Articles Tagged With:
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Supreme Court cases loom large in 2016
The most consequential reproductive health-related drama in Congress in 2016 most likely played out in January.
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Elevated testosterone levels might increase risk of uterine fibroids
Women who have high levels of both testosterone and estrogen in midlife might face a greater risk of developing benign uterine fibroids than women with low levels of the hormones, results of a new study indicate.1
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Antifungal drug tied to miscarriage risk
In a retrospective analysis of 1.4 million pregnancies in Denmark, use of the oral antifungal medication fluconazole during pregnancy was tied to a significantly increased risk of spontaneous abortion associated with fluconazole exposure (HR, 1.48; 95%CI, 1.23-1.77), compared with risk among unexposed women and women who used a topical antifungal during pregnancy. Until more data on the association are available, cautious prescribing of fluconazole in pregnancy might be advisable. Although the risk of stillbirth wasn’t significantly increased, this outcome should be investigated further.1
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Could premenstrual syndrome be a flag for future risk of hypertension?
Results of a new study indicate that women with moderate-to-severe PMS had a 40% higher risk of developing high blood pressure during the following 20 years compared to women experiencing few menstrual symptoms.1
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Push is on to increase postpartum use of LARC
Your next patient is a young mother of two, and her youngest child is less than a year old. While she was using combined oral contraceptives to prevent pregnancy, her busy schedule compromised compliance. The lab results are in: The pregnancy test is positive.
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CMS proposes new benchmarks for measuring ACO performance
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is looking to change the way it measures accountable care organization performance.
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Updated nursing Code of Ethics
The American Nurses Association recently revised its Code of Ethics, which had not been updated since 2001.
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Are ethical responses clear to providers if family requests inappropriate care?
Lawrence J. Schneiderman, MD, founding co-chair of the University of California, San Diego Medical Center’s Ethics Committee, notes one of the more extreme views that emerged during the “patient’s rights” movement is that patients have a right to receive any treatments they wish, and that physicians should not impose their “paternalistic” power.
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Pathologists ill-prepared to disclose errors, says research
Virtually all pathologists (97%) reported being involved in a minor or serious error, but only about 39% knew whether the error had been conveyed to the patient, according to a recent survey of 106 pathologists, presented at the 2015 annual meeting of the College of American Pathologists.
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Troubling social justice issues stem from cost of dementia care
Healthcare and caregiving costs for dementia patients in the final five years of life are greater than for patients with cancer, heart disease and other illnesses, according to a recent study.