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Newbie doctors “allowed” to work 28-hours straight

The current 16-hour cap occasionally prevents doctors from seeing a surgery through from beginning to end, which may disrupt patient care continuity, and undermine medical team unity. These – proponents of the 28-hour shift argue – would be ameliorated by the increase.

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How Provider Bias Harms Women in Pain

A female ER patient cannot bear the burden of a provider’s biases.  It’s crucial that providers – especially those in the emergency or urgent clinical settings – critically examine each patient, without regard for the patient’s gender.  But what happens when these biases are unconscious (which they undoubtedly are in most circumstances)?

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Erin Jackson APTA Speaker

Speaking at CSM: Reflections one year later

This week, I’ve been engrossed in the enthusiastic tweets coming out of the American Physical Therapy Association’s Combined Sections Meeting.  And so, I wanted to take an opportunity to reflect on what’s happened in the year since I spoke at CSM in 2016.

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How Sex Disparities in Clinical Drug Trials Hurt Women

Although women consume more pharmaceuticals than men, they comprise a minority of clinical trial test subjects and are at twice the risk for adverse drug reactions. Those who advocate for scientific accountability of sex differences in drug studies argue that the pharmaceutical industry lacks a commitment to women’s safety.

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3 Tips for Using Electronic Signatures

Moving away from ink signatures also has makes good business sense, including operational cost savings, increased work efficiently, and ease of document retention.

But are they enforceable to the same degree as their ink equivalents?

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How to Focus on Treatment, Not on Your Title

 I love my physical therapist, and I have the highest respect for the profession.  The best way to imbue that sense of professional loyalty and appreciation in your patients is to simply do a good job treating them.  Don’t tell them about what makes you great – show them.  Help them rehabilitate and accomplish their goals, and you’ll make them physical therapy loyalists for life.

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How to Integrate the End of Medicare’s “Failure to Improve” Standard into Your Clinical Practices

If a Medicare patient has achieved their maximum level of recovery, and additional therapy would not help them improve beyond that point, then additional treatment isn’t warranted or medically necessary. Plus, Medicare surely won’t foot the bill.  You, their PT, think that additional therapy would help them from getting worse, but that’s not the standard. It’s time to discharge them, right?

WRONG.

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3 Things to Remember About the Health Insurance Coverage Gap

So, what happens to those people in the 19 states who make too much money to be eligible for Medicaid, but who make too little money to be eligible for a subsidy?  They fall into the dreaded “coverage gap” – and people in this group generally aren’t subject to the IRS penalties for their failure to purchase insurance.  (Although this doesn’t address the greater problem: they don’t have insurance.) 

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