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Workforce

How to Thrive—Not Just Survive—as a New Manager, Part 2

Karen Appold  |  September 30, 2016

In Part 2 of how to thrive as a new manager, our experts expand on how age can affect the transition to management, what it’s like to join a new practice as a manager and how to take charge with grace…

How to Thrive—Not Just Survive—as a New Manager, Part 1

Karen Appold  |  September 23, 2016

The transition from employee to manager in a rheumatology practice can be daunting. But according to experts, setting clear roles and responsibilities and cultivating professional relationships with your employees ultimately help make you and the practice successful…

Crossing the Line

When Medical Workforce Grievances Lead to Strikes

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  September 12, 2016

Picket Lines: June 27 was marked on my calendar as the day to watch. No doubt the union organizers shrewdly selected it to be their strike day because of its proximity to July 1, an auspicious date for teaching hospitals, when rookie interns and residents anxiously assume their heightened roles of responsibility within the medical…

The ACR’s Workforce Study Group to Release 2015 Survey Results

Joan M. Von Feldt, MD, MSEd, FACR, FACP, & Eric L. Matteson, MD, MPH  |  September 7, 2016

The ACR and its Rheumatology Research Foundation continue to work together to provide support for the rheumatology and patient communities. Both organizations are committed to advancing the field of rheumatology with a dedication to expanding the workforce. With a growing number of patients being diagnosed with a rheumatic disease and living longer with the disease,…

No Time Theft Here: One Practice’s Success Story

Karen Appold  |  August 26, 2016

Practitioners at Orthopaedics and Rheumatology of the North Shore, in Skokie, Ill., have implemented practices for hiring and personnel management that help prevent employee time theft. Communication is open, employees are invested in the practice, and managers work to ensure employees are listened to and have clear guidelines to work by…

Stop Time Theft: Why Employees Waste Time & the Toll It Takes

Karen Appold  |  August 19, 2016

Do your employees waste time during the day or get easily distracted by personal issues? In a rheumatology practice, time equals money and time theft can affect all aspects of the practice—from office morale to patient satisfaction. Here are a few tips for keeping employees and managers on track to create a more effective working environment…

Ixekizumab Improves Work Productivity in Patients with Plaque Psoriasis

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  August 10, 2016

In three clinical trials, ixekizumab proved more effective than placebo or etanercept at increasing the work attendance and productivity of patients with plaque psoriasis…

How to Leverage Patient Satisfaction

Richard Quinn  |  August 5, 2016

Medicare and other insurers are using patient satisfaction to determine provider payment. But according to one expert, rheumatologists who look at their practice with a critical eye, listen and ask their patients the right questions may improve their patient relationships and their practice…

How Rheumatologists Can Plan for Extended Work Absences

Karen Appold  |  June 13, 2016

Sometimes, life calls for you to be out of the office for a length of time. Whether the absence is planned or not, it’s important to consider the best actions to take given the circumstances to ensure patients are cared for during your absence. Alexa Meara, MD, clinical instructor and rheumatologist, The Ohio State University…

workforce

Addressing the Rheumatology Workforce Shortage

Timothy Harrington, MD, Erin Arnold, MD, William Arnold, MD, David Sikes, MD, Gary Crump, MD, James Bower, MPA, & Drew Johnson, MS, MBA  |  May 13, 2016

In 2008, the American College of Rheumatology Workforce Study Advisory Group published a comprehensive rheumatology workforce analysis.1 It concluded: Based on assessment of supply and demand under current scenarios, the demand for rheumatologists is expected to exceed supply in the coming decades. Strategies for the profession to adapt to this changing health care landscape include…

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