Virginia Board of Medicine adopts regulations to address opioid epidemic – WRIC

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) The Virginia Board of Medicine voted to adopt new regulations in response to Virginias opioid epidemic.

These regulations address the safe prescribing of opioids and buprenorphine by health care practitioners in the Commonwealth. The regulations also give prescribers a descriptive template for effective prescribing habits to ultimately produce best patient outcomes.

The opioid prescribing regulations address three common types of pain: Acute pain (often from injury or minor illness), pain resulting from surgery and chronic pain. The regulations prescribe limitations on the number of days opioids should be prescribedwhile maintaining a physicians discretion to exceed in cases where medically necessary. The BOM also addressed the prescribing of buprenorphine, used to treat opioid addiction, to ensure Virginians struggling with anopioid use disorder have every opportunity to successfully manage their disease.

The epidemic of opioid abuse and overdose has devastated thousands of Virginia families, said Virginia Secretary of Health and Human Resources Dr. Bill Hazel. Setting limits and guidelines for proper prescribing, as these regulations do, will help curtail the flow of pills into our communities and significantly reduce the chances of people becoming addicted to prescribed medications. The new regulations also help ensure when people are prescribed the addiction treatment medication buprenorphine, they get the addiction counseling that is critical to their recovery.

These regulations will now be available for review under the Administrative Process Act and are then expected to be signed by the Governor. To see the full regulations, click here.

This is a developing story. Stay with 8News online and on air for the latest updates.

Never miss another Facebook post from 8News

Find 8News onTwitter,Facebook, andInstagram; send your news tips to iReport8@wric.com.

Go here to see the original:

Virginia Board of Medicine adopts regulations to address opioid epidemic - WRIC

Clemson researchers work toward brighter future in medicine, security – Greenville News

Jan. 27, 2017 - Luiz Jacobsohn, in his lab in Olin Hall, recently won an NSF CAREER award.(Photo: Patrick D. Wright)

A research project underway at Clemson University could mean a future with safer medical imaging, tighter national security and even more efficient lighting.

The project involves defects known as electronic traps that are found in materials used for the detection and measurement of ionizing radiation, said Luiz Jacobsohn, the assistant professor inClemsons Department of Material Science and Engineering who is leading the work.

The materials are dosimeters, which measure the amount of accumulated ionizing radiation absorbed, and scintillators, which display luminescence, or light, when exposed to ionizing radiation, he said.

The traps are found in both, but play different roles in each as they capture electrons, he said, and the more radiation received, the more electrons that are captured. And the traps occur without control.

There has not been a systematic investigation of these defects in materials in general, he said.

Sounds like esoteric scientific jargon to the layperson.

But in a nutshell, Jacobsohn is looking to map this process and engineer these traps in the hopes of enhancing the performance of the dosimeters and scintillators.

And better scintillators could mean less radiation in CT scans, he said.

Jan. 27, 2017 - Luiz Jacobsohn, in his lab in Olin Hall, recently won an NSF CAREER award.(Photo: Patrick D. Wright)

CT scans offer detailed images of the inside of the body, allowing doctors to pinpoint the precise location of a tumor in the brain, a blood clot in the lungs or a malfunction in a beating heart.

But they deliver much more radiation than X-rays potentially damaging DNA, leading to fears that they may cause cancer later in life, particularly in children, who are more vulnerable to the effects of radiation.

Research has shown that children and young adults who have multiple CTs have a small increased risk of leukemia and brain tumors one case of leukemia and one brain tumor in the decade following the firsts CT for every 10,000 head CT scans performed on children 10 years of age or younger than would have been expected without any scans, according to the National Cancer Institute.

So something that could reduce the amount of radiation in the scans has the potential to prevent illness and save lives.

By increasing the quality of the detector through a better scintillator, you can decrease the amount of radiation a patient has to go through in CT scans, he said. You can improve accuracy of radiotherapy as well because you know precisely how much radiation is needed.

And these materialsare used for other applications, too.

Because scintillators act like sensors to detect the presence of radioactive materials, they are used to protect the country from the smuggling of nuclear materials across our borders, he said. So a better scintillator couldimprove national security, he said.

Jan. 27, 2017 - Luiz Jacobsohn, in his lab in Olin Hall, recently won an NSF CAREER award.(Photo: Patrick D. Wright)

And understanding the role of the traps, which are detrimental to luminescence, could lead to more efficient lighting and lower energy bills, he said.

In his laboratory, which is equipped with high-temperature, atmospherically controlled furnaces and optical spectrometers, Jacobsohn synthesizes materials, modifies them through thermal processing, measures and analyzes their characteristics, and evaluates their luminescent properties.

Its a great opportunity for students to be exposed to science and to learn, he said, and in this way, prepare themselves for their professional lives.

Jacobsohn's work is supported by a $546,243 grant from the National Science Foundations Faculty Early Career Development Program. He also has plans to develop tools and strategies aimed at introducing materials science and engineering concepts to students atD.W. Daniel High School and McCormick High School.

The NSF CAREER award affirms Dr. Jacobsohns accomplishments as a teacher and a scholar, said Anand Gramopadhye, dean of the College of Engineering, Computing and Applied Sciences. It also underscores Clemsons growing strength as a research university, creating jobs and finding solutions to some of the worlds toughest challenges.

Read or Share this story: http://grnol.co/2m1qipe

See the original post:

Clemson researchers work toward brighter future in medicine, security - Greenville News

What it’s like in preventive medicine: Shadowing Dr. Blumenthal – American Medical Association (blog)

As a medical student, do you ever wonder what its like to specialize in preventive medicine? Meet Daniel Blumenthal, MD, a preventive medicine and public health specialist and a featured physician in the AMA Wire Shadow Me Specialty Series, which offers advice directly from physicians about life in their specialties. Check out his insights to help determine whether a career in preventive medicine and public health might be a good fit for you.

Shadowing Dr. Blumenthal

Specialty: Public health and general preventive medicine

Practice setting: Academic

Employment type: Medical school

Years in practice: 42 (retired)

A typical day and week in my practice: I was a medical school department chair. Every day was different. Some days, I taught students. Other days, I worked on research projects or manuscripts or saw patients in a neighborhood health center. I had a meeting or two on most days. A typical week was split between teaching, 10 percent; clinical patient care, 10 percent; research, 30 percent; and administration, 50 percent.

The most challenging and rewarding aspects of caring for preventive medicine patients: Most of the time, students and physicians think about patients as individuals who present themselves one at a time to a doctor in an office or a hospital. But in public health, the community is our patient, and we can go about diagnosing and treating the community using much the same thought processes as we do in treating individuals.

I teach students to think about subjective datathe kind you can collect from a survey or a focus group or a key informant interviewand objective data, such as morbidity and mortality statistics. Frequently, the objective data will lead you down a different path from what the subjective data would. Its important to consider all of that and develop an assessment, a problem list, which may be very longmuch longer than it would be for most individual patientsand then a plan for addressing those problems.

Very often, that plan will be something that involves a policy change or a piece of legislation, which might be a law requiring motorcycle riders to wear helmets or a law requiring children to be completely immunized on school entry. Those are the sorts of things that may be very difficult to convince our elected officials are important, and that may be the most difficult part of treating the community as a patient. But there are other difficult parts as well, such as convincing people to eat more vegetables, which would be undertaken on a community-wide basis.

The most rewarding aspects are seeing students graduate with a real understanding of health equity, as well as seeing improvements in health status indices and reductions in disparities.

Three adjectives to describe the typical preventive medicine specialist: Socially conscious. Oriented to the big picture. Curious.

How my lifestyle matches or differs from what I had envisioned in medical school: As a general pediatrician, the rewards had less to do with treating the self-limited diseases and more to do with watching kids grow up. But that had its limits, and I think treating sore throats and stomach aches would have bored me eventually.

Being in public health and preventive medicine has given me the opportunity to do so many different things, including teaching, research and local public health as a county health officer; national public health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC); international public health with the World Health Organization; and program development as a medical school department chair. That variety of experiences has kept medicine exciting for me. Also, in public health, you can save more lives than you can ever save as a clinician. You just dont know whose lives they are.

Skills every physician in training should have for preventive medicine but wont be tested for on the board exam: Epidemiology, health education and promotion, and policy development. For academicians, specifically: teaching and research skills.

One question every physician in training should ask themselves before pursuing this specialty: Will I be satisfied taking care of one disease or a small group of related diseases for my whole career, or would I prefer to do a variety of things that affect both individuals and populations?

Books every medical student in preventive medicine should be reading:

Maxcy-Rosenau-Last Public Health and Preventive Medicine, edited by Robert Wallacea general reference text; the equivalent of Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics or Goldman-Cecil Medicine

Annals of Epidemiology, by Berton Rouech, or any other book by Rouech

House on Fire: The Fight to Eradicate Smallpox, by William H. Foege, MD, MPH

The online resource students interested in my specialty should follow: The CDC website.

