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Physicians Should Help Patients With Depression Name Their Problem

Because people with depression often do not recognize they have a problem or are unable to describe their distress, many do not seek treatment. About a quarter of those with major depression are undiagnosed, according to several studies, and fewer than half receive treatment. To improve recognition and treatment of depression, primary care physicians should do three things: help their patients name their di ...

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Coordinated Treatment Approach Improves Anxiety Symptoms

A coordinated, multi-component treatment approach was more effective in treating anxiety disorders than usual care found in primary care settings, according to an NIMH-funded study published May 19, 2010, in a special issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association devoted to mental health. The study highlights the importance of including a talk-therapy/psycho-social component to treatment. ...

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American College Of Physicians Supports SGR Provision Of H.R. 4213

The American College of Physicians (ACP), representing 129,000 internal medicine physician and medical student members, today said it strongly supports the proposed provision in the American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act (H.R. 4213), to provide stable and positive Medicare payment updates to physicians. The measure begins moving to a new framework that could serve as the basis for permanently replacing ...

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Smoking Cessation Treatments Work And Are Safe For People With Severe Mental Illness

In a study published in the journal Addiction, researchers have determined that treatment for smoking dependence is as effective among people with severe mental illnesses as it is for the general population. Importantly, they also found that offering such treatments does not appear to cause deterioration in mental health. ...

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Scientists Design New Drug Type To Kill Lymphoma Cells

Three researchers who are recipients of a collaborative grant from the Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation have developed a new type of drug designed to kill non-Hodgkin lymphoma tumor cells. The breakthrough could lead to potential non-toxic therapies for cancer patients. The Foundation-funded investigators include Ari Melnick, M.D., of Weill Cornell Medical College, Alexander MacKerell, Ph.D., of the ...

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Performance-Based Payments For Primary Care Providers May Worsen Disparities In Medical Care

Rewarding primary care physicians for providing better care to patients could end up widening medical disparities experienced by poorer people and those belonging to racial and ethnic minorities, according to a new RAND Corporation study. Researchers found that under a typical pay-for-performance program medical practices that serve vulnerable populations would likely receive lower payments than other pract ...

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Annals of Family Medicine Research Summary And Tip Sheet (May/June 2010)

The Annals of Family Medicine released a research summary / health-care provider tip sheet for May/June based on recent studies with patient populations that range from children to the elderly. This summary covers topics from mental health, including health psychology and behavioral medicine, and physical health that psychologists and physicians alike may be interested in. Hopefully, The Annals of Family Me ...

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Medical Home Pays Off – Improves Primary Care And Cuts Cost At 2 Years

In a two-year evaluation at Group Health Cooperative, transforming primary care into a "patient-centered medical home" model paid off. Published in the May 2010 Health Affairs, the evaluation compared the medical home prototype to Group Health's other medical centers, showing: The quality of care was higher, patients reported having better experiences, clinicians said they felt less "burned out," patients h ...

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Physicians Nationwide Face Clinical Ethical Conflicts With Religious Hospitals

Nearly one in ten primary care physicians in the United States has experienced a conflict with a religiously-affiliated hospital or practice over religious policies for patient care, researchers from the University of Chicago report in a paper published early online in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. Younger and less religious physicians are more likely to experience these conflicts than their old ...

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