Showing posts with label medical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medical. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Weight-Loss Surgery May Not Cut Medical Costs: Study

HealthDay – 2 hrs 1 min ago TUESDAY, July 17 (HealthDay News) -- Although patients do indeed lose weight after bariatric surgery, health-care costs remain about the same as they were before the procedure, according to a new study.

Bariatric surgery reduces the size of the stomach, which results in significant weight loss. Most patients in the new study had undergone a procedure called Roux-en-Y gastric bypass.

Previous studies had shown that many obese people who have this procedure improve their health and reduce the cost of their care. In this group of patients, however, costs did not go down, the researchers said.

"These three-year findings suggest that the return on investment for bariatric surgery isn't seen," said lead researcher Matthew Maciejewski, from the Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care at the Durham VA Medical Center, in North Carolina.

"It is possible, however, that if we could follow these

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Friday, July 13, 2012

U.S. cracks down on "world's largest" medical marijuana dispensary

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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Groupes major medical back édulcorants : aide alimentaire

HealthDay – 6 minutes depuis lundi, 9. Juillet (HealthDay News)--édulcorants non nutritives comme Splenda, égale et Sweet'N bas peut avoir un rôle à jouer pour maintenir ou même perdre du poids, aussi longtemps que les gens ne les utilisent pas comme un prétexte pour traiter vous-même plus tard avec goodies haute teneur calorique.

Cette approbation de six substituts du sucre comme une aide alimentaire est entré dans un avis scientifique publié lundi par deux organisations de santé majeur, l'American Heart Association et l'American Diabetes Association.

« Il y a peut-être un avantage pour les personnes à utilisent à bon escient et pas compensent plus tard dans la journée et annule la prestation, » dit Christopher Gardner, principal auteur de la nouvelle déclaration scientifique.

Selon le contexte informations dans le document sont publiées simultanément dans la circulation des journaux et soins du diabète, quelque 6 000 aliments et boissons sur le marché américain contiennent au moins un des édulcorants non nutritives disponibles 6.

Quatre d'entre eux--le sucralose (Splenda), acesuflame-K, néotame (faite de l'aspartame) et saccharine (Low Sweet'N)--sont des édulcorants artificiels et sont réglementés comme additifs alimentaires par la u.s. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). L'aspartame (égale ou NutraSweet) est composée de trois acides aminés et de stevia est un dérivé de la plante, donc techniquement pas considérés comme « artificielle », mais ils ont approuvé par la FDA, explique Gardner.

Peu importe d'où ils viennent, sont non nutritive édulcorants est devenue de plus en plus populaire. En 1965, il a passé seulement 3 pour cent des américains dans leur régime alimentaire en 2004 a attiré 15 %.

Cette augmentation de la popularité, mais n'a pas été accompagnée par une réduction de la consommation de sucres ajoutés, qui contribuent à l'obésité, le diabète et une série d'autres problèmes de santé, a fait remarquer l'expression scientifique.

Dans l'ensemble, la littérature scientifique concernant les édulcorants non nutritives sont faibles, mais il existe certaines preuves que boire un soda zéro calories diète au lieu d'un soda sucré peut aider à la réduction des calories.

Ni les boissons ont une valeur nutritive, mais les personnes qui boivent des boissons diète probables pas compensent avec les cookies ou autres calories vides plus tard dans la journée, dit Gardner.

En revanche, il a ajouté, les personnes qui consomment des aliments contenant des édulcorants non nutritives sont plus enclins à compenser avec sucre-lacées circonférentielle des éléments plus tard dans la journée.

À ce stade, c'est ne pas clair ce que les édulcorants non nutritive effet peuvent avoir sur la perte de poids réelle ou gain, ou total en calories ou apport en hydrates de carbone, ou si elles ont un effet sur les autres facteurs de risque de maladies cardiaques et le diabète.

Mais il y a certains caractères (en grande partie anecdotiques) de consommer des produits édulcorants non nutritive peuvent aider les personnes diabétiques de surveiller leur consommation de sucre, un élément clé dans la gestion du diabète, Gardner a dit.

« Choisir le régime alimentaire bicarbonate de soude à la soude ou aliments de choix même avec édulcorants non nutritives peuvent avoir un impact direct sur les apports en sucre et

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Monday, July 9, 2012

Mugabe returns from medical checks in Singapore

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Saturday, May 12, 2012

Child-sizing radiation doses from medical scans

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Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Connecticut Senate passes medical marijuana bill

Reuters – Sat, May 5, 2012 HARTFORD, Connecticut (Reuters) - The Connecticut Senate passed a bill on Saturday legalizing marijuana use for medical purposes with tight restrictions aimed at avoiding problems that have plagued some of the 16 other states where pot is now legal.