One quick insight I'd give students who are considering preventive medicine: Do an elective at the CDC, a health department or similar. You might get to do some hands-on epidemiology, gather data on a food-borne illness or other outbreak, or even get involved in taking measures to control an epidemic, such as the Zika virus.

If I had a mantra or song to describe my life in this specialty, it would be: Public health is one manifestation of social justice, so Id pick Blowin in the Wind.

See more here:

What it's like in preventive medicine: Shadowing Dr. Blumenthal - American Medical Association (blog)

Holistic medicine, what you need to know – Arizona Sonoro News

Eduardo Estrada and Manny pose for a picture while hiking. (Photo courtesy by: Eduardo Estrada)

October 2016. Eduardo Eddie Estrada gently sips a beer and while closing his eyes. He takes a French fry and looks at his hand as he begins to remember.

Its September 2012. Estrada returns to the United States after a serving his country as a Hospital Man Third Class in Afghanistan. This is where it all began; the nightmares, the stress, the anger.

It started gradually, said Estrada, When I got out of the military, I thought I was fine and didnt have any transition problems but I came from a place that was very strict and everyone respected you.

Estrada deals with a mental illness, as do other 57 million Americans, a disease that affects the individual and the people surrounding them. Most patients are prescribed medications, but new strategies like yoga, meditation, dance and art classes can hold less toxic effects on the body.

But what happens when Americans decide to use holistic methods to cope with their disease?

What Happens in the Brain?

When the brain, the soft-tissue organ whose main functions include nervous and intellectual activity, is damaged in certain regions or has some type of chemical imbalance, it creates a problem for the individual. These problems range from minimal complications to severe complications.

There are different levels of severity for mental disorders, said Dr. Kaitlyn Zavaleta, an adjunct professor at the University of Arizona.

Mental problems arise, not only when the brain is damaged, but when the mind is damaged as well. This, at times, is the result from a traumatic event.

Each mental illness affects the brain differently, said Zavaleta. For example with depression, there are different patterns activated in the brain causing it to be different for every person.

Holistic treatments, however, are not always sponsored by government funds, not covered by insurance companies or the community are not well informed about them even though they are of great value.

Holistic researcher

Holistic treatments involved taking care of the mind, body and soul while looking at all the aspects to help the well being not just from the medical standpoint, said Renee Gregg, Doctor and Assistant Professor, Doctor of Nursing Practice, and Certified Family Nurse Practitioner.

Gregg believes holistic treatments are of great value to society, especially patients suffering from mental health problems.

Everyone thinks they need medication to fix and treat whatever is wrong with them, Gregg said. Its a newer concept for all of us to think that medicine could not be the only concept and it will take time for us to adapt.

Eduardo Estrada posing with his dog Manny. (Photo by: Mar Ruiz/ Arizona Sonora News Service)

Gregg explained that sometimes when a patient has high blood pressure, it could be caused be stress or not having a good diet. There are multiple techniques that help patients like yoga, but patients have to learn how to handle their lifestyles and structures, she said.

We see many promising results and the nurse practitioners are saying theyre finding much more comfort in speaking and a much higher response of patients when they talk to them than they were before, Gregg said.

According to Gregg, the first thing that practitioners look at is prevention and then once the patient passes prevention, they look at yoga, meditation or other holistic treatments that could be used to improve the quality of life and the quality of overall care.

The Natural Medicine Journal says that the annual expenses for alternative car is around $34 billion, most of it coming from the patients own money. The first visit to a Naturopathic doctor could range from $150-$300.

As far as insurance companies, they are not covering the full coverage,said Gregg. They are covering some wellness programs but as far as yoga classes and meditation and massages they are generally not being covered.

Medical providers are being cautioned and limited in opiate medication that patients can get.

We are seeing more insurance coverage of therapies for depression that go along more of the holistic methods, even if its therapy music or a therapy dance, especially in teens and kids, Gregg said.

Insurance companys perspective

Therapy itself may be covered by the insurance companies as long as the patient has a referral from their medical provider. When a patient has a referral, the case manager can work with the insurance company to get the alternative treatment covered.

Judith Revell, Public Executive for the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, a nonprofit mental health watchdog, says their company suggests, but never advises, that patients see a doctor before even trying to suggest other alternative treatments. Revell says that their company knows its important to know first what medical problem or mental problem someone has before giving them a treatment .

Mannys therapy vest worn only during his working time. (Photo by: Mar Ruiz/ Arizona Sonora News Service)

Because some psychiatrist are funded by the pharmaceutical industry, we are here to help them in anything they need so they can get the best treatment, Revell said.

Life

As he took a sip from his beer, Estrada said he never used medication to help him with his problem.not even once because he thought it didnt work.

I chose this route with my dog because I did not want to do medication because most of my friends who did medications were having problems with their sleep, anger, depression and had all the side effects, Estrada said.

Before deciding to actually go to therapy and getting a service dog, Estrada considered himself healthy despite his problems. His problem began gradually once he was back from Afghanistan.

Ive always thought I was a very strong man and some of the stuff I got to see over there were really strong but I thought I was good for it.

The nightmares, the endless fights with his wife, the sense of being lonely.everything went away once he rescued and trained his dog.

I thought I was rescuing him but he was helping me out all the time.

Mar Ruiz is a reporter for Arizona Sonora News, a service from the School of Journalism with the University of Arizona. Contact her at marery@email.arizona.edu.

Click here for high-resolution photos.

Read the original here:

Holistic medicine, what you need to know - Arizona Sonoro News

New provider joins Samaritan Lebanon Health Center Family Medicine clinic – Lebanon Express

Samaritan Lebanon Health Center-Family Medicine has added Certified Nurse Practitioner Devin Petschl to its team.

Devin attained a bachelors degree Gonzaga University, followed by a masters degree in nursing from Georgetown University.

She chose to become a nurse practitioner after working as a nurse in pediatrics and womens health for four years.

I always knew I wanted to be able to do more for my patients, she said. I appreciated the model of practice set for nurse practitioners and found a passion in helping patients meet their healthcare goals using a holistic approach by keeping in mind a patients ethnic, spiritual, environmental and family background.

I chose Samaritan for the opportunity to work in a positive, collaborative environment with easy access to multiple specialties, including in-house radiology and lab, Devin continued. I hope to live up to Samaritan values by increasing access to primary care for those who need care the most.

In her free time, Devin enjoys spending time with her family, hiking, and traveling.

For more information, call 541-451-6282.

More:

New provider joins Samaritan Lebanon Health Center Family Medicine clinic - Lebanon Express

Precision medicine’s Holy Grail: Anticipate cancer’s next step – Healthcare IT News

ORLANDO At the Precision Medicine Symposium on Sunday, Intermountains gastrointestinal medical oncology director, Mark Lewis, MD, outlined both the challenges and solutions to cancer treatment.

Our Holy Grail isnt just to treat now, but to anticipate what cancer is going to do, Lewis said, adding, Cancer is a Darwinian nightmare, with millions of cells competing for survival. If we can anticipate the changes, we may be able to get ahead of it.

Lewis opening keynote at Sundays HIMSS17 Precision Medicine Symposium highlighted the results of Intermountains precision medicine program, which has reduced cancer treatment costs and improved patient outcomes. Intermountain Healthcare is located in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Lewis described the patients journey, which begins at Intermountains precision medicine clinic, followed by a biopsy or FFPE and pathology review. The sample is prepped for molecular analytics, and a molecular tumor board creates a personalized treatment. The process should take two weeks or less from patient entry to results.

To take longer than that is truly doing a disservice to patient care, Lewis said. Cancer doesnt wait.

But a single sample cant allow researchers to understand the complete genomic architecture of cancer, Lewis explained. EMRs, and even our own data warehouses, cant compute the volume of genomic data and arent well-suited to the workflow. And there isnt an excellent mechanism for outcome tracking.

Infrastructure of managing genomic data is absent at most institutions, he said. True implementation comes from measurement outcomes and a clinical champion. There needs to be at least one doctor who invests in precision medicine.

Interoperability is also a challenge, as theres no real industry standard. HL7 has made great use of FHIR, but its not yet used in labs.

The only way were going to move the standard of care ahead for cancer is with research, he said. What genomics is helping us do is to be smarter about how we treat cancer.

And precision medicine needs to be a global effort, Lewis explained, and that its also imperative organizations use specialized tools like Syapse, which streamline precision medicine data in EHR clinical workflows.

What were trying to do here is find things that are actionable and make a difference in a patients care, he said.

Intermountain has generated a large pool of data, which can be used to determine the best course of action for each patient. Patients can be matched to conventional therapies or clinical trials.

Having the data is one thing, but being able to act on that information is another thing entirely, Lewis said. This is not an academic exercise: This is trying to better patient care.

This article is part of our ongoing coverage of HIMSS17. VisitDestination HIMSS17for previews, reporting live from the show floor and after the conference.

