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Evidence-Based Medical Research + Full-Text Access to a Medical Library for $225/Year! - 0 views

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    Evidence-Based Research: a series of tutorials for medical and healthcare professionals and students wanting to improve their skills in conducting research geared toward clinical use, this 12-month session is offered by the Journal Club. In addition to the tutorials, you will gain full-text access to all journals in the library at the University of Bridgeport. Only $225 for all tutorials, and for a full year of full-text access to all of the library's digital resources!
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    Evidence-Based Research: a series of tutorials for medical and healthcare professionals and students wanting to improve their skills in conducting research geared toward clinical use, this 12-month session is offered by the University of Bridgeport's Journal Club. In addition to the tutorials, you will gain full-text access to all journals in the UB library. Only $225 for all tutorials and one year of full-text access to all of the library's digital resources!
avivajazz  jazzaviva

eMedicine | Continually Updated Clinical Reference - 0 views

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    Reference portal largely directed at medical professionals and health care providers, this site has articles, clinical guidelines, workups, drug databases, algorithms, CMEs, and other educational tools and resources.
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Journal of Participatory Medicine (JoPM) | New, Peer-Reviewed, Open-Access - 0 views

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    Participatory medicine will owe part of its success to the technologies that have the potential to remove treatment, symptom management, administrative, and communications burdens from individuals and clinicians while maintaining the critical interpersonal interactions between them. Out of the steady stream of new devices, programs, gadgets, and applications, which will make a difference in the health and lives of patients? We hope to build the Journal as a resource for critical reviews of technologies that support and facilitate participatory medicine. We realize it will be no small undertaking to put together a process that will allow for the review of a substantial number of technologies over time, reflecting the experience of different types of users.
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Good Health Insurance + Bad Medical Care | "Hop up on the table, Honey." - 0 views

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    "Hop up on the table, Honey." mThat's how an x-ray technician addressed my 89-year-old mother-in-law in 2001, when we took her for knee x-rays. Mom, who had advanced osteoporosis and arthritis as well as confusion and heart problems, had long since given up hopping. When it became obvious that she needed assistance, the technician grabbed her arm -- as if pulling on another sore appendage would magically raise the rest of her onto the table. It didn't. This incident has become our personal mantra for expressing what is wrong with America's health care system. Having helped our four parents during their final years and having both had cancer ourselves as well as other medical problems, we have had experiences with five nursing homes, two personal care facilities and a half dozen hospitals. We've lost count of the doctors, drugstores and health insurance plans. All of us have had health insurance, though some policies were better than others. Nonetheless, we have experienced incident after incident demonstrating the waste, ignorance and apathy which is rampant in the system. Unable to list them all, I have been heretofore reluctant to write about a handful of them lest the reader be persuaded that the problem is with only that hospital, only that nursing home or only that doctor. There is, however, an increasing crisis of confusion, mismanagement and ill-preparedness which is at the core of our healthcare system. We are all familiar at least with the trend line if not the specifics for healthcare costs. According to WhiteHouse.gov, "The United States spends over $2.2 trillion on health care each year-almost $8,000 per person." That's sixteen percent of the economy. Healthcare costs are projected to increase to almost twenty percent ($4 trillion a year) by 2017. Meanwhile forty-six million Americans are without health insurance (14,000 more each day), premiums and co-pays are rising and more reasons are used to refuse coverage both to those willing to pay and thos
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    "Hop up on the table, Honey." mThat's how an x-ray technician addressed my 89-year-old mother-in-law in 2001, when we took her for knee x-rays. Mom, who had advanced osteoporosis and arthritis as well as confusion and heart problems, had long since given up hopping. When it became obvious that she needed assistance, the technician grabbed her arm -- as if pulling on another sore appendage would magically raise the rest of her onto the table. It didn't. This incident has become our personal mantra for expressing what is wrong with America's health care system. Having helped our four parents during their final years and having both had cancer ourselves as well as other medical problems, we have had experiences with five nursing homes, two personal care facilities and a half dozen hospitals. We've lost count of the doctors, drugstores and health insurance plans. All of us have had health insurance, though some policies were better than others. Nonetheless, we have experienced incident after incident demonstrating the waste, ignorance and apathy which is rampant in the system. Unable to list them all, I have been heretofore reluctant to write about a handful of them lest the reader be persuaded that the problem is with only that hospital, only that nursing home or only that doctor. There is, however, an increasing crisis of confusion, mismanagement and ill-preparedness which is at the core of our healthcare system. We are all familiar at least with the trend line if not the specifics for healthcare costs. According to WhiteHouse.gov, "The United States spends over $2.2 trillion on health care each year-almost $8,000 per person." That's sixteen percent of the economy. Healthcare costs are projected to increase to almost twenty percent ($4 trillion a year) by 2017. Meanwhile forty-six million Americans are without health insurance (14,000 more each day), premiums and co-pays are rising and more reasons are used to refuse coverage both to those willing to pay and thos
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Piper Report |:| Medicare, Medicaid, Pharma, Health Reform, and More - 0 views

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    Blog on Medicare, Medicaid, pharma, biotech, health reform, and more. Insights and resources on hot issues. Authored by a health care strategist, speaker, and writer. Expert on Medicare, Medicaid, and pharma, biotech, and device industries
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) - 0 views

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    Government portal for the CDC. Provides medical and health care information, research, policies, reports, agencies, experts, tools, resources, contacts, and news.
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Mayo Clinic - 0 views

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    A resource largely for patients and non-professional consumers of medicine and health care, created by the Mayo Clinic as an educational tool to help facilitate delivery of better, more efficient medicine to informed, participatory clients.
avivajazz  jazzaviva

National Library of Medicine (NLM) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) - 0 views

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    Access research studies, publications, conference proceedings, reference materials, databases, tools, and other resources of interest to medical researchers, health care providers, patients, consumers, citizens, and policymakers.
avivajazz  jazzaviva

// D E R U - 0 views

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    their site? the site of a fine electronica team? totally trippy. ingenious. like much of their music.
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Web 2.0 Guide to Swine Flu | Rahul K. Parikh | Open Salon - 0 views

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    This post is from "sWell." Interesting medical blog
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