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All Content

  • News

    Hospitalists Can Be Good Stewards of Healthcare Dollars

    October 5, 2015

    [caption id="attachment_8354" align="alignright" width="150"] amane kaneko[/caption] Are hospitals going to be allowed to start “patient profiling” in order to reduce costs?

  • News

    Technology Allows Independent Living for Elderly

    October 2, 2015

    NEW YORK - Shari Cayle, 75, called "Miracle Mama" by her family ever since she beat back advanced colon cancer seven years ago, is still undergoing treatment and living alone. "I don't want my grandchildren to remember me as the sick one, I want to be the fun one," said Cayle, who is testing a de

  • News

    Hospitalization in Lung Cancer Patients More Common Than Anticipated

    October 1, 2015

    NEW YORK - Chemotherapy-related hospitalization happens much more often in the real world than in drug trials, according to a new study. Patients with advanced lung cancer receiving chemotherapy in real-world settings were almost eight times more likely to be hospitalized during treatment than th

  • News

    Nursing Home Residents Likely to Suffer Fractures

    September 30, 2015

    NEW YORK - Older adults living in long-term care are more than twice as likely as their peers living at home to suffer a fracture, and a new guideline endorsed by the Scientific Advisory Council of Osteoporosis Canada explains how to reduce their risk. Residents of long-term care tend to be frai

  • News

    Online Refill Reduces Time Without Statins in Diabetes Patients

    September 29, 2015

    NEW YORK - Diabetes patients in the Kaiser Health System spent more days with their prescribed statins on hand if they used Kaiser's online refill tool, a study shows. The researchers looked specifically at racial and ethnic minorities and found that while these groups had poorer medication adher

  • News

    Racial, Economic Disparities in Life Expectancy after Heart Attack

    September 28, 2015

    After a heart attack, black patients typically don't live as long as whites - a racial difference that is starkest among the affluent - according to a new U.S.

  • News

    ABIM-ACCME Collaboration Helps Hospitalists Earn Credit for Continuing Medical Education

    September 22, 2015

    Earning credit for continuing medical education (CME) is a little easier for hospitalists and other physicians. A collaboration between the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) and the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) will enable physicians who are engaged in l

  • News

    Short-Course Antimicrobial Therapy Outcomes for Intra-Abdominal Infection

    September 22, 2015

    Clinical question: Does a short, fixed duration of antibiotic therapy for complicated intra-abdominal infections lead to equivalent outcomes and less antibiotic exposure than the traditional approach? Background: Published guidelines recommend appropriate antimicrobial agents for intra-abdominal

  • News

    Compared to Open Repair, EVAR Reduces Mortality up to 3 Years

    September 22, 2015

    NEW YORK - Endovascular repair (EVAR) of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) is associated with an initial survival advantage over open repair, according to a study of "real-world" data from California. However, the difference disappears in the long term, researchers report in JAMA Surgery, online

  • Audio

    LISTEN NOW: Pediatric Hospital Medicine and the “Right Care” Movement

    September 21, 2015

    Three pediatric hospitalists – Dr. Ricardo Quiñonez of San Antonio Children’s Hospital, Dr. Shawn Ralston of Dartmouth-Hitchcock, and Dr.

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