Like Healthcare IT News onFacebookandLinkedIn

Read more:

Precision medicine's Holy Grail: Anticipate cancer's next step - Healthcare IT News

3D-printed prosthetic limbs: the next revolution in medicine – The Guardian

Daniel Omar, now 14, was fitted with a 3D-printed prosthetic arm after losing both arms during an aerial attack in Sudan. Photograph: Not Impossible/Project Daniel

John Nhial was barely a teenager when he was grabbed by a Sudanese guerrilla army and forced to become a child soldier. He spent four years fighting, blasting away on guns almost too heavy to hold, until one day the inevitable happened: he was seriously injured, treading on a landmine while he was on morning patrol.

I stepped on it and it exploded, he recalled. It threw me up and down again and then I tried to look for my leg and found that there was no foot.

His comrades carried him back to base camp, but there was hardly any medical care available. It took 25 days before he received proper treatment, during which time he developed tetanus down one side of his body. Finally, Nhial (not his real name) was put on a flight to the Kenyan border, his life only saved when he was handed over to a Red Cross team.

Now, a decade later, he lives in a Juba refugee camp, having suffered further troubles in the conflict that has engulfed the struggling new nation of South Sudan. He plays wheelchair basketball for his country, although he relies on a prosthetic lower leg to struggle around the muddy, sprawling camp. Reaching the most basic services often entails long walks and it can be difficult to get to training. But at least his hands are free to carry things such as food and water, unlike those on crutches.

Such stories of lives devastated by conflict or disease are all too common in developing countries. Lack of an arm or leg can be tough anywhere, but for people in poorer parts of the world it is especially challenging. Some are victims of conflict, while others may have been born with congenital conditions. Many more are injured on roads, with the casualty toll soaring in poorer nations. In Kenya, half the patients on surgical wards have road injuries. The World Health Organization estimates there are about 30 million people like Nhial who require prosthetic limbs, braces or other mobility devices, yet less than 20% have them.

Prosthetics can involve a lot of work and expertise to produce and fit and the WHO says there is currently a shortage of 40,000 trained prosthetists in poorer countries. There is also the time and financial cost to patients, who may have to travel long distances for treatment that can take five days to assess their need, produce a prosthesis and fit it to the residual limb. The result is that braces and artificial limbs are among the most desperately needed medical devices. However, technology may be hurtling to the rescue in the shape of 3D printing.

Slowly but surely, 3D printing, also known as additive manufacturing, has been revolutionising aspects of medicine since the start of the century, just as it has had an impact on so many other industries, from cars to clothing. Perhaps this is not surprising, given that its key benefit is to enable the rapid and cost-efficient creation of bespoke products. There are few commercial products that need to suit a wider variety of shapes and sizes than medical devices made for human beings.

Experts have developed 3D-printed skin for burn victims, airway splints for infants, facial reconstruction parts for cancer patients, orthopaedic implants for pensioners. The fast-developing technology has churned out more than 60m customised hearing-aid shells and ear moulds, while it is daily producing thousands of dental crowns and bridges from digital scans of teeth, replacing the traditional wax modelling methods used for centuries.

Jaw surgery and knee replacement operations are also routinely carried out using surgical guides printed on the machines. So it is no surprise that the technology has begun to stir interest in the field of prosthetics, even if sometimes by accident. Ivan Owen is an American artist who likes to make weird, nerdy gadgets for use in puppetry and budget horror movies. In 2011, he created a simple metal mechanical hand for a steampunk convention, the spiky fingers operated by loops pulled through his own.

He posted a video that was seen by a carpenter in South Africa who had just lost four fingers in a circular-saw accident. They began discussing plans for a prototype prosthetic hand and that came to the attention of the mother of a five-year-old boy, called Liam, who had been born without fingers on his right hand.

She wanted a tiny version of their hand, but Owen realised the child would rapidly grow out of anything they made, so he looked at the idea of using 3D printing. If we could develop a design that was printable, it would be possible to rescale and reprint the design as Liam grew, essentially making it possible for his device to grow with him, he said.

So the artist persuaded a printer manufacturer to donate two machines and developed what has been claimed to be the first 3D-printed mechanical hand. Crucially, rather than patent this work, Owen published the files as open source for anybody to access, allowing others to collaborate on, use and improve the designs.

This has grown into Enabling the Future, a network with 7,000 members in dozens of countries and access to 2,000 printers, who help make arms and hands for those in need. One school student in California even printed a new hand for a local teacher.

Often they are aimed at children, since many dislike the weight, look and hassle of modern prosthetics, which can involve inserting the arm into a silicone sleeve and using straps across the back to hold the device in place.

These body-powered hands cost thousands of pounds, yet must be replaced every couple of years as a child grows. The 3D-printed versions cost about 40, come in any colour and look like a cheery toy, so are often more appealing despite being less sophisticated.

Jorge Zuniga, a research scientist in the biomechanics research department at the University of Nebraska in Omaha, heard about this project on his car radio. He was only half-listening, but on arriving home he started playing baseball with his four-year-old son and observed how important the grabbing of an object was to his childs development.

He spent the next month carefully building a prosthetic model that mimicked the human hand, only for his work to be dismissed instantly by his son. He told me children wanted a hand that looked like a robot.

From this conversation and the open-source designs emerged Cyborg Beast, a project heavily backed by Zunigas department to develop futuristic-looking, low-cost prosthetic hands. You can do anything with 3D printing, said Zuniga, who now leads a seven-strong team. We believe it will revolutionise the prosthetics field. It will lower the costs worldwide and gives engineers, patients and doctors the chance to modify prosthetic hands as they want. And they can be any colour.

When I told Zuniga, slightly hesitantly, that his design looked like a toy, he was delighted. Thats great we want children to see it as a toy, he said. This is a transitional device. Many children do not like prosthetics, however good they are these days, because they might have a hook for a hand and they need help to put the harness on, which children dislike. So this is to bridge the gap, helping them get used to the idea as they grow up.

We have even had a child missing a shoulder. So we developed a device that weighs the same as the missing arm. This meant he not only got a new arm that helped daily life but it also improved his posture and balance, therefore was much better for his spine. This sort of thing can be done much easier with 3D technology.

It is remarkable that people who do not even own a printer can obtain a functional childs hand for the price of a theatre ticket within 24 hours. Zuniga says at least 500 Cyborg Beasts are in use worldwide and the design has been downloaded more than 48,000 times. He has taken it to his native Chile, where he runs a paediatric orthopaedic 3D-printing laboratory, and has had recent requests for the plans from Nigeria.

My concern at this stage is that some of the materials can melt in higher temperatures. It is not working well there yet, but this sort of prosthetic has huge potential to be used with better materials in the developing world. We are still in the infancy stage at this moment.

Another scheme experimenting with this technology is Project Daniel in the Nuba mountains of Sudan, where in the middle of the ongoing civil war an American physician, Tom Catena, has been working as the only permanent doctor for half-a-million people around his Mother of Mercy hospital. Fuelled by his religious faith, for almost a decade this brave medic has ignored bombings, a lack of electricity and water shortages to do everything from delivering babies to amputating limbs.

Its demoralising for us to amputate an arm knowing that there is no good solution, Catena told me by email. We have many arm amputees both above and below the elbow as a result of the war here and general lack of medical care. This in an agricultural society, where nearly everyone is a subsistence farmer. If one is missing an arm, he is not very functional in this society.They become totally dependent on the family and have a difficult time getting married [which is also very important in this society].

The idea of using 3D printing to help arose when Mick Ebeling, an American film producer and philanthropist, learned about the Mother of Mercy hospital at the same time as he was hearing about the emerging work on low-cost prosthetic hands. Searching for information on Catena, Ebeling read about one of his patients: Daniel Omar, a 12-year-old boy who had wrapped his arms around a tree to protect himself during an aerial attack. His face and body were protected when a bomb exploded nearby, but both the boys arms were blown off.

You cant just smash in these new technologies, but if we get this right the growth could be exponential

Ebeling travelled out to the Nuba mountains with 3D printers and, working with hospital staff, fitted about a dozen people with new arms. Unfortunately, as time went on, none of the amputees was using the prostheses as they felt they were too cumbersome, said Catena. The doctor concluded: The 3D model was good, fairly easy to make and inexpensive although it hasnt worked out so well here. Perhaps with some tweaking, the 3D printers can be of great use for arm amputees.

Yet for all the agonies and difficulties associated with arm loss, the bigger problem in poorer countries is when lower limb disability leads to a loss of mobility. Wheelchairs are expensive and can be difficult to use when roads are potholed, streets are muddy and pavements are nonexistent. Without a prosthetic limb, people struggle to fetch water, prepare food and, above all, to work. This throws them back on their families and communities, intensifying any hardship and poverty.

One group that has spent almost three decades trying to tackle these issues is Exceed, a British charity set up by diplomats and academics at the request of Cambodias government to help thousands of landmine survivors. It works in five Asian countries, training people at schools of prosthetics and orthotics. In Cambodia, there are almost 9,000 landmine survivors in need of artificial limbs, although these days traffic accidents are a more likely cause of disability, while children also need braces for a range of common conditions such as spina bifida, cerebral palsy and polio.