After nearly 10 hours of debate, the Senate voted 21-13 in favor of the measure, which already cleared the House.

Democratic Governor Dannel Malloy was expected to sign the bill. Once he does, Connecticut will join 16 other states and the District of Columbia in allowing use of marijuana to treat sick patients.

Connecticut's legislation calls for tight regulation of the plant, a move advocates say is aimed at avoiding problems that have plagued some of the other states, include disagreements with the federal government.

Under the bill, patients and their caregivers must register with the Department of Consumer Protection. In addition, their doctors must certify there is a medical need for marijuana to be dispensed, including such debilitating conditions as cancer, glaucoma, HIV, AIDS, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis or epilepsy. And, medical marijuana would be dispensed only by pharmacists with a special license.

(Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Eric Beech)



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Medical Tests You May Not Need

each revealed their lists of the top five overused tests or procedures in their fields. The resulting list of 45 tests has been made public as part of ABIM's Choosing Wisely campaign, an effort to boost communication between patients and physicians, and scale back on unneeded medicine in the process.

Could You Be Denied Coverage Because You're a Woman?

Here, we get to the bottom of the buzz to see what these new recommendations mean for you.

Early Detection Is Not Prevention

"Do we do too many tests? Absolutely," says Dr. Mary Jane Minkin, Prevention advisor and clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the Yale School of Medicine.



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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Elsevier Launches ClinicalKey, a Breakthrough 'Clinical Insight Engine' that Brings Fast, Trusted and Comprehensive Medical Content to Clinicians on 10 April 2012

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Apr
2012Powered by Elsevier's Smart Content, ClinicalKey can understand clinical terms and discover the most relevant medical content based on clinicians' searches.


(1888PressRelease) April 13, 2012 - Philadelphia, PA, April 10, 2012 - Elsevier, a world-leading provider of medical content and solutions, today announced ClinicalKey, the next generation of online clinical information resources. ClinicalKey draws answers from the largest collection of clinical resources, covering every medical and surgical specialty-eliminating physicians' reliance on less accurate sources. ClinicalKey's content includes more than 700 textbooks and 400 top medical journals, providing the most current clinically relevant evidence-based answers, as well as expert commentary, MEDLINE abstracts and select third-party journals.

"Physicians are under severe time pressure and want their answers fast and relevant, with comprehensive depth available if they want," said Dr. Jonathan Teich, Elsevier's Chief Medical Informatics Officer. "By reducing the time it takes to find the best answer and providing trusted, more comprehensive content, we're able to help clinicians spend more time with their patients to achieve better outcomes."

As Elsevier's new 'clinical insight engine', ClinicalKey provides faster, smarter access to the relevant online clinical answers physicians seek. After conducting market research with more than 2,000 physicians, Elsevier designed ClinicalKey to meet the three key search requirements those physicians demanded:



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Monday, April 9, 2012

Study: Obesity Weighs in at 21 Percent of Medical Care Costs

This story comes from the Yahoo! Contributor Network, where individuals publish their unique perspectives on some of the world’s most popular websites.Do you have a story to tell? Become a Yahoo! contributor

A new study from Cornell University indicates that an obese individual not only racks up higher medical costs per capita, but the costs associated with obesity make up 21 percent of all medical care costs.

According to research led by John Cawley, lead author of the study and professor of policy analysis and management and economics, the costs attached to obesity touch just about every aspect of the medical care field. Cawley, with Chad Meyerhoefer of Lehigh University, conducted the government study using 2000-2005 data from 24,000 non-elderly adults, doctors, and medical care providers.

"Historically we've been underestimating the benefit of preventing and reducing obesity," he told Medical Xpress. "Obesity raises the risk of cancer, stroke, heart attack and diabetes. For any type of surgery, there are complications with anesthesia, with healing

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Saturday, April 7, 2012

ISC Medical Comments on Health and Social Care Bill

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Apr
2012One of the country's leading providers of medical interviews and interview skills consultancy services, ISC Medical, comments on the Health and Social Care Bill.


(1888PressRelease) April 05, 2012 - One of the country's leading providers of medical interviews and interview skills consultancy services, ISC Medical, comments on the Health and Social Care Bill, which received Royal Assent on the 27th of March 2012.

After much negotiation, the Health and Social Care Bill has now been passed into law, despite strong opposition from a number of doctors. The Bill formally introduces a range of new reforms, including increased competition with the health service - though this is meant to be on the basis of quality rather than price, the right for external providers to enter the marketplace, and a transfer of commissioning powers to GPs.

