ACR Convergence 2025| Video: Rheum for Everyone, Episode 26—Ableism

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Search results for: pediatric

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…

Filed under:Practice SupportTechnology Tagged with:patient carerheumatologyTechnologytelemedicine

ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting Preview

From the College  |  September 15, 2015

The meeting with something for everyone! Below is a sneak peek at some of the 2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting’s scientific sessions and content specific to each educational track. Basic Science Track Our knowledge of autoimmunity, bone pathology and other aspects of rheumatic disease is expanding rapidly due to the important research data produced by scientists…

Filed under:Education & TrainingFrom the CollegeMeeting ReportsProfessional Topics Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual Meetingeducation and training

Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis: Parents Discuss Challenges, Support Rheumatologists Can Offer

Kathy Holliman  |  September 15, 2015

One parent wishes that she could have consulted a crystal ball at the beginning of her daughter’s illness to have “some kind of idea of what we were in for. There are so many stages of letting go of the idea of what your little kid is in for in life, what they are going…

Filed under:EthicsProfessional Topics Tagged with:education and trainingEthicspatient carerheumatologists

2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting to Offer Clinical Focus Course

Maura Iversen  |  September 15, 2015

Want to hear about the latest advances in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), osteoarthritis (OA), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and polymyositis/dermatomyositis and how best to implement interprofessional care for your patients? The Association of Rheumatology Health Professionals (ARHP) Clinical Focus Course (CFC) is the course for you. The CFC is a full-day course titled, Clinical Advances in…

Filed under:Education & TrainingProfessional Topics Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual MeetingAssociation of Rheumatology Professionals (ARP)education and trainingRheumatoid arthritis

More Evidence Dexamethasone Speeds Recovery in Kids with Septic Arthritis

Will Boggs, MD  |  September 11, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Adding to earlier evidence, a new study finds kids with septic arthritis who are treated with dexamethasone recover faster. “We expected these results based on our previous randomized double-blind controlled study,” Dr. Itay Fogel from Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel and Tel Aviv University told Reuters Health by email. “However, the…

Filed under:ConditionsDrug Updates Tagged with:Childrendexamethasoneseptic arthritis

Alcohol Use Complicates Chronic Disease Management in Teens

Will Boggs, MD  |  September 1, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—High school students with chronic medical conditions who drink alcohol are more likely than their nondrinking peers to forget or skip taking their medications, according to an online survey. “I was surprised to see such a clear association between alcohol use and medication nonadherence—a finding which really brings home the need to…

Filed under:ConditionsRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:AdolescentsAlcoholchronic conditiondruginflammatory bowel diseaseoutcome

Project Increases Pneumococcal Vaccination Rates in Rheumatology Patients

Will Boggs, MD  |  August 26, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—A multicomponent intervention can significantly increase pneumococcal vaccination rates in pediatric rheumatology patients, researchers report. “The interventions outlined in our article can easily be implemented in pediatric rheumatology practices or other subspecialty clinics,” Dr. Julia G. Harris from Children’s Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, Mo., told Reuters Health by email. “It takes additional…

Filed under:ConditionsOther Rheumatic Conditions Tagged with:Pediatric Rheumatologypneumococcal vaccinevaccination

Women, Minorities Continue to Be Underrepresented in Medicine

Megan Brooks  |  August 24, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Continued efforts are needed to increase the number of women and minorities in graduate medical education (GME) to ensure a diverse U.S. physician workforce, say the authors of a research letter published today. “Diversifying the physician workforce has been discussed as requisite to addressing health disparities and inequities. Minority physicians continue to…

Filed under:Education & TrainingWorkforce Tagged with:Diversitygraduate medical educationWomen

Epratuzumab Results Disappointing, but Adalimumab Promising

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  August 19, 2015

Two Phase 3 trials have shown that epratuzumab did not meet its primary endpoints for treating SLE. Meanwhile, a Phase 3 study has shown adalimumab is effective for treating enthesitis-related arthritis in juveniles…

Filed under:Biologics/DMARDsDrug Updates Tagged with:adalimumabenthesitis-related arthritisepratuzumabJuvenile arthritissystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

RA Diagnosis Uses Lab Tests, Clinical Insight to Rule Out Lyme

Charles Radis, DO  |  August 18, 2015

What struck me first as I walked by the exam room where Lynn P. sat was the swelling in her fingers and wrists. The bloated hands rested unnaturally on her thighs, palms up, fingers slightly flexed. Her strawberry-blond curls were offset by a high-neck, loose-fitting, burgundy sweater. Her pale skin matched her trim slacks. She had…

Filed under:ConditionsRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:ClinicalDiagnosislab testLyme Diseasepatient careRheumatoid arthritisrheumatologist

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