Articles Tagged With:
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CT Calcium Score vs. Stress Testing
A subgroup analysis of the PROMISE trial showed that CT coronary calcium scores in symptomatic patients at low to intermediate risk for coronary artery disease are more sensitive but less specific for major adverse cardiac events over a two-year follow-up period than stress testing. Consequently, both approaches exhibited similar but modest discriminatory ability.
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Hold the Hormones — At Least for Chronic Condition Prevention
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force reissued a statement on hormone replacement therapy for the prevention of chronic conditions that reiterates its D recommendation from 2012. It recommends physicians do not prescribe hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to prevent medical conditions, but leave the question of using HRT for treatment of menopausal symptoms unanswered.
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The Debate Continues on Salpingectomy
The role of routine salpingectomy during vaginal hysterectomy is controversial.
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Intrauterine Device String Checks: Are They Necessary?
Two-thirds of women complied with the recommendation for a six-week follow-up visit after intrauterine device (IUD) insertion. Among these women, 19.8% had their IUD removed in the first year compared to 12.6% among women who did not attend the follow-up visit. The majority of removals occurred outside the six-week follow-up period.
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Does Hysterosalpingography With Oil-based Contrast Increase Fertility?
A multicenter, randomized trial in the Netherlands documented higher rates of ongoing pregnancy and live births among infertile women who underwent hysterosalpingography with oil-based contrast compared to those who underwent the procedure with water-based contrast.
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Breast Cancer and Hormonal Contraception: New Information or Sensationalism?
Highly publicized results from the Danish database demonstrate an increase in the risk of breast cancer associated with current use of hormonal contraception. Consistent with prior research, the risk is small, confined to current users, and disappears following discontinuation.
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Recognizing Pediatric Sepsis: Early Diagnosis Critical to Recovery
Identifying pediatric sepsis and treating it quickly can be a matter of life and death.
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Pediatric Sepsis and Septic Shock
Pediatric sepsis is a high-stakes diagnosis that requires vigilance to make an early, timely diagnosis. Aggressive resuscitation, including fluids, antibiotics, and vasoactive agents, may be necessary. Rapidly changing standard of care also makes sepsis a critical diagnosis for clinicians.
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Barcode Medication Errors Reported for Analysis
Pennsylvania healthcare facilities increasingly have reported patient safety events associated with a technology used to prevent medication-administration errors.
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CMS Describes Measures Considered for 2018
CMS has issued a list of 32 measures it is considering for 2018 that could drive quality improvement in various healthcare settings.