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Engaging Patients to Enhance Rheumatology Research

Susan Bernstein  |  September 15, 2015

It takes a great deal of time and money to produce clinical practice guidelines for rheumatic diseases. No matter how well a treatment inhibits inflammatory cytokines, it won’t lower disease activity without one essential factor: patient compliance. “You can’t propose a treatment algorithm in your research that no patient would actually use,” says Veena Ranganath,…

EULAR 2015: Innovations in Rheumatology Education, Practice

Susan Oliver, RN, FRCN, MSc, OBE  |  September 15, 2015

ROME, Italy—The European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) annual congress (EULAR 2015) was a much-anticipated event, with more than 14,000 delegates attending from far and wide. The Health Professional Standing Committee was particularly delighted to have planned a program that provided the latest in research terms but also an eclectic mix of valuable topics for health…

Walk-in Medical Kiosks Find Place in Telemedicine

Catherine Kolonko  |  September 15, 2015

Technology is taking medicine and the Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clinic to unexpected places. The famed institutions are testing a new way to deliver medical care, with walk-in kiosks mobilized to reach patients who may be too far away, too short on time or facing other challenges that keep them from a traditional doctor’s office…

Pros, Cons of Provider-Based Conversions

Steven M. Harris, Esq.  |  September 15, 2015

When the local hospital approaches you about selling your practice and converting it to a provider-based outpatient department, you may want to hear them out. There are many benefits to becoming a department of the hospital, but what would it mean for you and the practice you worked tirelessly to build? What Does It Mean…

Mindfulness May Improve Medical Efficacy in Rheumatology Patients

Kimberly Retzlaff  |  September 15, 2015

Every day, rheumatology patients live with the realities of having a chronic disease that requires a lifetime of treatment. This knowledge can be an emotional burden, and some people deal with it better than others. Emerging research is showing that those patients who exhibit emotional control are better able to cope and ultimately experience a…

KeMo Disease: A Newly Recognized Debilitating Musculoskeletal Disease

John F. Beary, MD  |  September 15, 2015

Dr. Simon Helfgott’s essay, “Barking at the Moon,” in the July 2015 issue of The Rheumatologist, about the unintended consequences of EHRs (electronic health records) prompted me to share my experience regarding the newly recognized KeMo disease. Keyboarding and mouse-clicking (KeMo) activity now consumes about 50% of the medical clinician’s day, as the modern EHRs…

2015 ACR Workforce Study Survey Now Open

American College of Rheumatology  |  September 11, 2015

The American College of Rheumatology Workforce Study Group has been working diligently to develop the 2015 workforce study survey. Ten years have elapsed since the last workforce study, and much has changed since then. This study will help us understand the character and composition of the overall rheumatology workforce, identify demographic and employment trends, and…

Hamstrung by Red Tape, Hospital Operators Buy Their Way into India

Aditya Kalra & Aditi Shah  |  September 11, 2015

NEW DELHI (Reuters)—For nearly two years, Parkway Pantai has delayed the opening of its 450-bed India hospital, the Singapore-based medical firm’s bid to cash in on one of Asia’s fastest growing private healthcare markets, as it waited for the necessary permits. Parkway, a unit of the world’s second largest healthcare group by market value IHH…

Electronic Health Records Software Often Written Without Doctors’ Input

Kathryn Doyle  |  September 10, 2015

(Reuters Health)—The reason why many doctors find electronic health records (EHR) difficult to use might be that the software wasn’t properly tested, researchers suggests. Current guidelines and industry standards suggest that new EHR software should be tested by at least 15 end users with a clinical background to make sure they are usable and safe…

New Recommendations Support Effective Use of Telemedicine in Primary Care

Will Boggs, MD  |  September 9, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—The American College of Physicians (ACP) has issued a baker’s dozen of recommendations intended to guide the effective use of telemedicine in primary care settings. “The recommendations balance the potential benefits and expanded use of telemedicine with the importance of maintaining the patient-physician relationship and patient safety,” Hilary Daniel from American College…

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