The reforms attracted controversy and conflicting opinions from within the profession, ranging from outright refusal (e.g. by the British Medical Association and the Royal College of GPs, though the latter later re-entered the negotiation table) to the more constructive approach adopted by the Royal College of Surgeons.

Olivier Picard, MD of ISC Medical, commented: "The long-term impact of the Bill is unknown and much of the controversy that it attracted can only be based on speculation. However, one thing is clear: many doctors and healthcare professionals are worried about the fact that they have little understanding of what the Bill means for them exactly.

"We invite any Registrars, SpRs, SAS doctors, Consultants, GPs, Senior Nurses and NHS Managers interested in exploring the Bill further to attend our NHS issues course, where you can learn in more depth about the impact that current reforms are likely to have on the different players and stakeholders that form the NHS."

For more information about ISC Medical's medical courses, visit http://www.medical-interviews.co.uk/ or call 0845 226 9487 between 8:30am and 8:30pm.

About ISC Medical:
ISC Medical is one of the UK's longest-established companies specialising in medical interview courses, medical CV writing, and medical personal development courses, including teach the teacher courses, for all grades medical school entry, FY, CT/ST, GPST, consultants, and GP posts. They provide a personal service and insist on running all courses in smaller groups, enabling their trainers to accommodate for the individual needs of each client.

Contact:
Olivier Picard
Interview Skills Consulting Ltd,
97 Judd Street,
London, UK
Zip: WC1H 9JG
Tel: 0845 226 9487
Email: enquiries (

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Physicians Change Recommendations for Many Medical Tests

This story comes from the Yahoo! Contributor Network, where individuals publish their unique perspectives on some of the world’s most popular websites.Do you have a story to tell? Become a Yahoo! contributor

Several physician specialty groups have provided lists of medical tests or treatments they have deemed unnecessary or used too frequently, as part of the ABIM Foundation's Choosing Wisely project. There's a range in recommendations, from refraining from imaging tests for uncomplicated headaches via the American College of Radiology to refraining from routine antibiotic treatment of acute sinusitis that has lasted less than 5 to 7 days via the American Academy of Family Physicians.

Forty-Five Tests Make List of Recommended Changes in Use

The lists were made available on Wednesday as part of a joint effort between the ABIM Foundation and Consumer Reports to lower overall health care costs that is due to medical testing of questionable value. Each of nine physician specialty groups provided a list of five medical tests or procedures in their field of expertise that require closer consideration by practicing physicians before using.

Why a Change in Typical Medical Care Is Needed

Christine K. Cassel, M.D. and James A Guest, J.D. explain the need for these and additional changes in health care in an April 4 article published in The Journal of the American Medical Association. The current system of health care in the United States continues to demonstrate rising costs with "high rates of poor-quality care."

Physicians have been burdened with the fear that if some tests/procedures/treatments are not ordered for patients, even if the ratio of need to potential outcome is low, they would open themselves to increased chances of medical malpractice suits.

Realizing that changes need to be made to the health care delivery system, the ABIM Foundation, the European Foundation of Internal Medicine and the American College of Physicians Foundation together established a charter that would ultimately lead to "Choosing Wisely" in an effort to ensure quality patient care, as explained in an article published in a 2002 Annals of Internal Medicine article.

Suggested Changes that Affect Baby Boomers Health Care Decisions

Many of the changes suggested in the "Choosing Wisely" lists affect people of all age groups, while others will affect certain age groups more than others.

The suggested "Five Things Physicians and Patients Should Question" list provided by the American College of Cardiology is most relevant for baby boomers and their seniors that includes not performing annual stress cardiac imaging on patients without symptoms of heart problems and only perform an echocardiogram for mild, native valve disease when symptoms are present.

The American College of Gastroenterology in its list of suggested changes recommends that in average-risk individuals, no colorectal cancer screening needs to be performed in intervals briefer than 10 years for those who have already had a colonoscopy with negative results.

These and other suggested changes due in the fall of this year from eight additional medical specialty societies will likely impact the state of health care and its associated costs in the United States for years to come.

Smack dab in the middle of the baby boomer generation, L.L. Woodard is a proud resident of "The Red Man" state. With what he hopes is an everyman's view of life's concerns both in his state and throughout the nation, Woodard presents facts and opinions based on common-sense solutions.



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Thursday, April 5, 2012

New effort by MDs to cut wasteful medical spending

Old checklist for doctors: order that test, write that prescription. New checklist for doctors: first ask yourself if the patient really needs it.

Nine medical societies representing nearly 375,000 physicians are challenging the widely held perception that more health care is better, releasing lists Wednesday of tests and treatments their members should no longer automatically order.

