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New Research Shows Knee Osteoarthritis Prevalence Is Rising

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  September 20, 2018

Studies highlighting the large numbers of people affected by knee osteoarthritis (OA) point to what clinicians who treat knee OA have been seeing for the past few decades: a substantial increase in the prevalence of knee OA in the U.S. and globally. Roughly 250 million people are affected by knee OA worldwide, and about 14…

Racial Disparities in Rheumatology: What Are We Doing About It?

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  September 20, 2018

The data tell the story. Despite improvements in overall outcomes for common rheumatologic conditions, such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA), white patients fare better than minority patients, and sometimes substantially better. Even with new biologic therapies that have significantly altered the course of disease for patients with RA, outcomes for minorities…

Case Report: A Psoriatic Arthritis Patient with Dactylitis & Enthesitis

Samantha C. Shapiro, MD; Jemima Albayda, MD; & Ana-Maria Orbai, MD, MHS  |  September 20, 2018

A 36-year-old woman presented at the Johns Hopkins Arthritis Center for a second opinion regarding a diagnosis of psoriatic arthritis (PsA). One year prior to our evaluation, she had developed pain and stiffness in her hands, feet, knees, ankles, elbows and shoulders. She had mild plaque psoriasis of the scalp and base of the neck,…

Why & How to Add Advanced Practice Clinicians to Your Practice

Kelly Tyrrell  |  September 20, 2018

More than two decades ago, Charles King, MD, was completing his final year of residency in internal medicine, fairly confident he was headed for a career in gastroenterology. Then he took a rotation in rheumatology. The rest, as they say, is history. “It’s a complicated field, and it requires a balance of left brained-ness and…

For Residents, Mystery Patients Often Require Rheumatologist Advice

Veena S. Katikineni, MD  |  September 20, 2018

As a first-year internal medicine resident, I find myself consulting rheumatologists for just about every mystery patient in our hospital. Like many residents, I was initially intimidated by the complexity of this elusive field. At first glance, diagnosis and management seem completely inaccessible to a first-year resident. But several rheumatology consults later, I can confidently…

New Study Aimed at Better Predicting Large Vessel Vasculitis Relapse

Elizabeth Hofheinz, MPH, MEd  |  September 20, 2018

Imagine telling a patient “You’re in remission!” and finding out it’s not true. The last thing you want to do is get it wrong clinically and put your patient on an emotional rollercoaster. With large vessel vasculitis (LVV) in particular, physicians struggle to be accurate, to determine if indeed the disease has gone away or…

Compliance Means More than Just Paperwork

Anita Henderson-Sumpter, MHA, MBA, CHC, CPC  |  September 20, 2018

Effective management of healthcare compliance requires an office compliance plan that stays current with changing government regulations, payer requirements, office operations and technology. Many still wonder, why is a compliance program needed—if something isn’t broken, don’t fix it, right? This is not always the case; compliance is an essential part of practice operations, but providing…

In Memoriam: Morris Reichlin, MD

Judith A. James, MD, PhD, & John B. Harley, MD, PhD  |  September 20, 2018

With sadness we honor the passing of Morris Reichlin, MD. Dr. “Moe” Reichlin enjoyed a distinguished clinical, investigative, rheumatology career that spanned more than five decades. Moe was inquisitive, persistent, humble and inspiring. His achievements were many and diverse. Moe Reichlin received his BA and MD degrees from Washington University in St. Louis, where he…

Help Your Patients Live Well with Rheumatic Disease

David Daikh, MD, PhD  |  September 20, 2018

As rheumatology professionals, we focus on how to achieve better outcomes for our patients: lower disease activity, remission, milder symptoms and prevention of joint damage or serious complications, such as heart disease. Another outcome is just as important: good quality of life. What can we do to engage our current patients and those at risk…

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Advanced Practice Clinicians May Help Close the Workforce Gap

Paul H. Caldron, DO, PhD, FACP, FACR, MBA  |  September 20, 2018

GLENDALE, ARIZ.—Arizona is a microcosm of America’s challenges in reconciling the rheumatology workforce to growing patient demand, as quantified in the ACR’s Workforce Study of 2015.1 So it was timely this year for the Phoenix Rheumatology Association to sponsor its 1st Annual Strategic Training for Rheumatology Advanced Practice Clinicians Symposium. (Note: Advanced practice clinicians [APCs]…

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