If you wear a prosthesis, you are disabled for about 10 minutes in the morning while you have a shower, then you put your leg on and go to work. If you do not have one, then your hands are out of use with crutches so you cant even take drinks to the table, said Carson Harte, a prosthetist and the chief executive of Exceed. Without a prosthesis, there are no expectations. You just go back and rely on the goodwill of your family.

It is not really a lack of money that denies people these devices, since simplified forms cost little and generic Chinese models are improving fast. The components can cost just 30. The big hurdle is the lack of trained technicians to fit the artificial limbs. In the Philippines, there are estimated to be 2 million people needing prosthetics or orthotics. However, there are only nine fully trained experts, each able to treat 400 patients a year, at most, although more are being trained on a new four-year course.

Traditionally, a prosthetist would wrap a stump with plaster of Paris bandages to make a reverse mould and let it dry, then fill it with more plaster that must harden. From this, a socket can be forged that fits, with more modifications for precision, to the bone on the stump. Great care must be taken to avoid nerves and tender areas that are not tolerant of pressure.

The key for the technician is to understand the pathology of a stump, which differs for each person. This is a cumbersome process that can take a week, especially with physical therapy for new patients that lasts three days. It can also be messy work, mixing up and moulding the plaster, while a prosthetist visiting a rural area must transport 20-kilo packs of plaster. With a 3D scanner, a digital image can be made in half an hour and sent by email.

Exceed has begun a seven-month trial of 3D-printed devices in Cambodia with Nia Technologies, an innovative Canadian not-for-profit organisation. This technology has the potential to increase the productivity of every technician, said Harte. It is not about printing off legs, nor does it replace the skills of a well-trained professional, but it has potential to produce a better, faster, more easily repeatable way of doing one key part of the chain. There are no magic bullets, but this may be an important incremental change.

Nia is also trialling its 3D PrintAbility technology in Tanzania and Uganda, where there are only 12 prosthetists to serve a population of about 40 million people; at the time of writing, all six state clinics have run out of materials. Doctors there often deal with children who have lost limbs after falling into open cooking fires, while other youngsters need braces after suffering post-injection paralysis caused by badly administered jabs that damage nerves.

In Uganda, its team is working with CoRSU hospital in Kisubi, a specialist rehabilitation centre for children with disabilities. Orthopaedic technician Moses Kaweesa said they found the technology lighter and faster to use, as well as easier for people in remote rural areas. It used to take five days to have a limb manufactured, with lots of hanging around for the patient. Now, it is barely two days, so they spend much less time in the hospital. There is also less waste of material, so for a country like ours this can help so much by cutting down the costs.

The first person to test out a 3D-printed mobility device at the hospital was a four-year-old girl who until then had dragged herself across floors and had to be carried around by her family. When she was born, her right leg was missing the foot, said her older brother. It was very difficult for her to walk, to play with other children. She can be lonely. But when she was given a leg she was able to run with others, play with others.

Matt Ratto, Nias chief science officer, who led the projects development, admitted that it was only when he saw the serious-looking child in her red dress start to walk that he realised his technology actually worked. But, like Harte, he urges caution. We are surrounded by the hype of 3D printing with crazy, ridiculous claims being made, he said. We must be cautious. A lot of these technologies fail not for engineering reasons but because they are not designed for the developing world. You cant just smash in these new technologies.

Rattos aim is to use the technology to fit 8,000 people with 3D-printed mobility devices within five years, across some 20 sites in poorer countries. If we get this right the growth could be exponential. If we iron out the kinks, and work out the best way to help clinicians, I think we will see something of a hockey stick curve on the graph. But we must not get it wrong, move too fast nor over-hype the potential.

This article first appeared on Mosaic and is republished here under a Creative Commons licence

See more here:

3D-printed prosthetic limbs: the next revolution in medicine - The Guardian

Definitions relating to regenerative medicine studies at the Steadman Philippon Research Institute – The Denver Post

Biologics: Using tools produced by a patients body such as stem cells and platelet-rich plasma (PRP) to help the patient heal faster and better.

Regenerative medicine: This and tissue engineering are promising treatment approaches that can enhance or promote musculoskeletal tissue healing and regeneration following surgery or injection therapy. Biological treatments such as growth factor supplementation, PRP and bone marrow concentrate have been shown to improve patient function and quality of life.

Platelet-rich plasma: A biologic treatment that is produced by concentrating the patients own blood to yield a high platelet count. Platelets are important blood components that secrete hundreds to thousands of biological factors that initiate musculoskeletal tissue healing and regeneration.

Stem cells: Stem cells have the ability to transform into specific musculoskeletal tissue cells. These types of cells also secrete biological factors that initiate musculoskeletal tissue healing and regeneration. There are several forms of stem cells, such as muscle-derived stem cells, bone marrow-derived stem cells, adipose-derived stem cells and others.

John Meyer, The Denver Post

Read this article:

Definitions relating to regenerative medicine studies at the Steadman Philippon Research Institute - The Denver Post

Dr. David Katz, Preventative Medicine: Diet Trial Tribulations – New Haven Register

We do not always need a definitive RCT to know what we know; and I make a living running such trials. Suppose you wanted to know with something nearing certainty what specific dietary pattern was best for human health. How would you proceed?

First, you would need to define best in an operational (i.e., measurable) way. Does best mean lowers LDL in the short term, or does it mean raises HDL, or both? Does it mean it lowers inflammatory markers, or insulin, or blood glucose, or blood pressure? Does it mean all of these, or does it mean something else? Is the short term one month, or three, or a year?

I dont think any of these, or anything like them, really satisfies what we think we mean when we say best for health. I think the intended meaning of that is actually rather clear: the combination of longevity, and vitality. Years in life, and life in years, if you will. I think a diet is best for health and yes, I have wrestled with this very issue before if it fuels a long, robust life free of preventable chronic diseases (e.g., heart disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes, dementia, etc.) and obesity, and endows us with the energy both mental and physical- to do all we want and aspire to do. That, I think, is a robust definition of best for health.

We are obligated to wrestle comparably with the operational definition of a specific diet. Low fat, or low carb dont mean much. A low fat diet could be rich in beans and lentils, or made up exclusively of lollipops. A low carb diet could cut out refined starch and added sugar, or exclude all fruits and vegetables. Lets not belabor this, and simply concede that the relevant test to prove that one, specific dietary prescription (e.g., the Ornish diet, or the South Beach diet, or the DASH diet, etc.) is best is to establish optimized versions of the various contenders, from vegan to Paleo, and put them up against one another directly.

Advertisement

And now our tribulations begin. As we noted at the start, our outcome is the combination of longevity and vitality. To get at longevity, we need a very long trial; in fact, our trial needs to last a lifetime. So, just to get started, we are toying with the notion of a randomized trial running for 80 to 100 years.

Since we are comparing optimal versions of diets reasonably under consideration for best diet laurels, we may anticipate that our study participants are apt to be healthier, and longer-lived in general than the population at large, consuming the lamentable typical American diet.

Thats a problem too. If our entire study sample does well, it raises the bar to show that one of our diets is truly, meaningfully better than another. The smaller the difference we are seeking, the larger the sample size we need to find it. That now means we need not only a RCT unprecedented in length, but unprecedented in size, too. We need to randomize tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands to study the effects of competing diets on vitality and longevity at a cost that is staggering to contemplate, and would certainly run into the billions of dollars.

This study has not been done. This study will not be done. But, so what?

Lets contrast our ostensible need for this RCT to how we know what we know about putting out house fires. There has never been, to the best of my knowledge, a RCT to show that water is a better choice than gasoline. Do you think we need such a trial, to establish the legitimacy of the basic theme (i.e., use water) of the right approach? Would you, and your home, be willing to participate in such a trial when you call 911 knowing you might randomly be assigned to the gasoline arm of the study?

I trust we agree that observation, experience, and sense serve to establish beyond the realm of reasonable (or, even, any) doubt that water is generally good for putting out house fires, and gasolinenot so much.

My friends diet is the same. The want of a RCT addressing this kind of water versus that does not mire us in perpetual cluelessness about the basic approach to putting out fires. Sure, we could do RCTs to add to what we know, but the want of such studies does not expunge what we already know based on empirical evidence, long experience, observation, and sense.

A diet comprised principally of minimally processed vegetables, fruits, whole grains, beans, lentils and pulses, nuts, seeds, with plain water preferentially for thirst is the best theme for human and planetary health alike, and runs commonly through all the legitimate, specific contestants, just as water is the best theme when aiming a fire hose. To conclude otherwise is to misconstrue the utility of randomized trials, succumb to their tyranny, and lose our way in a bog of tribulations.

Dr. David L. Katz, http://www.davidkatzmd.com; is founder, True Health Initiative.

View post:

Dr. David Katz, Preventative Medicine: Diet Trial Tribulations - New Haven Register

Dear Sports Medicine Counsel #4 – The Argus.ca

Dear Sports Medicine Counsel,

I am a hockey player in the winter and avid long distance runner in the summer. While I had my best marathon time yet this summer, its getting harder for me to keep up with my teammates on the ice. A lot of my teammates are using energy drinks before the game could this be the secret to their speed? I am a very fit individual and dont get why I am falling behind. Should I consider using energy drinks before games?

