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Search results for: sleep

8 Ways to Help Your Patients with Medication Costs

Vanessa Caceres  |  October 18, 2018

A patient with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) comes to your office and needs a medication. You prescribe it, and the patient’s insurance plan covers it. The patient begins the medication and slowly but surely feels better. Prescribing drugs for a patient should be this simple but rarely is, thanks to the high cost of drugs and…

Filed under:Drug UpdatesPatient PerspectivePractice Support Tagged with:cost savingdrug costs

Juvenile Arthritis Camps Offer Kids Freedom, Fun & Education

Linda Childers  |  October 18, 2018

With the wind in her hair and a smile on her face, a young girl flies through the air on the zip line at Camp Wekandu. She waves to her fellow campers on the ground and offers a thumbs up before the ride ends and one of the camp counselors lowers her from the zip…

Filed under:ConditionsPatient PerspectivePractice Support Tagged with:Arthritis FoundationJuvenile Arthritis (JIA)Juvenile Arthritis Camps

Pain Response to Low Intensity Pressure Tied to Cognitive Deficits in Fibromyalgia

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  October 2, 2018

A recent study found that the perception of experimentally induced pain is closely associated with neurocognitive symptoms, such as attention, memory and executive function, in fibromyalgia patients. Specifically, fibromyalgia patients described low-intensity pressure as more painful than controls did…

Filed under:ConditionsPain Syndromes Tagged with:braincentral nervous systemcognitivecognitive impairmentFibromyalgiaPain

Collaborative Interventions Can Improve Sjögren Syndrome Patients’ Daily Lives

Carina Stanton  |  September 27, 2018

New research identifies how education designed to empower self-care and collaboration among providers, patients and family members can help patients with Sjögren’s syndrome manage their daily challenges and take back their lives…

Filed under:ConditionsSjögren’s Disease Tagged with:communicationpatient carephysician-patient communicationSjogren's

Promote Pregnancy Wellness: Data Can Help Guide Pregnancy Management in Lupus

Thomas R. Collins  |  September 10, 2018

AMSTERDAM—Clinicians who are counseling women with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) have the benefit of an array of new insights into factors linked with increased risk of pregnancy loss, how SLE therapies affect pregnancy and data on outcomes of children born to mothers with SLE, an expert said in a session at EULAR: the Annual European…

Filed under:ConditionsSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:HYDROXYCHLOROQUINELupus nephritispregnancypregnant womensystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

From Dog Clickers to Scripts—Thoughts on Learning to Teach

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  August 16, 2018

You can purchase a dog clicker for about $3 on Amazon. If you don’t own a dog, this is not a useful piece of information. I don’t own a dog, and the first time I heard the phrase dog clicker, I thought—I think understandably—that it was some sort of remote control. If you don’t own…

Filed under:Career DevelopmentEducation & TrainingOpinionRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:Preceptorshipteaching physicians

How Depression Affects the Cognitive Profile of Fibromyalgia Patients

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  July 23, 2018

New research evaluated the effect of depression on the cognition of fibromyalgia patients, finding that these patients have a distinct cognitive profile. Researchers note that emotional symptoms, such as depression and anxiety, are essential to the cognitive performance of fibromyalgia patients and that treating these symptoms may reduce cognitive impairment…

Filed under:ConditionsPain SyndromesSoft Tissue Pain Tagged with:cognitive dysfunctionDepressionFibromyalgiaMental HealthPainPain Management

Medical Tech-Tool Usage Is Surging

Susan Bernstein  |  July 19, 2018

Technology in medicine is no longer new or trendy. It’s pervasive. Rheumatologists may now assume a patient has searched online for information about his or her diagnosis or potential therapies. Both physicians and rheumatology health professionals should acknowledge their patients’ Internet surfing and find out what they’ve read, says Betsy Roth-Wojcicki, RN, MS, CPNP, an…

Filed under:AppsTechnologyTechnology Tagged with:Social Media

Case Report: Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome Mimicking Vasculitis

Case Report: Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome Mimicking Vasculitis

Catherine (Katie) Donnelly, MB, BCh, BAO, & Surabhi Khanna, MD  |  July 19, 2018

A 43-year-old man with a past medical history of type 2 diabetes mellitus, bilateral inguinal hernia repair as a child and prior cholecystectomy woke from sleep with sudden-onset periumbilical abdominal pain. He was admitted to another hospital, but required transfer to our surgical intensive care unit after a recurrent episode of severe abdominal pain, during…

Filed under:Vasculitis Tagged with:Ehlers-Danlosmimics

Drug Commercials—How Are They Still a Thing?

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  July 19, 2018

Picture this: It’s 3 o’clock in the morning. You can’t sleep. You settle in front of the television to watch a rerun of Dirty Dancing. And then it hits you: Ask your doctor. Even as your eyelids sag, some part of your primitive forebrain snaps to attention. Medical training has turned us all into multitaskers,…

Filed under:OpinionRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:patient communicationpatient management

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