A study reported in JAMA examines the use of telemedicine techniques to improve the management of pain and depression in cancer patients.
The state of human knowledge is often imperfect and medical treatment provides frequent examples of that. What we think we know often turns out to be erroneous as two recent studies published in JAMA demonstrate.
There are so many sources of the rapid increases in national health spending that it is hard to track them all. A recent article estimates the costs of “medicalization”, the process of turning problems into medical issues which end up incurring health costs.
Struggling with the continuing rise in health insurance premiums, Rhode Island’s Insurance Commissioner takes some creative steps to attempt to slow the rise of hospital costs, which are a major contributor to the premium increases.
Medical care provided near the end of a patient’s life accounts for a significant portion of total national health spending and is often inconsistent with patient wishes. New research evaluates the effects of a more detailed set of physician advance orders for frail and elderly persons.
Sitting indoors seeking relief from the summer heat? Here’s a montage of cool and refreshing health care items, including CPOE systems, accountable care organizations, Massachusetts’ reform experience, reducing imaging, and medical management trends.
Coventry gets slapped with a two hundred-million-plus dollar damage award for failing to comply with Louisiana’s PPO statute. Ouch that hurts. A vivid example of the need to pay careful attention to each jurisdiction’s regulations when running a national business.
Preventive measures can help patients delay or prevent illness or can lead to early detection and usually better outcomes. Unfortunately many patients fail to take even the most basic preventive steps. A new study suggests just how difficult it is to change that behavior.
One approach to lowering health care spending is to lower the costs of doing business for providers. One big item in those costs is malpractice insurance. Cutting malpractice costs could also lead to a reduction in ordering of unnecessary tests and services.
Medicare has an impending value-based purchasing program for hospitals. Payments would be based on performance against quality standards. Some hospitals ability to improve performance may be limited by the economic and workforce characteristics of their location, according to new research.