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Spending time with patients. That’s my job.

Nathan A. Pennell, MD, PhD
Physician
August 18, 2015

asco-logoI’m sure I am not alone in saying that I am almost obsessively conscious of time. Namely, that there never seems to be enough of it. As busy oncologists, we all have constant demands on our time, from our leadership, colleagues, drug company reps, insurers, and our families, not to mention the time we try to carve out for ourselves. But …

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After surgery, the scars will always remain

Bruce Campbell, MD
Physician
August 17, 2015

“To be trusted is a greater compliment than to be loved.”
– George MacDonald

As we adjust her position on the surgical table, I spot some short, vertical scars on the front of her neck. The parallel slashes sit directly over her enlarged thyroid — a goiter — and appear to have been deliberately placed. There are two sets of scratches, one set on either side of the neck, nearly identical in length and evenly …

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7 ways physicians can improve health care quality

Robert Pearl, MD
Physician
August 16, 2015

Patients want to receive health care that is of the highest quality. Physicians want to provide it. But what is “high-quality health care?” On that, few agree.

Ask most Americans and they’re unsure where to find it. They know they want to be kept healthy, have rapid access to personalized care whenever they need it and be charged only what they can afford.

Ask the leaders of the national medical and surgical …

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What does a doctor look like?

Lara Devgan, MD, MPH
Physician
August 15, 2015

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As a plastic surgeon, I am interested in how people look. Whether I am piecing together a fractured face or reconstructing a cancer-scarred breast, I am focused on appearance, symmetry, contour, and lines. I am always thinking about how our bodies are the physical manifestations of who we are.

What I am never thinking about is how that sentiment applies to me.

An intern …

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Please, don’t eat your placenta. Here’s why.

Jennifer Gunter, MD
Conditions
August 14, 2015

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Every few news cycles placenta-eating seems to make the rounds. I’ve already seen it a couple of times this year, so I figured the Internet is trying to tell me something.

Some women, but mostly those who recommend and/or prepare placenta for them, think that ingesting placenta can cure/help postpartum depression and possibly a host of other postpartum ills and issues. Some …

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This is why the humanities are important in medicine

Nasir Malim, MD, MPH
Education
August 12, 2015

As a medical student having completed my undergraduate major in the humanities, I often receive the question, “Why did you choose to do that?” The underlying thought behind asking why I would choose a major in the humanities while holding the intention to later attend medical school is that medicine is especially distinct from the humanities (and specifically African-American studies in my case). The sciences are just a whole other …

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Cerner beats Epic in the DoD sweepstakes. What does that mean for the rest of us?

Margalit Gur-Arie
Tech
August 12, 2015

The health information technology (HIT) world has been hit by a watershed event like no other. The Department of Defense (DoD), widely respected for its indiscriminate generosity to contractors, has awarded the most coveted prize in recent HIT memory: the Defense Healthcare Management Systems Modernization (DHMSM) contract. And the winner is … Leidos, the contractor formerly known as SAIC. A couple of years ago, when the race for …

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Slowly, slowly

Christy Duan
Physician
August 11, 2015

“What is the meaning of life?”

A perfectly reasonable question, albeit a strange one considering that I was in the third grade, it was recess time, and I was having a philosophical conversation about death with a grasshopper I had just caught.

Ever since I could remember, I was fascinated by death. But my life was characterized more by loss than by death. When I was three, there were no funeral processions …

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The real cost of MOC is stunning

Tara F. Bishop, MD, MPH
Physician
August 11, 2015

In the past few years there has been tremendous criticism of the American Board of Internal Medicine’s (ABIM’s) maintenance of certification (MOC) program.  The MOC program was significantly expanded in 2014 and required doctors to get 100 MOC points every 5 years and do at least one MOC activity every 2 years. These requirements also came with increased fees for the MOC program and increased failure rates for the recertification …

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Is solving the primary care crisis easier than we think?

Stephen C. Schimpff, MD
Policy
August 10, 2015

Part of a series.

There is a crisis in the provision of primary care in the United States. If you are a patient, a primary care doctor, an insurer, an employer or a policy maker, this crisis is exceptionally important to you. The crisis means that Americans do not get the level or quality of health care that they deserve and need. This crisis is the major reason that …

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This is what a successful direct primary care practice looks like

Rob Lamberts, MD
Physician
August 10, 2015

I recently attended (and spoke at) the Concierge Medicine Assembly in Atlanta.  My role was to give the perspective of a “successful” direct primary care (DPC) practice.  This being the second such conference in three weeks, I’ve learned that my panel of 600+ patients and survival for two and a half years puts me in the higher ranks of solo DPC practices.  The Atlanta conference was actually a combination conference, catering to …

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#ILookLikeASurgeon I am a surgeon and this is what I look like

Admin
Physician
August 10, 2015

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It’s time to celebrate diversity in surgery with the #ILookLikeASurgeon hashtag.

Inspired by surgery resident Heather Logghe, who says it best: “As women surgeons, whether we are in our first year of training or an emeritus professor, it’s most important that we ourselves believe we ‘look’ like surgeons. Because we do.”

And it’s taken off.

Below is a continuously-updated Storify of this movement.

Spread the word!