Blogs

Health Action Assembly and Health Funding & Sustainability Conference

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Ontario Health Coalition

Saturday, November 6 – Sunday, November 7, 2010, Bond Place Hotel, Toronto

Health Action Assembly: Updates on key issues including hospital cuts and restructuring, protecting rural access to care, long term care funding/inspections/regulations changes, retirement homes, homecare, primary health care, P3s and privatization. Participate in strategy-setting session. This year will lead into the provincial election, so it is particularly important.

Medical Students Believe Video Games Can Help Them Become Better Doctors

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Survey of medical students at University of Michigan and University of Wisconsin-Madison shows strong interest in role-playing and strategy games for doctor training

ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Today’s students were raised with a digital mouse in their hands.

So it should be no surprise that a majority of medical school students surveyed say video games and virtual reality environments could help them become better doctors.

Computerized Warning System Alerts Doctors to Medications that Could Harm Elderly Patients

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System aims to reduce adverse drug events -- and subsquent complications -- in older hospital inpatients

BOSTON – Adverse drug events, such as dizziness or confusion occur in an estimated 40 percent of all hospital patients and can be the result of inappropriate medications being ordered. Not surprisingly, elderly individuals are particularly vulnerable to these adverse events, which not only result in longer hospitalizations, but can also pose a threat of serious complications and even death.

Doctors Hard to Find for Patients in Massachusetts' First For-Profit Health Plan

Researchers note troubling implications for Obama's new health law

The first for-profit insurance company approved to offer government-subsidized coverage under Massachusetts' health reform has dangerously restricted access to primary care, according to data reported in Thursday's (Aug. 5) New England Journal of Medicine. Researchers say the findings raise troubling concerns about the Obama administration's new health law, which is modeled after the Massachusetts plan.

Is Conventional Medicine Ignoring You?

Do you feel like your thoughts about your condition have been brushed off or dismissed at the doctor's office, because they're not relevant to the diagnosis?

You are not alone.

The type of thinking that says anything outside of the box is irrelevant to the diagnosis means that critically important information is often missed.

Why does this happen?

Because conventional medicine looks at you as a diagnosis.

As a disease.

From treatment to insurance, it all comes down to a precise diagnostic number. In the U.S. today, whatever ails you has to be assigned a number called an ICD code.

Putting Patients at the Center of the Medical Home: NY Times

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For several years now and with a growing messianic fervor, physicians and health care experts have been responding to the need to deliver more efficient and better primary care with one response: patient-centered medical homes.

Not long ago, I found myself doing the same with a friend who prides himself on being a well-informed patient. But instead of an overwhelmingly enthusiastic or even mildly interested response, my friend stared at me blankly.

“What in the world are you talking about?” he finally asked. “A hospice? A halfway house? Some kind of group home for patients?”

Reform of Primary Care Could Reduce Diagnostic Errors

HOUSTON – (July 28, 2010) – Errors in diagnosis place a heavy financial burden on an already costly health care system and can be devastating for affected patients. Strengthening certain aspects of a new and evolving model of comprehensive and coordinated primary care could potentially address this highly relevant, but underemphasized safety concern, said health researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and Stony Brook University Medical Center.

Doctors Don’t ‘Get’ Their Patients

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Physicians often guess wrong about their patients’ beliefs about health

US physicians are often poor judges of their patients’ health beliefs, according to a new study by Dr. Richard Street from Texas A & M University and Paul Haidet from The Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, USA. However, physicians’ understanding is better the more patients are involved by asking questions, expressing concerns, and stating their beliefs and preferences for care. Their analysis¹ of how patients’ health beliefs differ from their physicians’ perception of these beliefs was just published online in the Journal of General Internal Medicine².