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Thursday, November 5, 2009

QD: News Every Day--health care reform's eerie repeat history

ACP Internist's daily digest of news and events continues with updates on health care reform, "swine" flu in a cat, and two views on fixing the shortage of primary care doctors.

Health care reform
Health care reform is streaking toward a vote in the U.S. House Saturday, but is it just a case of history repeating itself--specifically, the Clintons' 1994 effort? A New England Journal of Medicine paper analyzed 30 public opinion surveys and compared the shift in public opinion, both then and now. (AP, Boston Globe, NEJM)

Waiting in the wings, the Senate's legislation is facing opposition from surgeons and other specialists. (The Hill)

One aspect of health care that needs reform is the practice of defensive medicine. One doctor was profiled about why he encourages patients not to get unneeded tests, and then capitulates if the patients insist. (AP)

Primary care shortage
Op-eds in two major dailies agree that fixing the shortage of primary care doctors is an important component of health care reform. You wouldn't normally expect the Los Angeles Times and Wall Street Journal to agree on anything but the rising cost of newsprint.

H1N1 influenza
Swine flu has jumped from a cat owner to the pet, ABC News reports.

In case you missed it ...
In case the mainstream media misses something, there's always a blogger who digs a little deeper and finds it. Hats off to the person who found this outlier right in the middle of the U.S. House legislation on health care reform--a tax credit for second generation biofuels. (FireDogLake.com)

And, an economist offers "vaguely heretical" musings on the proposed legislations floating around Congress. His social conscience doesn't override his desire to balance the books. (The New Yorker)

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Blog log

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Also known as the Green Journal, the American Journal of Medicine publishes original clinical articles of interest to physicians in internal medicine and its subspecialities, both in academia and community-based practice.

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The alter ego of Kevin Pho, ACP Member, is the closest thing to royalty in the medical blog world.

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One of the most popular anonymous blogs written by a doctor.

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