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Patients Leaving Hospitals Often Don’t Understand Care Plans

Lisa Rapaport  |  January 6, 2016

(Reuters Health)—Many patients leaving the hospital don’t understand follow-up care plans because the instructions are tailored to people with higher reading levels and more education, a recent U.S. study suggests. The American Medical Association already recommends that written health information be targeted to a sixth grade audience because nearly half of the U.S. population is…

Living with RA: Study Examines the Value of Patient Involvement in Creating Clinical Practice Guidelines

Arthritis Care & Research  |  January 6, 2016

“The lived experience with RA is itself a valuable form of expertise,” writes Dr. Liana Fraenkel, MD, MPH, and her colleagues in their latest research. To examine the value of this expertise and how it can be incorporated into clinical practice guidelines, researchers developed 18 questions for which two panels—one physician dominated and one comprising entirely patients—would develop recommendations. For a majority of these questions, the patient panel made the same recommendations as the physician panel, with similar recommendation strengths…

Biosimilars Seek Regulatory Approval in the U.S. & Europe; Plus MTX Underused in the U.S.

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  January 6, 2016

In Europe, an etanercept biosimilar is getting closer to being approved to treat RA and more, and in the U.S., an application for an adalimumab biosimilar has been submitted for FDA approval. Also, an analysis of methotrexate use in the U.S. shows that therapy may actually be underused for RA…

5 Considerations to Help Jumpstart Your New Rheumatology Practice

Richard Quinn  |  January 5, 2016

Starting your own rheumatology practice is daunting, and it’s easy to focus on the medical side and neglect the business side of a practice. Here are five important considerations that could help a new practice thrive…

The RUC’s Work & Where You Fit In

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  January 4, 2016

To ensure adequate and appropriate reimbursement, rheumatologists must provide detailed information about their services to the people advocating on their behalf. With the proper information, advocates can then do the work necessary to secure the appropriate values for these services. These advocates are members of the Relative Value Update Committee (RUC), a volunteer committee of…

ACPA-Positive & ACPA-Negative Patients with RA: The Difference Begins in the Lungs

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  January 4, 2016

A new study from Stockholm, Sweden, strengthens the link between the lungs and anti-citrullinated protein antibody (ACPA)–positive RA. After analyzing the bronchial tissue of untreated patients with early RA, researchers found the patients’ lungs had signs of immune cell accumulation and activation…

Researchers Describe Controversial Study of Surgeon Training

Andrew M. Seaman  |  January 3, 2016

(Reuters Health)—Whether surgical trainees should be able to work long shifts is a matter of fierce debate, and the methods of a controversial study aimed at answering that question were outlined in a top surgical journal. The results won’t be available until February. In the meantime, critics of the study say it exposed residents and…

The Microbiome’s Role in Inflammatory Arthritis

Arthritis & Rheumatology  |  January 1, 2016

Despite the relative novelty of the human microbiome as an area of study, a substantial body of evidence has accumulated addressing its potential involvement in the pathogenesis of rheumatic disease. This review article explores the available data in animal and human studies, focusing on the role of the intestinal microbiome in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and the spondyloarthritidies (SpA)…

Dr. Soumya Raychaudhuri Answers 5 Questions on Bioinformatics & Rheumatology

Richard Quinn  |  December 30, 2015

Dr. Soumya Raychaudhuri of the Harvard Medical School, Boston, discusses how his interest in math led him to the study of bioinformatics in rheumatology. He addresses how big data can play a role in clinical rheumatology in years to come…

Original Sin—Researchers Look for Infectious Triggers of Rheumatic Disease & the Best Options to Block the Process

Susan Bernstein  |  December 29, 2015

SAN FRANCISCO—Two hundred years ago, physicians knew nothing about what caused various forms of arthritis. Today, we have more clues about what may trigger rheumatic diseases, but still can’t pinpoint the culprits that set scores of inflammatory conditions in motion. Researchers discussed some of the background and recent findings that point to what immunologists call…

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