Best regards,

Enduring Eddie

Dear Enduring Eddie,

That is quite the dilemma you have; your questions raise some issues about training methods and the use of caffeine as a performance-enhancing supplement. First of all, it is important to recognize how different your chosen sports are. Long distance running is an endurance sport, whereas hockey involves short, intense bursts of exertion similar to a sprinter. Because of this, your body has to use different sources of fuel to produce energy. When you run long distances, the energy demands placed on your body are relatively small. Thus your body can use fat along with oxygen to produce energy; this is called aerobic metabolism. On the other hand, the immediate energy required to race for a puck is much larger, so much so that your body is unable to meet this through aerobic metabolism alone. Without oxygen, energy is produced through the breakdown of sugars, called anaerobic metabolism. You can think of anaerobic metabolism as your bodys immediate energy source and aerobic metabolism as a sustainable source.

Now if that wasnt enough of a difference, your body uses different muscle fibers depending on the intensity of the exercise youre doing. When running long distances, youre using fibers that are well suited for endurance and aerobic metabolism, called slow-twitch fibers. When you sprint, youre using fibers which are great at producing a significant amount of energy but quickly fatigue. These are called fast-twitch fibers. Think of your body as having two separate factories, one aerobic and the other anaerobic, with a fixed number of workers between them. When youre running a marathon, imagine that your aerobic factory is producing almost all the energy for your body while the anaerobic factorys outputs are minimal. In training, when you repetitively stress one factory over another, your body will take workers from the lesser used factory and place them where they are needed most. This effect is related to the concept of training specificity, or, that changes in the body will be specific to the method in which you train.

The reason you may be falling behind your teammates playing hockey isnt that they are gaining an advantage over you by taking energy drinks. Instead, they are likely spending more time training their anaerobic factory than you are. If you want to keep up your with your teammates on the ice, youll have to start adding some anaerobic training to your program. This kind of training involves weight lifting, sprints, high-intensity interval training (HIIT), or anything that closely resembles the movement and intensity of hockey. In fact, many studies have shown HIIT to be an effective way to increase your bodys maximum oxygen consumption. Adding some HIIT may not only improve your speed on the ice but could also decrease your marathon times.

Consuming an energy drink before a game can make you feel more alert and ready, due to its high caffeine content. This feeling is favourable among many athletes, which is why caffeine is commonly used as a performance-enhancing supplement. If you wish to use caffeine before games, here are a few guidelines:

Hope this helps!

Sports Medicine Counsel

Go here to read the rest:

Dear Sports Medicine Counsel #4 - The Argus.ca

Smartphones are revolutionizing medicine – Phys.Org

February 18, 2017 by Jean-Louis Santini Researchers are finding new benefits to smartphone features such as camera and flash, which can help examine and diagnose patients

Smartphones are revolutionizing the diagnosis and treatment of illnesses, thanks to add-ons and apps that make their ubiquitous small screens into medical devices, researchers say.

"If you look at the camera, the flash, the microphone... they all are getting better and better," said Shwetak Patel, engineering professor at the University of Washington.

"In fact the capabilities on those phones are as great as some of the specialized devices," he told the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual meeting this week.

Smartphones can already act as pedometers, count calories and measure heartbeats.

But mobile devices and tablets can also become tools for diagnosing illness.

"You can use the microphone to diagnose asthma, COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder)," Patel said.

"With these enabling technologies you can manage chronic diseases outside of the clinic and with a non-invasive clinical tool."

It is also possible to use the camera and flash on a mobile phone to diagnose blood disorders, including iron and hemoglobin deficiency.

"You put your finger over the camera flash and it gives you a result that shows the level of hemoglobin in the blood," Patel said.

An app called HemaApp was shown to perform comparably well as a non-smartphone device for measuring hemoglobin without a needle. Researchers are seeking approval from the US Food and Drug Administration for its wider use.

Smartphones can also be used to diagnose osteoporosis, a bone disorder common in the elderly.

Just hold a smartphone, turn on the right app in hand and tap on your elbow.

"Your phone's motion picture sensor picks up the resonances that are generated," Patel said.

"If there is a reduction in density of the bone, the frequency changes, which is the same as you will have in an osteoporosis bone."

Such advances can empower patients to better manage their own care, Patel said.

"You can imagine the broader impact of this in developing countries where screening tools like this in the primary care offices are non-existent," he told reporters.

"So it really changes the way we diagnose, treat and manage chronic diseases."

Lower costs

Mobile smartphone devices are already helping patients manage cancer and diabetes, says Elizabeth Mynatt, professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

"Someone who is newly diagnosed with diabetes really needs to become their own detectives," she said.

"They need to learn the changes they need to make in their daily lifestyle."

For women newly diagnosed with breast cancer, researchers provided a tablet that allows them real-time access to information on the diagnosis, management of their treatment and side effects.

The technique also helps patients who may not be able to travel to a medical office for regular care, reducing their costs.

"Our tool becomes a personal support system," Mynatt said. "They can interact to get day-to-day advice."

Research has shown this approach "changes dramatically their behavior," she added.

"The pervasiveness of the adoption of mobile platform is quite encouraging for grappling with pervasive socio-economic determinants in terms of healthcare disparities."

A growing number of doctors and researchers are turning to smartphones for use in their daily work, seeing them as a useful tool for managing electronic health data and figuring out the most effective clinical trials, said Gregory Hager, professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins University.

Clinical trials currently cost around $12 million to run from start to finish, he said.

"The new idea is micro-randomized trials, which should be far more effective, with more natural data," he said.

Although the costs could be dramatically lower, too, the field is still new and more work needs to be done to figure out how to fully assess the quality and the effectiveness of such trials.

Explore further: HemaApp screens for anemia, blood conditions without needle sticks

2017 AFP

In the developing world, anemiaa blood condition exacerbated by malnutrition or parasitic diseaseis a staggeringly common health problem that often goes undiagnosed.

Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) would benefit if pulmonary function testing was used more consistently to diagnose the condition, according to a study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal)

Food and Drug Administration officials say they will begin regulating a new wave of applications and gadgets that work with smartphones to take medical readings and help users monitor their health.

UK doctors and nurses are routinely using their own smartphonesincluding apps and messaging systemsfor patient care, reveals a survey of frontline staff, published in the online journal BMJ Innovations.

People suffering from asthma or other chronic lung problems are typically only able to get a measure of their lung function at the doctor's office a few times a year by blowing into a specialized piece of equipment. More ...

Two reports from AmericanEHR Partners based on a survey of nearly 1,400 physicians suggests that tablets are of greater use for clinical purposes than smartphones.

Smartphones are revolutionizing the diagnosis and treatment of illnesses, thanks to add-ons and apps that make their ubiquitous small screens into medical devices, researchers say.

You may not realize it but alien subatomic particles raining down from outer space are wreaking low-grade havoc on your smartphones, computers and other personal electronic devices.

BYU engineering professors have created an origami-inspired, lightweight bulletproof shield that can protect law enforcement from gunfire.

When vertebrates run, their legs exhibit minimal contact with the ground. But insects are different. These six-legged creatures run fastest using a three-legged, or "tripod" gait where they have three legs on the ground at ...

The cutting-edge biocompatible near-infrared 3D tracking system used to guide the suturing in the first smart tissue autonomous robot (STAR) surgery has the potential to improve manual and robot-assisted surgery and interventions ...

When people suffer spinal cord injuries and lose mobility in their limbs, it's a neural signal processing problem. The brain can still send clear electrical impulses and the limbs can still receive them, but the signal gets ...

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

Read more:

Smartphones are revolutionizing medicine - Phys.Org

Request For Abstracts: The Practice Of Medicine – Health Affairs (blog)

Health Affairs

February 17, 2017

Health Affairs seeks submissions for a series of articles focusing on the practice of medicine that we will begin publishing in early 2017. The series will explore the broad practice environment and how features of that environment affect physicians, other clinicians, and the practice of medicine on a number of dimensions. The practice environment includes forces that physicians and other clinicians respond to (both on a daily basis and in a strategic sense), such as regulatory requirements, payment policy, quality measurement, economic and market influences, the organization of care, technology, professional standards, etc. We are interested in papers that reflect on and explore how such factors affect care delivery, including consideration of broader implications for health care spending, access to care, and health outcomes.

We will consider new empirical research, essays, reviews, and analysis/commentaries that address these topics.

We invite submissions from anyone with an interest in this topic. Health Affairs reaches a wide audience that includes policymakers; academics and researchers from many disciplines; health and public health professionals and officials; health industry executives; lawyers; consultants; students; and members of the media. Authors should be mindful of this breadth and aim to write for readers who have an interest in health policy issues, but should not assume expertise among readers on any particular topic.

