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It's time to increase chlamydia screening in your clinic. Results of a new study show that, despite current screening recommendations, more than 2 million people are infected with chlamydia in the United States.
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The next patient in your exam room is a 35-year-old mother of three. When you talk with her about her risks for cancer, she tells you they are low, because no one in her family has had the disease. What is your next step?
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Help women discuss HPV, cervical cancer, and Pap tests with health care providers, with a new brochure, "Ask How You Can Prevent Cervical Cancer."
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Prompt, accurate assessment of the severity of injury and early initiation of appropriate critical care — including adequate oxygenation, ventilation and correction of hypotension — is of crucial importance in preventing deaths in children with severe trauma. This article reviews the critical aspects of airway assessment and management in the pediatric trauma patient.
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Whether it's new onset or established disease, the PCP has an arsenal of diagnostic tests available. The array of tests, however, can be quite daunting in identifying the right test to order, especially in light of sensitivity and specificity, not to mention cost. This issue provides the PCP with a comprehensive survey of the diagnostic tests available, a guide to selection, an estimate of cost, and limitations of each test.
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Starting next month, hospices will have to report to Medicare all nursing, hospice aide, and social worker visits made for patients. Then a few months later, the new conditions of participation (COPs) will be finalized, which will require greater attention to documentation of services and quality.
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Providers of home health services and other post-acute services provided in patients' homes frequently observe that patients are discharged from hospitals who are still in need of acute care.