On the HCPLive news page, resources on the topics of disease- and specialty-specific medical news and expert insight can be found. Content includes articles, interviews, videos, podcasts, and breaking news on health care research, treatment, and drug development.
For Women with Cystic Fibrosis, Contraceptive Counseling is Imperative
May 13th 2015Advanced treatment has allowed people with cystic fibrosis (CF) to live longer. Consequently, researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) urged physicians to talk to female CF patients about contraception.
5 New Hepatitis C Drugs Added to WHO "Essentials" List
May 13th 2015The essential medicines list put out by the World Health Organization (WHO) now includes five new hepatitis C drugs that show great promise in curing the disease in millions of people. However, the WHO also warned financial stumbling blocks could greatly hinder efforts to make treatment equitable throughout the world.
Hepatitis C and Injection Drug Use Top Targets of CDC Prevention Efforts
May 13th 2015In a continuing effort to curb the spread of hepatitis C among the riskiest populations, government health officials recently held a webinar to discuss links between opioid injection drug use and increased cases of the liver disease.
Helicobacter Pylori and Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: More GI Upset with Metformin
May 12th 2015China's type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) epidemic continues to be a pervasive, costly health care issue, with proportions surpassed only by epidemic here in the US. The majority of T2DM treatment guidelines recommend metformin as the first-line anti-hyperglycemic agent for diabetes management due to its relative safety, tolerability, and cost-effectiveness.
Pay-for-Performance in Diabetes: Sorting the Good from the Not-so-Good
May 12th 2015As P4P strategies gain popularity, the need for accurate assessment tools becomes more and more apparent-many physicians support PCP but believe that current measures are inaccurate. A common problem is that physicians appear to be penalized if they treat the elderly or patients who have reduced access to care or drug treatment.
Atrial Fibrillation Increases Heart Attack Risk
Analysis of a large patient cohort indicates that atrial fibrillation is associated with an increased risk of just 1 of the 2 major types of heart attack - but the association is strong enough to increase the overall heart-attack risk by 63%.
Pharma Changes Alter Opioid Dispensing & Overdose Rates
May 11th 2015Research from Harvard Medical School and Boston University School of Medicine indicates that opioid dispensing and prescription opioid overdoses decreased substantially following two major changes in the pharmaceutical market in 2010: the introduction of abuse-deterrent, extended-release oxycodone hydrochloride and withdrawal of propoxyphene.