The 45 items listed include most repeat colonoscopies within 10 years of a first such test, early imaging for most back pain, brain scans for patients who fainted but didn't have seizures, and antibiotics for mild- to-moderate sinus distress.

Also on the list: heart imaging stress tests for patients without coronary symptoms. And a particularly sobering recommendation calls for cancer doctors to stop treating tumors in end-stage patients who have not responded to multiple therapies and are ineligible for experimental treatments.

Dr. Christine Cassel, president of the American Board of Internal Medicine, said the goal is to reduce wasteful spending without harming patients. She suggested some may benefit by avoiding known risks associated with medical tests, such as exposure to radiation.

"We all know there is overuse and waste in the system, so let's have the doctors take responsibility for that and look at the things that are overused," said Cassel. "We're doing this because we think we don't need to ration health care if we get rid of waste." Her group sets standards and oversees board certification for many medical specialties.

The recommendations come at a time when American health care is undergoing far-reaching changes. No matter what the Supreme Court decides on President Barack Obama's health overhaul, employers, lawmakers, insurers and many doctors are questioning how the United States spends far more on medical care than any other economically advanced country and still produces mediocre results overall.

Until now, the health care system has rewarded doctors for volume. Now the focus is shifting to paying for results and coordination. That explains the urgency for doctors themselves to identify areas of questionable spending.

It's unclear how much money would be saved if doctors followed the 45 recommendations rigorously. Probably tens of billions of dollars, and maybe hundreds of billions over time. That would help, but come nowhere near solving, the problem of high health care costs.

The nation's medical bill hit $2.6 trillion in 2010. A major quandary for cost-cutters is that most of the spending is attributable to a relatively small share of very sick people. Just 5 percent of patients accounted for half the total costs among privately insured people, according to a recent study from the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics.

Dr. James Fasules of the American College of Cardiology said the goal is to begin changing attitudes among patients and doctors.

"We kind of have a general feeling that if you don't get a test, you haven't been cared for well," said Fasules. "That has permeated American culture now." The new advice isn't meant to override a doctor's judgment, Fasules added, but to inform and support decisions.

The recommendations will be circulated to consumers and doctors by a coalition calling itself Choosing Wisely, which includes employer groups, unions, AARP and Consumer Reports. Neither the insurance industry nor the federal government was involved in process.

Each of the nine medical societies submitted five tests or treatments they viewed as overused. Their work was coordinated by a foundation that's an offshoot of Cassel's group. Eight other medical societies are developing additional recommendations, Cassel said.

The medical societies don't have any power of enforcement, and fear of malpractice lawsuits may well prompt many doctors to keep ordering as many tests as ever.

Insurers will certainly take a close look at the recommendations, but what they do may be limited. That's because most of the questionable tests and treatments in the lists don't particularly stand out in the avalanche of bills processed daily by insurance companies.

Take a recommendation for no annual EKGs for low-risk patients with no heart symptoms. Dr. John Santa, director of the Consumer Reports Health Ratings Center, said he used to routinely order EKG's when he was a general adult medicine practitioner. EKGs cost $50 to $60. A medical assistant would do the tests, and it would take Santa just a couple of minutes to read them. Yet 2 percent to 3 percent of his income came from EKGs, enough to make a difference in a tight year.

"It's very difficult for an insurance company to tell the difference when an EKG is being used as a diagnostic tool and when it is being used as a screening test," said Santa. "It would probably cause more trouble for insurance companies."

The medical groups that participated are: American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology; American Academy of Family Physicians, American College of Cardiology, American College of Physicians, American College of Radiology, American Gastroenterological Association, American Society of Clinical Oncology, American Society of Nephrology, and American Society of Nuclear Cardiology.



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Monday, March 26, 2012

French medical orders target diet guru Pierre Dukan

"Doctor Pierre Dukan is pictured in 2011. French medical orders have filed complaints against the celebrity diet guru whose diet was reportedly used by the Middleton family ahead of Kate's wedding to Britain's Prince William. (AFP Photo/Loic Venance)" title

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US announces deal to ensure medical isotope supply

President Barack Obama says the United States and several European countries have struck an agreement meant to sustain the supply of lifesaving isotopes without the use of highly enriched uranium.

Medical isotopes are used to treat cancer and heart disease worldwide. Scientists have been working on using low enriched uranium because highly enriched uranium can be used to create nuclear bombs.

Obama announced the agreement on Monday during a nuclear security summit in Seoul. The other countries are Belgium, France and the Netherlands.

World leaders are in Seoul to seek ways to improve nuclear security.



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