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1.
Emerg Med Clin North Am ; 38(2): 267-281, 2020 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32336324

ABSTRACT

The job description of the emergency physician contains many responsibilities, including identifying and managing life-threatening illness, providing symptomatic relief, determining safe and efficient disposition, managing department flow, providing customer service, improving public health, and ensuring wise resource utilization. Emergency physicians must communicate effectively with patients, interdisciplinary clinical teams, and consultants, both orally and through the medical record. Excellence in clinical care as well as in communication and documentation is critical for managing risk in the emergency department.


Subject(s)
Communication , Documentation , Emergency Service, Hospital , Risk Management , Emergency Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Humans , Risk Management/methods
2.
J Arthroplasty ; 32(11): 3268-3273.e4, 2017 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28669568

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The Medicare program has initiated Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CJR), a bundled payment mandate for lower extremity joint replacements. We sought to determine the degree to which hospitals will invest in care redesign in response to CJR, and to project its economic impacts. METHODS: We defined 4 potential hospital management strategies to address CJR: no action, light care management, heavy care management, and heavy care management with contracting. For each of 798 hospitals included in CJR, we used hospital-specific volume, cost, and quality data to determine the hospital's economically dominant strategy. We aggregated data to assess the percentage of hospitals pursuing each strategy; savings to the health care system; and costs and percentages of CJR-derived revenues gained or lost for Medicare, hospitals, and postacute care facilities. RESULTS: In the model, 83.1% of hospitals (range 55.0%-100.0%) were expected to take no action in response to CJR, and 16.1% of hospitals (range 0.0%-45.0%) were expected to pursue heavy care management with contracting. Overall, CJR is projected to reduce health care expenditures by 0.5% (range 0.0%-4.1%) or $14 million (range $0-$119 million). Medicare is expected to save 2.2% (range 2.2%-2.2%), hospitals are projected to lose 3.7% (range 4.7% loss to 3.8% gain), and postacute care facilities are expected to lose 6.5% (range 0.0%-12.8%). Hospital administrative costs are projected to increase by $63 million (range $0-$148 million). CONCLUSION: CJR is projected to have a negligible impact on total health care expenditures for lower extremity joint replacements. Further research will be required to assess the actual care management strategies adopted by CJR hospitals.


Subject(s)
Arthroplasty, Replacement/economics , Medicare/economics , Models, Economic , Patient Care Bundles/economics , Comprehensive Health Care , Economics, Hospital , Health Expenditures , Hospital Costs , Hospitals , Humans , United States
3.
Med Educ Online ; 19: 25603, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25391976

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Median indebtedness at graduation is now more than $170,000 for graduates of US Medical Schools. Debate still exists as to whether higher debt levels influence students to choose high paying non-primary care specialties. Notably, no previous research on the topic has taken into account cost of attendance when constructing a debt model, nor has any research examined the non-career major life decisions that medical students face. METHODS: Medical students were surveyed using an anonymous electronic instrument developed for this study. The survey was delivered through a link included in a study email and students were recruited from school wide listservs and through snowball sampling (students were encouraged to share a link to the survey with other medical students). No incentives were offered for survey completion. RESULTS: Responses were recorded from 102 US Allopathic medical schools (n=3,032), with 22 institutions (11 public, 11 private) meeting inclusion criteria of 10% student body response proportion (n=1,846). Students with higher debt relative to their peers at their home institution reported higher frequencies of feeling callous towards others, were more likely to choose a specialty with a higher average annual income, were less likely to plan to practice in underserved locations, and were less likely to choose primary care specialties. Students with higher aggregate amounts of medical student loan debt were more likely to report high levels of stress from their educational debt, to delay getting married and to report disagreement that they would choose to become a physician again, if given the opportunity to revisit that choice. Increases in both aggregate and relative debt were associated with delaying having children, delaying buying a house, concerns about managing and paying back educational debt, and worrying that educational debt will influence one's specialty choice. CONCLUSIONS: Medical student debt and particularly debt relative to peers at the same institution appears to influence the way that students approach major life choices like when to start a family, when to buy a home, and what specialty to choose. Future research should take into account cost of attendance when looking for the impact of medical student debt on major life choices.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior , Education, Medical/economics , Students, Medical , Training Support/economics , Career Choice , Family , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Male , Multivariate Analysis , Specialization , Students, Medical/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States
4.
Endocr Relat Cancer ; 17(3): R213-31, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20576803

ABSTRACT

Nuclear receptors comprise a large family of highly conserved transcription factors that regulate many key processes in normal and neoplastic tissues. Most nuclear receptors share a common, highly conserved domain structure that includes a carboxy-terminal ligand-binding domain. However, a subgroup of this gene family is known as the orphan nuclear receptors because to date there are no known natural ligands that regulate their activity. Many of the 25 nuclear receptors classified as orphan play critical roles in embryonic development, metabolism, and the regulation of circadian rhythm. Here, we review the emerging role(s) of orphan nuclear receptors in breast cancer, with a particular focus on two of the estrogen-related receptors (ERRalpha and ERRgamma) and several others implicated in clinical outcome and response or resistance to cytotoxic or endocrine therapies, including the chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter transcription factors, nerve growth factor-induced B, DAX-1, liver receptor homolog-1, and retinoic acid-related orphan receptor alpha. We also propose that a clearer understanding of the function of orphan nuclear receptors in mammary gland development and normal mammary tissues could significantly improve our ability to diagnose, treat, and prevent breast cancer.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/therapeutic use , Breast Neoplasms/etiology , Orphan Nuclear Receptors/physiology , Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy , Female , Humans , Orphan Nuclear Receptors/antagonists & inhibitors
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