We welcome essays and commentaries, but submissions should have a strong basis in evidence and reflect a thorough understanding of the state of knowledge of the subjects explored as well as the policy issues and questions that surround those subjects.

Please consult our online guidelines for additional formatting instructions and answers tofrequently asked questions.If you have questions about the suitability of a particular paper, please e-mail us at POM_queries@projecthope.org.

We thank you for your time and consideration. Please feel free to pass this invitation along to colleagues who might be interested, as well.

We are grateful to the Physicians Foundation for providing support for this series.

Read more here:

Request For Abstracts: The Practice Of Medicine - Health Affairs (blog)

Was Andy Cohen the Shadiest Person at the Married to Medicine Reunion? 5 Fierce Moments You Need to Check Out – Bravo (blog)

It was time for the Married to Medicine ladies to face the heat this week after a contentious Season 4. Allegations, shade, and sass abounded when the crew sat down with Andy Cohenfor the epic post-season chat and Andy didn't hold back with his own witty barbs while rehashing everything that went down this past season. We're breaking down some of the buzziest moments from last night in The Daily Dish Morning After.

Listen, even thissquad can't handle all the shade that Andy brings to the stage. That guy can mess around with the best of them, as you can see above.

With all the debate about the ladies' marriages and husbands, the fellas will get to weigh in on all the drama during Part 2 of the reunion, airing Friday at 8/7c.

...and better than ever, if you ask us. The Charleston gang returns to the airwaves on Monday, April 3 at 9/8c. In the meantime, preview all the feisty ups and downs above.

While most parents pray their adult kids will move out, The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills mom and self-confessed buritto lover is all about her police officer son, Tommy, residing with her. "I actually love having my son there. He's free security, OK?" she joked.

In fact he oozes so much pride for his daughters, that they sometimes even make him cry. All together now, "Awww!"

Check back every morning as we'll be recapping the 5 must-see moments from the night before. And don't forget to tune in toThe Daily Dishpodcastto get the latest on what's happening in the Bravo galaxy, currently available oniTunes,Soundcloud,Google Play, and Amazon's Alexa.

Read the original post:

Was Andy Cohen the Shadiest Person at the Married to Medicine Reunion? 5 Fierce Moments You Need to Check Out - Bravo (blog)

Family Medicine Faculty More Diverse Than Most, but Still Wanting – AAFP News

Departments of family medicine employ a higher percentage of female and underrepresented minority faculty members than do those of other specialties as a group, but there is still a way to go before medical schools catch up with the nation's changing demographics, according to a recent study.

Researchers at the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) and the Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care analyzed the number of women and racial and ethnic minorities in family medicine departments and compared that figure with averages among all other medical faculty.

The study, "Increasing Family Medicine Faculty Diversity Still Lags Population Trends,"(www.jabfm.org) was published in the January/February issue of the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.

From 1980 to 2015, the number of full-time family medicine faculty increased nearly fourfold, from 1,396 to 5,507 positions. The proportion of female and minority faculty in family medicine departments more than doubled during that period.

"The fact that FM departments are becoming more diverse is encouraging, given that primary care faculty are charged with training the source of first-contact, continuous, coordinated and comprehensive care for underserved minority patients," the researchers wrote.

Still, women and minorities hold a higher percentage of the lower-ranking faculty positions.

Women occupy 51 percent of family medicine assistant professorships and ethnic minorities hold 12.6 percent, a higher average percentage of both groups than is found among other medical faculty departments. But when it comes to full professor positions in family medicine, women occupy just 30 percent, and minorities occupy only 7 percent, according to data from the AAMC Faculty Roster.

Progress can be seen, but diversity among faculty still does not reflect that among the U.S. population as a whole, where ethnic minorities grew from 18 percent of the population in 1980 to 31 percent in 2015.

More rapid gains are being made in gender equality than in racial and ethnic diversity. More undergraduate students entering universities are female, and researchers noted that the majority of black physicians are female.

Imam Xierali, Ph.D., a senior researcher at the AAMC, told AAFP News that incoming minority faculty members could benefit from a mentorship program that offers assistance with writing grants and conducting research, two essential factors that determine eligibility for promotion.

Although the medical profession has pushed to expand the number of physicians, and several new medical schools have opened since 2003, overall diversity ratios have remained flat during that period.

A diverse faculty is important because incoming medical students say that diversity is a consideration when they select a school. It's particularly problematic that the proportion of minority faculty is lower than that of minority students who are entering medical school.

"We need to double down on our efforts regarding the value of diversity," Xierali said. "The population base is changing, and we need to acknowledge that."

Admittedly, achieving diversity will take longer among medical faculty than among the student population because of slow turnover, but that should not discourage family medicine departments and all other medical faculty from rededicating their efforts.

"Medical schools and academic FM departments may need to review their current practices and policies with an eye toward enabling more faculty diversity through institutional transformation and moving diversity from the periphery to the core of institutional excellence," the researchers wrote.

Related AAFP News Coverage High Court Affirms Value of Diversity in Meeting Educational Mission Carefully Tailored Nod to Race in Med School Admissions Benefits Patients, Say AAFP Experts (7/6/2016)

AAFP Joins Brief Supporting Diversity in Med School Admissions Supreme Court to Hear Oral Arguments Dec. 9 (11/20/2015)

More From AAFP Policy on Workforce Reform

Policy on Diversity in the Workforce

Policy on Medical Schools, Minority and Women Representation In Medicine

More:

Family Medicine Faculty More Diverse Than Most, but Still Wanting - AAFP News

Medicine Hat unveils proposal to assist residents dealing with poverty – The Globe and Mail

The race to eradicate poverty has moved to the forefront of issues confronting Albertas cities, large and small. The provincial capital has End Poverty Edmonton, a 10-year plan to address the more than 100,000 people living in poverty. In Calgary, Enough For All: The Calgary Poverty Reduction Initiative is working to help the more than 114,000 people who live below the poverty line.

Now, Medicine Hat has joined the fight. On Wednesday, its Poverty Reduction Leadership Group unveiled Thrive, its own proposal to assist the one in 10 residents dealing with poverty defined as someone who earns less than what they need to meet the necessities of life.

But what makes Medicine Hat so uniquely qualified to end poverty is its reputation as a place where things get done.

Two years ago, it became the first Canadian city to solve homelessness. It succeeded by taking 1,072 people, including 312 children, off the streets and providing them with a place to live, be it a house, an apartment, basement suite, trailer, townhouse or condo. The rent was set at 30 per cent of a persons income, and pride of ownership has helped keep homelessness from making a significant comeback.

Medicine Hat has been so vigilant at monitoring homelessness, it has attracted the interest of city officials from Victoria, B.C. to St. Johns, Nfld., to Texas, Washington State and the United Kingdom. The program was so successful it became the springboard for ridding an even bigger problem.

When we announced a functional end to homelessness, the next step was logically poverty reduction, said Medicine Hat Councillor Celina Symmonds, who was involved in the homelessness project as a member of the Community Housing Society. It is a very co-ordinated effort [taking on poverty], but this community does pull together. I like to call it the little community that can.

Emanuel Akech, 44, can attest to that. He arrived alone in Medicine Hat in 2008, after leaving his war-torn homeland of Sudan and spending 14 years in Cuba, before eventually becoming a Canadian citizen. When he reached Medicine Hat, he had only a backpack with him.

Community Housing put him in a place for the night, got him into the Canadian Mental Health Associations Housing First program, which ultimately placed him in a fourplex. He pays his rent from the income support he receives from the federal government. He is aware of how fortunate he is.

I see some suffering the same way. Ive been there, he said of his early days in Alberta. To not suffer like that, I like that way.

Medicine Hats approach is to streamline a one-stop system where all services and social needs can be met. Assistance will come from a myriad of sources including the city, Medicine Hat College, the school board and the food bank, all of them committed to making things work and work well.

Theyre all on the inside and theyre pushing the agenda through their different networks, said Jaime Rogers, manager of the Homeless and Housing Development Department. Thats why this is working, because you have all these background players who have connections and legitimacy in the community.

Measuring poverty in Canada is not an exact exercise. The federal government has defined the low-income measuring point as having half the median income of an equivalent household. In Statistics Canadas most recent survey, nearly five million Canadians were considered impoverished.

End Poverty Edmonton was unveiled in September of 2015 as united task force involving the city, the provinces Poverty Reduction Strategy and the United Ways Capital Region. Its members are business people, academia and health-care and social-service workers. Their research told them one in eight Edmontonians earn less than $16,968 per year.

In Calgary, the Poverty Reduction Initiative first surveyed the public to understand what poverty meant and how it impacted people. Enough For All is a collaborative effort between the city and the United Way of Calgary designed to assist the one in 10 Calgarians living below the poverty line. The goal is to be poverty free in a generation.

I think its a worthy initiative, said John Kolkman, research and policy analysis co-ordinator for the Edmonton Social Planning Council. Is it overly ambitious? Some have argued that theres so much attention on the overarching developments that we miss what it really is a series of small steps.

Mr. Kolkman pointed to Medicine Hat as proof that social ills can be cured.

