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Subcategories:Career DevelopmentInterprofessional PerspectivePresident's PerspectiveProfilesRheuminations

High-Spending Doctors Are Less Likely to Be Sued

Andrew M. Seaman  |  November 5, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Providing more care than necessary may work to lower a doctor’s risk of being accused of malpractice, suggests a new U.S. study. Although the results can’t prove extra expenditures are due to defensive medicine, the researchers found that doctors in Florida who provided the most costly care between 2000 and 2009 were…

Signatures to Be Filed for California Drug Price Referendum

Sharon Bernstein  |  October 30, 2015

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters)—Backers of a referendum aimed at reducing the cost of prescription drugs in California said Wednesday that they had gathered more than enough signatures to place their measure on the November 2016 ballot in the most populous U.S. state. The measure by the AIDS Healthcare Foundation would require the state to pay no…

Specialized Health Care May Be Lacking under Obamacare Plans

Andrew M. Seaman  |  October 29, 2015

(Reuters Health)—Some health insurance plans sold on the Affordable Care Act‘s federal marketplace may not provide reasonable access to medical specialists, new research suggests. Under the act, also known as Obamacare, the federal marketplace offers subsidized private health insurance to consumers in states that didn’t establish their own health insurance exchanges. About one in seven…

Even Doctors & Nurses Don’t Always Have Healthy Lifestyles

Lisa Rapaport  |  October 22, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Even doctors and nurses don’t always follow the healthy lifestyle choices they recommend for patients to reduce the risk of medical problems, such as obesity, heart disease and diabetes, a U.S. study suggests. Although rates of these conditions appeared lower among healthcare workers than other people, the diseases were still common. They…

anaken2012/shutterstock.com

Legalities of Telemedicine

Kathy Holliman, MEd  |  October 15, 2015

A brief has been filed with the U.S. Supreme Court that, if the court decides to hear the case, could have wide-ranging implications for online medical care and the limits of a physician’s First Amendment right to free speech. Medical Advice Via e-Mail Institute for Justice Senior Attorney Jeff Rowes filed the brief at the…

Rheumatologist Robert H. Shmerling, MD, Volunteers Time for Children Affected by Domestic Violence

Carol Patton  |  October 14, 2015

On any Thursday from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., you can find Robert H. Shmerling, MD, playing tag, basketball or even roughhousing with a group of children at Second Step, a transitional living program that offers victims of domestic violence in the Boston area a safe place to live and opportunities to go back to…

Opinion: Insurance Companies Use Medically and Fiscally Irresponsible Formularies

Bruce Rothschild, MD  |  October 14, 2015

Receipt of an unsolicited communication that a sweepstakes award has been won may con some people (especially, but not limited to, those underprivileged or undereducated as to legalities), but can’t fool all of the people all of the time. The names of the organizations and products involved are often marketing tool inventions, which imply special…

Dr. Yokoyama, MD, with Jennifer Laurent

Interdisciplinary Collaboration at Wash U Advances Understanding of Immunology, Rheumatology

Gretchen Henkel  |  October 14, 2015

In June 2014, 10 members of a church group returned to St. Louis from Haiti, where they had contracted chikungunya virus (CHIKV), a mosquito-transmitted alphavirus previously unknown in the Western hemisphere that produces inflammatory arthritis symptoms. Because CHIKV-related arthritis mimics seronegative RA, a group of clinicians, immunologists, virologists and geneticists at the Washington University in…

Rheumatologists Share Research, Successes at Annual Investigators’ Meeting

From the College  |  October 14, 2015

“Each project adds new knowledge that brings us a little closer to the cure,” Joan Bathon, MD, of Columbia University Medical Center, says of the Rheumatology Research Foundation’s 8th Annual Investigators’ Meeting in San Diego. Dr. Bathon was one of more than 30 investigators who presented the latest progress on research funded by the Foundation’s…

Rheumatologist Nathan Wei, MD, Focuses on Alternatives to Surgery for Athletes

Eric Butterman  |  October 14, 2015

Nathan Wei, MD, FACP, FACR, admits that he didn’t exactly agree with the amount certain things were encouraged in his family. “Aspects such as academics and music were focused on so much,” he says. “I wanted to break out from that upbringing. I wanted to add in more of what I wanted to do.” And…

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