Tuesday, November 10, 2009
QD: News Every Day--more time, more patients, more quality
ACP Internist's daily digest of news and events continues with a snapshot of health care reform, as well as a look at an ACP member's findings that doctors are spending more time with more patients, and still providing better care across nine quality measures.
Health care reform
The focus has now shifted to the Democrats for health care reform.
--Some Democrats don't think it slows health spending enough.
--Some Democrats think it pits young constituents against elderly ones.
--It's either pragmatic and flexible or just as good as it gets.
As the debate moves back to the Senate next week, there's five "flash points" to consider. (New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Politico, The Hill, Cristian Science Monitor)
Patient encounter
Doctors are spending more time with their patients--21 minutes in 2005 compared to 18 minutes in 1997, reports Lena Chen, ACP Member. And, primary care visits increased 10%, from about 273 million visits in 1997 to 338 million in 2005. Yet, quality is improving across nine performance measures. The population is aging, which requires more time, but also health care in general is more complex now. And, patients are better informed and more engaged. (U.S. News & World Report)
In case you missed it ...
Medical education is changing to focus on health care reform, the patient-centered medical home and patient communication, and leaving anatomy for later. Genetics, demography and the environment are being included. Students are helping design the curriculum, too. What's going on? (Washington Post)
Kaiser Health News looks back to 1977 for a familiar scenario--politicizing living wills that might lower unneeded or unwanted health care use at the end of life.
Labels: health care reform, living wills, medical education, patient communication, patient-centered medical home, QD
ACP Internist hosted Grand Rounds on June 16, wrapping up the best of the medical blogosphere. Click here for the complete wrap-up.
Contact ACP Internist
Send comments to ACP Internist staff at acpinternist@acponline.org.
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Blog log
American Journal of Medicine
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.
Clinical Correlations
A collaborative medical blog started by Neil Shapiro, ACP Member, associate program director at New York University Medical Center's internal medicine residency program. Faculty, residents and students contribute case studies, mystery quizzes, news, commentary and more.
db's Medical Rants
Robert M. Centor, FACP, contributes short essays contemplating medicine and the health care system.
Everything Health
EverythingHealth is designed to address the rapid changes in science, medicine, health and healing in the 21st Century.
Getting Better with Dr. Val
Getting Better is the continuation of Dr. Val Jones' previous blog at Revolution Health. It is devoted to helping people understand health issues from a balanced, scientifically sound perspective.
HealthHombre
A roundup of health policy news drawn from a database of hundreds of Web sites.
Interact MD
Michael Benjamin, ACP member, doesn't accept industry money so he can create an independent, clinician-reviewed space on the Internet for physicians to report and comment on the medical news of the day.
Kevin, MD
The alter ego of Kevin Pho, ACP Member, is the closest thing to royalty in the medical blog world.
LSUHSC-S Medical Library Evidence Alert
Major guidelines, systematic reviews, meta-analyses and/or major reviews by national and international organizations.
PLoS Blog
The Public Library of Science's open access materials include a blog.
White Coat Rants
One of the most popular anonymous blogs written by a doctor.

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