Articles Tagged With:
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When Is It Appropriate to Admit End-of-Life Patients to ICU?
ICU admission should be based on the alignment of uniquely beneficial treatment offered by the ICU, along with patients’ values and stated goals of care, the authors of a recent paper argued.
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Complex Language Hinders Informed Consent
It is rare for written consent forms used for cancer treatment with radiotherapy to meet recommended readability levels for patient materials, according to the authors of a recent analysis.
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Change in How Donated Livers Are Allocated Sparks Debate
A patient has needed a liver transplant for years, and one finally becomes available in her town. Instead, the organ is shipped by plane to someone hundreds of miles away. Because of a change in how donated livers are allocated, such a scenario could become common.
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Guidance on Grateful Patient Fundraising: No Consensus on Direct Solicitation by MDs
There is more attention paid to ethical implications of grateful patient fundraising, particularly when physicians solicit directly from their patients. Recent guidance could help physicians in this area.
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Treating Infective Endocarditis in Moderate-Risk Patients
There are patients with a moderate risk of infective endocarditis who may warrant consideration of antibiotic prophylaxis.
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Positive Outcomes With One Month of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy After PCI
One month of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) followed by single antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel was noninferior to 12 months of DAPT following percutaneous coronary intervention with drug-eluting stents.
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Reducing Mortality in Stable Ischemic Heart Disease Patients
A multivariate analysis of a large registry of patients with stable ischemic heart disease revealed that beta-blocker use was associated with lower mortality only when prescribed in the first year after acute myocardial infarction.
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Do Antianginal Agents Prevent Revascularization Procedures?
For patients with stable ischemic heart disease, adding either ranolazine or calcium channel blockers to nitrate or beta-blocker therapy reduced the incidence of subsequent revascularization and costs vs. beta-blocker or nitrate therapy alone or in combination.
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Keep Calm and Compress On, But Do Not Hold Your Breath Too Long
In a recent analysis, using any CPR was associated with significant improvement in 30-day survival, with slightly better outcomes associated with standard CPR over compression-only CPR.