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Pain Management

Conference Highlights: ACEP17

Nov 20, 2017

Discharging PE Patients from the ED Evidence indicates that EDs are overcrowded, that length of stay is of major concern, and that decreasing hospital admissions is good for patients. For a study, ...

FDA Approves Pill with Sensor that Digitally Tracks if Patients have Ingested their Medication

Nov 14, 2017

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today approved the first drug in the U.S. with a digital ingestion tracking system. Abilify MyCite (aripiprazole tablets with sensor) has an ingestible sensor emb...

3D Printing Shows Talocalcaneal Joint Very Well!

Oct 19, 2017

A surgical resident used the above 3D-printed calcaneal fracture to gain more insight in the fracture pattern during preoperative evaluation. Using this 3D printed model, the surgical resident was abl...

Introducing a New Blog on 3D Printing in Medicine

Oct 04, 2017

I’m a surgical resident in training and PhD-candidate in the Elisabeth-Tweesteden hospital, Tilburg, the Netherlands. The Elisabeth-Tweesteden Hospital, a level 1 trauma center with a large neurosur...

#PWChat - Pseudoscience in Medicine PART 2: Steering Patients Toward Reliable References

Sep 28, 2017

Join us Wednesday, October 25 at 3:00pm ET for a live, interactive tweetchat with Linda Girgis, MD, on how to steer patients toward reliable resources when it comes to pseudoscience-related topics. To...

#PWChat Recap – Pseudoscience in Medicine: Steering Patients Toward Reliable References

Sep 27, 2017

Dr. Linda Girgis, MD, FAAFP joined Physician's Weekly to co-host another installment in our #PWChat series, on Tuesday, Sept. 26, on how to steer patients toward reliable resources when it comes to p...

#PWChat - Exercise as Medicine: Helping Patients Cut Through all the Noise

Sep 26, 2017

Join us Wednesday, October 4 at 3:00pm ET for a live, interactive tweetchat with Greg Wells, PhD, on how to help patients make sense of all the exercise-related information found online and elsewhere....

#PWChat - Pseudoscience in Medicine: Steering Patients Toward Reliable References

Sep 12, 2017

Join us Tuesday, September 26 at 3:00pm ET for a live, interactive tweetchat with Linda Girgis, MD, on how to steer patients toward reliable resources when it comes to pseudoscience-related topics. To...

New Vaccine Could Someday Fight the Effects of Opioid Combinations

Aug 23, 2017

Substance abuse is a continuing problem in the U.S., particularly with heroin and other opioids, to the point of being an epidemic. Treatments exist, but far too often patients relapse with devastatin...

Drug Used to Combat Opioid Addiction is Being Underprescribed

Aug 09, 2017

A drug approved for private physicians to treat opioid addiction is being underprescribed, and a survey of addiction specialists suggests that many of them are not willing to increase their use of it,...

John Hopkins Study Confirms Most Prescribed Opioid Pills Go Unused

Aug 07, 2017

In a review of half a dozen published studies in which patients self-reported use of opioids prescribed to them after surgery, researchers at Johns Hopkins report that a substantial majority of patien...

Is Outpatient Care Quality Improving Over Time?

Aug 03, 2017

More than a decade ago, landmark studies found that adults in the United States only received slightly more than half of the recommended healthcare services they should receive. “Since that time, ef...

Older Adults Who Eat Yogurt Linked to Better Bone Health

Jul 18, 2017

The largest observational study to date of dairy intakes and bone and frailty measurements in older adults has found that increased yogurt consumption was associated with a higher hip bone density and...

The Overuse of NSAIDs

Jul 18, 2017

NSAIDs are some of the most common over-the-counter (OTC) medications available and include aspirin, ibuprofen, and naproxen. In general, these medicines are safe and carry little danger to users from...

A Closer Look at Leftover Pain Drugs

Jul 14, 2017

Throughout the United States, the rates of prescription pain drug addiction and death continue to increase, placing a substantial burden on the nation’s healthcare system. This problem persists desp...

Meditation Could be a Cheaper Alternative to Traditional Pain Medication, Study Suggests

Jun 28, 2017

Just ten minutes of mindfulness meditation could be used as an alternative to painkillers, according to research by Leeds Beckett University. Results of the study suggest that a single ten-minu...

Reducing Opioid-Related Visits

Jun 26, 2017

Unintentional overdose involving opioids has become a leading cause of injury-related death in the United States. “Notwithstanding, several interventions promoted to address opioid-related morbidity...

Researchers Develop Game Changing Strategy for Pain Relief

Jun 15, 2017

Researchers from Monash University have developed a new drug delivery strategy able to block pain within the nerve cells, in what could be a major development of an immediate and long lasting treatmen...

TweetChat: A Look at the Drivers of Increasing Healthcare Costs

Jun 01, 2017

Join us Wednesday, June 21 at 9:00pm ET / 6:00pm PT for a live, interactive tweetchat with Linda Girgis, MD, on the drivers of increasing healthcare costs in the U.S. Topics to be discussed include: ...

Surgery & Opioid Dependence Risk

May 30, 2017

Throughout the United States, the chronic use of opioids continues to be a substantial burden to the healthcare system in terms of morbidity, mortality, and economic costs. Studies show that the U.S. ...

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