Radiofrequency ablation vs medical therapy after a first episode of symptomatic atrial flutter

Atrial flutter is an arrhythmia that occurs less commonly than atrial fibrillation and is often resistant to rate control and termination.




Josh Weiner, President & CEO of Solutionreach

Latest:

Maximize Your Digital Front Door During COVID-19

A look at the available and viable tools to continue patient access and care.




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