Medicine Hat has largely eliminated chronic homelessness thats when people cant hold a place to stay no matter what is done. Medicine Hat has the gold standard for eliminating that, he said. Ive been to Medicine Hat and Ive been impressed with how cohesive it is there between the city, the non-profit organizations, businesses, the labour unions. Its helped by having the population it has [being the right size to see positive results].

Medicine Hats approach to poverty has 17 milestones to gauge how its performing. Yearly suicide rates will be monitored. So will the waiting lists for social housing. It will be, its administrators believe, very much a made-in-Medicine-Hat success story.

I think communities now are starting to take a look at themselves and saying, What can we do to be part of the solution? Ms. Symmonds said. Yes, provincial and federal governments are going to have to be a part of this. There has to be changes in systems across the board. That said, we have a lot to offer here.

A House of Commons committee on human resources, skills and social development will be in Medicine Hat Thursday for a public hearing. The committee is gathering information on how to reduce poverty.

Editor's Note: An earlier version of this story incorrectly said Medicine Hat homeless persons were granted new purpose-built housing. In fact, they were granted housing in existing homes, apartments and townhouses.

Follow Allan Maki on Twitter: @AllanMaki

Read more:

Medicine Hat unveils proposal to assist residents dealing with poverty - The Globe and Mail

Married to Medicine’s Quad Webb-Lunceford Aims to Prove She’s … – E! Online

Alex Martinez/Bravo

Prepare yourselves for a double dose of doctors and drama.

After a successful fourth season, the cast of Married to Medicine is coming together for a two-part reunion special. As you likely could have predicted, all of these ladies are not on the same page.

Before part one airs tonight on Bravo, E! News chattedwith Quad who expressed her delight at being seated next to Dr. Simone, Dr. Heavenly and Toya.

"I was right where I needed to be. I was prime-time television and right where I needed to be," she told E! News exclusively. "To be honest, I'm really good with almost everyone from the show excluding the person who drove my name through the mud the entire season and her little minion."

If you haven't already guessed, Quad is talking about Mariah and Lisa Nicole.

Throughout the season, these three haven't seen eye-to-eye and based on previews, it's only going to continue at the reunion.

"I have purged those people from my life and when you get bit by a snake, you got to get all of the poison out and you don't let that snake come around again and I'm okay with where I am with Lisa and Mariah and I," Quad explained. "If the question was would we ever be friends again, I can tell you absolutely not.I can tell you I do not trust Mariah or Lisa Nicole. That ship has sunk to the bottom of the ocean."

She added, "My advice to Lisa is never be a pawn in someone else's game and she was a pawn in Mariah's chess game."

During the two-part reunion, fans will also see the husbands join the conversation and discuss some hot-button issues of the season. Toya will open up about her financial situation while Dr. Jackie will share new details about her marriage.

As for Mariah calling her co-star "Quad the Fraud," you better believe there will be some heated discussion about that as well.

"Sometimes people are doing a lot of projecting," Quad teased to E! News. "I didn't appreciate the Quad the Fraud' thing but then again, it didn't really affect me because I know that's not who I am."

Married to Medicine airs Friday night at 8 p.m. only on Bravo.

(E! and Bravo are part of the NBCUniversal family)

E! Online - Your source for entertainment news, celebrities, celeb news, and celebrity gossip. Check out the hottest fashion, photos, movies and TV shows!

See the original post here:

Married to Medicine's Quad Webb-Lunceford Aims to Prove She's ... - E! Online

Mercy Health joins forces with Michigan Medicine – Grand Haven Tribune

This new relationship brings together two of the states leading health care providers to offer opportunities for patients to access joint clinical consultations in cardiac surgery; allow immediate access to some of the worlds leading protocols in cardiovascular surgery; provide physicians options for ongoing case discussions and best practices; and enhance patient care, including access to innovative clinical care models, for one of Michigans leading Catholic hospitals.

The professional services agreement includes the appointments of two West Michigan-based physicians, Dr. Richard S. Downey and Dr. Nabeel G. El-amir, to the Michigan Medicine cardiac surgery faculty. This gives them the ability to collaborate with Michigan Medicines heart team on complex cases and non-complex consultations. The two will continue to perform open heart surgery services in Muskegon.

As members of the U-M medical faculty, Downey and El-amir can participate in U-M medical education opportunities and U-M supported clinical trials. They retain their clinical relationships with physicians in West Michigan.

This collaboration is part of our continued commitment to enter affiliations with key health care providers, such as Michigan Medicine, to bring the best care and access to West Michigan, Mercy Health President/CEO Roger Spoelman said. Together, we will continue to strengthen the level of health care in this region. Both organizations share a commitment to excellence and to continue offering care in a complex health care environment.

Dr. Richard Prager, director of the University of MichigansFrankel Cardiovascular Center, said the collaboration will allow Michigan Medicine to provide Mercy Health patients a team of doctors and researchers who make significant advances in cardiovascular surgery.

Read the original:

Mercy Health joins forces with Michigan Medicine - Grand Haven Tribune

Maine’s HealthInfoNet taps Orion Health for precision medicine platform – Healthcare IT News

Maine's Health Information Exchange, HealthInfoNet, announced that it will deploy Orion Healths precision medicine platform.

Orion's Amadeus platform leverages an open and scalable database to capture, store and align patient information from multiple providers and payers.

The HealthInfoNet deal with Orion is pending final review by the HealthInfoNet Board of Directors, and the financial terms were not released.

HealthInfoNet also plans to incorporate Orion Health's integrated population health applications Coordinate and Amadeus Analytics. The goal is to ensure the timely delivery of insightful patient information to healthcare professionals, HealthInfoNet COO Shaun Alfreds said.

HealthInfoNet's HIE contains 98 percent of all Maine residents' clinical information and is connected to all Maine hospitals and more than 500 ambulatory care sites.

Alfreds said HealthInfoNet chose Orion Health for the precision medicine platform because of its single suite of open source, scalable products that offer in-depth analysis and interoperability at both a population and an individual patient level.

"The precision medicine tools will allow us to bring to fruition a new data exchange that expands beyond the delivery system to incorporate social services, genomics, and other unstructured data that will in turn empower Maine residents to be active participants in their health in a new 'data-informed' ecosystem, Alfreds said in a statement.

Go here to see the original:

Maine's HealthInfoNet taps Orion Health for precision medicine platform - Healthcare IT News

Hospitals, Hospital Medicine, And Health For All – Health Affairs (blog)

In September 2015, world leaders convened at the United Nations Summit to adopt the Sustainable Development Goals. Goal three, to ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages, is ambitious, and many in the field are asking how nations can contribute to achieving this target. The world has made great health gains, but in order to ensure health for all, the current and highly successful strategies of investing in primary health care (PHC), outreach, and implementing vertical, disease-oriented programs must be integrated with a safety net of high quality hospitals. We believe that the field of hospital medicinea clinical specialty that combines knowledge in acute care and inpatient medicine with expertise in hospital care deliverycan steward the valuable resource of hospital care toward high performance.

Since the Alma Ata Declaration in 1978the landmark declaration that affirmed the importance of primary carethe health care system strengthening strategy has emphasized PHC. With its successes in equitably delivering cost-effective health care services, the PHC movement has become a priority for achieving universal health coverage. Meanwhile, hospitals have either primarily served the well-to-do or catastrophically impoverished the poor, and have been seen as cost sinks for ministry of health budgets; hospital expenditures account for a quarter to half of total health expenditures in Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, and can be higher in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Although both non-health care interventions (for example, road safety policy) and PHC can prevent the lions share of the global burden of disease, which is shifting toward predominantly non-communicable and chronic diseases, prevention and early intervention do not obviate the need for hospital care. There is mounting evidence of the important role hospitals will need to play in health care systems.

An integrated continuum of care allows patients to move seamlessly from the community to the clinic to the hospital, and then back home as illness episodes come and go. Yet access to high quality hospital care remains inadequate, particularly in LMICs. Of the 42.7 million adverse events and consequent 23 million disability adjusted life years lost in hospitals worldwide, two-thirds occurred in LMIC. Furthermore, as many as one in 50 hospital admissions in a group of eight LMICs led to death from preventable adverse events, or errors. Simply put, hospitals around the world are underperforming.

The recognition that hospital care requires a specialized skill set, and the organization of a discipline to supply that skill set, is relatively new. Unlike other medical specialties that focus on an organ system (e.g. cardiology), group of diseases (e.g. infectious disease), or diagnostic or treatment modalities (e.g. surgery), the field of hospital medicine has emerged to develop expertise in a platform of care delivery: acute hospital care. Two forces of the 1990s catalyzed this change. First, hospitals in high-income countries were (and still are) put under increasing financial pressures to reduce hospital costs. Second, increasing attention to quality and safety of care put a spotlight on the systems and processes of hospital care. One response to these forces was at the point of service delivery: a hospital medicine discipline emerged to equip generalist health care professionals with a specialized knowledge of the nuances of hospital care. The field came to be known as hospital medicine in the United States, and while that name has gained international traction, the discipline draws from a legacy of hospital care worldwide and has a distinctly international value proposition. Today, hospital medicine has three core offerings that support delivery of high-value hospital care.

