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Health care costs for participants in a health and wellness coaching program were $19 to $22 per member per month less than for a control group in a study by an independent researcher conducted for Medica, a health insurance company with headquarters in Minneapolis.
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Providers and insurers are starting to add lifestyle coaching to the range of interventions they provide to help motivate people to take charge of their own health and make changes in the way they live that help them live healthier, more productive lives.
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Based on the positive outcomes of a health coaching pilot for its employees with diabetes, Advocate Health Care, an integrated healthcare system based in Oak Brook, IL, now offers health coaching to its patients, employees, spouses, and employer groups as part of its comprehensive wellness solution.
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Northwestern Memorial Physicians Group in Chicago is partnering with Walgreens to counsel patients with chronic illnesses on their disease and medication and to support them in following their medication regimen. So far, patients in the pilot have increased their medication adherence on five different drugs by 5%.
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While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta has been calling on EDs to routinely test patients for HIV since 2006, the practice is hardly widespread.
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If a health system wins a major national quality award, it must be doing something right, but also something different from other organizations, right? Ask one and likely at some point, a spokesperson will says something about focusing on the patient and striving to improve. But not everyone.
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As institutions seek to expand their international research portfolios, IRBs face increasing challenges differing regulations in different countries, cultural distinctions that may lead to unexpected risks and the difficulties of oversight at such a distance.
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As Internet use has exploded worldwide, so has Web-based research. Between 2004 and 2009, the number of web-based research studies published in the American Psychological Association's (APA) Journal of Personality and Social Psychology rose by more than 500%.