First, the combination of clinical generalism and site-based, system specialization can promote hospital effectiveness. Akin to its primary care counterpart, hospital medicine is a generalist clinical specialty, poised to deliver holistic and patient-centered care to patients presenting with any combination of undifferentiated disease, systemic disease, or multiple pre-existing comorbidities. However, the nature of acute and hospital care is complex some problems, like nosocomial infections (i.e. hospital acquired infections) or venous thromboembolism (a group of blood clotting disorders), require a nuanced skill set that generalist training alone might not provide. Hospital medicine develops a specialized understanding of the implications of hospitalization to make hospital care more effective, and data are increasingly justifying the fields value. An emphasis on the systems and processes of hospital service delivery can bring hospital care to its full potential. Tasks that are technically nonclinical, like coordinating care among specialists and outpatient providers, managing care transitions across the care continuum, or conducting quality improvement projects or safety inquiries, can make hospital care more effective, and have thus become a major focus of hospital medicine.

Second, the field of hospital medicine can promote hospital efficiency. Staffing hospitals with generalists trained in hospital medicine can better allocate human resources, improving cost allocation and cost-effectiveness. In such an environment, patients receive specialist care only when a generalists training is insufficient to address the patients needs (as might be the case when a patient with congestive heart failure needs the care of a cardiologist, for example), freeing specialists to see more patients better matched to their skill sets. Moreover, dedicated inpatient staffing can improve outpatient access to primary care by freeing primary care physicians of hospital duties. Hospital medicine encourages rational utilization of health care resources in areas such as length of hospital stay, readmission rates, or cost awareness and cost-effective interventions. Because of its value in improving hospital efficiency, hospital medicine expertise is becoming increasingly valued on hospital management teams and in system leadership positions.

Third, new understandings in the field of hospital medicine have bolstered the case for using and improving team-based care. The complexity of acute care means doctors and nurses are no longer the only ones participating in a hospitalized patients care. Physical and occupational therapists, case managers, social workers, medical interpreters, and volunteer health workers are among the many roles on a modern inpatient care team. Because of increasing pressures on performance and patient flow, these interdisciplinary teams need leadership that keeps the patient at the center, yet draws upon a strong system understanding hospital medicine naturally supplies such leadership.

The hospital medicine value proposition is rooted in both a whole-of-patient and a whole-of-system perspective. Driven by its value proposition, the number of practitioners of hospital medicine has grown exponentially. Today, most of the supporting evidence of value comes from the United States this, and that the term hospital medicine is widely considered American, limits the conceptual generalizability of the field. However, many countries have experience with staffing models that include hospital-based health care professionals, or with staffing of hospital medicine-trained personnel. This evidence base may provide some guide to how the field can affect hospitals worldwide.

There are myriad international examples of hospital staffing models whereby providers spend most or all of their time caring for hospitalized patients. In many cases, the connection between those models and the growing movement of hospital medicine has not yet been made, and they are distinct in two ways. First, much of international hospital-based care is provided by early-career physicians who face common district-level challenges like lower pay or prestige, specialists, or nurses and auxiliary staff. Specialists are more costly and likely better suited in a consultative role since patients rarely present with problems that fall discretely into one scope of practice, while challenges of respect and remuneration traditionally experienced by early-career or non-physician health workers may limit their access to hospital-specific training and development. Second, hospital medicine treats the hospital as part of a patients pathology. This clinical and systemic expertise widens the range of intervention possibilities, from traditional case management to quality improvement initiatives to medical informatics solutions, among other possibilities.

The scope of hospital medicine practice is expanding worldwide. We searched the literature, sought country information from the International Section of the Society of Hospital Medicine, and explored our own network to identify hospital medicine practices in 37 countries (Figure 1).Of these, we identified only 12 middle-income countries and no low-income countries practicing hospital medicine. Although the practice is not widespread outside North America, these numbers likely underrepresent its global impact. Furthermore, we are aware of four national or international professional organizations related to the practice of hospital medicine outside of the US-based Society of Hospital Medicine, and more are planned. Hospital medicine groups around the world have replicated results seen in the United States, showing that hospital medicine can improve select hospital outcomes, quality, utilization, cost, research, or education indicators.

Hospital medicine can catalyze needed integration of high quality hospital care into health care systems globally. As countries transition from low to middle income status over the next generation, there is potential for a surge in domestic health care investment, including in hospital care. As access to hospital care is achieved, health care systems must be ready to ensure those hospitals are providing high value care. Though a global expansion of hospital medicine is far from a panacea, it should account for a smallbut importantshare of the human resources for health strategy worldwide.

To date, the expansion of hospital medicine has mostly been from the bottom-up, emerging at the local level in response to local needs. However, there is much that can and should be done from ministry and leadership levels to facilitate appropriate hospital medicine uptake worldwide.

First, while health care system stewardship needs to be country-led, global institutions can advocate for creation (and universal coverage) of a complete continuum of care, and supply both capital and technical assistance to meet this end. Leading global institutions should engage with national ministries of health, professional societies, and donor organizations to advocate for integration of hospitals with PHC, and for careful stewardship. Refocusing a share of existing hospital investments on hospital medicine training could help hospitals operate at greater value and would not divert needed funds from PHC. Ultimately, however, many LMIC health care systems will need to simultaneously strengthen all platforms of care delivery. An either/or world of hospitals or PHC is both dogmatic and unrealistic, and has potential to constrain health care system effectiveness.

Second, there is a knowledge gap on how to make hospital care more cost-effective, and research will be needed to understand how the principles of hospital medicine add value to existing hospitals, financing structures, and health care system cultures across a variety of international settings and then to make the case that this is a global public good that donors should fund. This need is particularly glaring in low-income countries, where resources are limited, hospital performance is poor, and the burden of disease is shifting such that hospital care will be increasingly pressing.

Finally, the expansion of hospital medicine has demonstrated a valuable opportunity to transform health care education. The experience of hospital medicine has shown that over a generation there can be a remarkable shift in the culture of care delivery. The near simultaneous emergence of the field of hospital medicine with the quality and safety movements was both coincidental and synergistic the latter because hospital medicine rapidly became the leader in performance improvement efforts. If there is any ultimate lesson to carry forward, it is that the experience of hospital medicine should not be unique. All health care providers practicing in all settings would benefit from specialized training on their respective practice models. We now know that knowledge of disease is only one part of achieving high health care performance. How we deliver the care, and how we improve upon it, is the other.

Health care systems display emergent properties: if hospitals remain neglected, inefficient, or mismanaged, all aspects of the system suffer. The field of hospital medicine can be a powerful force in strengthening the value of hospital care, thereby balancing the health care system and potentiating its net effect. Unsurprisingly, the field is spreading worldwide. To maximize its effect, the global community should manage and cultivate it across health care contexts. If the Sustainable Development Goals are asking for health for all, hospitalsand their core discipline, hospital medicinehave an important role to play in integrated health care systems.

See the article here:

Hospitals, Hospital Medicine, And Health For All - Health Affairs (blog)

Medicine Rocks State Park – Atlas Obscura

Its not hard to see why Native American tribesconsidered the ancient sandstone pillars of the Medicine Rocks in southeastern Montana sacred.The remote landscapeis both peaceful and beautiful, coveredwith strangegeological rock formations. In the 1800s,Sioux and Northern Cheyenne camped near these unique perforated rocks, which are filled with holes and tunnelscrafted by rainfall and wind over 61 million years.

The Medicine Rocks site is populated with chained and isolated arches, and caves and spires reaching 80 feet high and 200 feet across.Tribes came here searching for medicinal plants to use in theirvision quests, as well as lookout pointsfor hunting bison and resting spots whiletraveling from the Yellowstone River Valley to the Black Hills. Later, in 1883, future President Theodore Roosevelt visited the land and wrote, As fantastically beautiful a place as I have ever seen.

The 320 acres of Medicine Rocksstill offers physical reminders of the past. Youcan find thousands oftribal petroglyphs that predate European settlement, signatures of cowpunchers, a sheepherders famous profile of a woman with a flower beside a bird, and recent inscriptions of elk, cattle brands, and military mentions.

Carving into the rocks isprohibited and park officials ask you be careful not to vandalize the site or disturb earlier markings. Instead,they recommend climbing the swiss cheese rocks and taking in the sights ofthe golden eagles flying in the skies above, and the mule deer and sharp-tailed grouse moving on the prairiebelow.

Medicine Rocks is setabout 11 miles north of Ekalaka and 30 miles west of both the North Dakota and South Dakota borders. The sitewas privately owned until Carter County, Montana seized the property inthe 1930s. Thestate of Montana took over ownership in 1957 and in 1993 it hadthe site declared a primitive park. Today, the parkis managed by the stateDepartment of Fish, Wildlife and Parks.

Read more:

Medicine Rocks State Park - Atlas Obscura