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Medical economics news

Medical economics

Foreign medical residents fill critical positions at US hospitals, but are running into visa issues

Some hospitals in the U.S. are without essential staff because international doctors who were set to start their medical training this week were delayed by the Trump administration's travel and visa restrictions.

Medical economics

Physician associates provide safe care for diagnosed patients when directly supervised by a doctor

Physician associates provide safe and effective care when they work under the direct supervision of doctors and care for patients who have already been diagnosed, or when they undertake procedures for which they have been ...

Medical economics

Judge blocks layoffs at US Health Department

A federal judge has stopped the Trump administration from implementing more layoffs at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), saying the job cuts likely went against the law.

Social Sciences

Online grocery program bridges food gap in rural Mississippi

An article by Ph.D. student Ivonne Quiroz and colleagues published in the Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development assesses an online grocery ordering service implemented in rural Mississippi, where ...

Medical economics

Nepal's health insurance program: Challenges and early impacts

Nepal's National Health Insurance Program (NHIP), started in 2016, set out to improve access to health care and protect citizens from high medical costs. However, the program has struggled with low enrollment and high dropout ...

Medical economics

What makes someone leave a Medicare Advantage plan?

More than half of older Americans now get their Medicare coverage through an insurance company's Medicare Advantage (MA) plan. But many go on to switch plans or even leave for traditional Medicare when Open Enrollment comes ...

Diseases, Conditions, Syndromes

Q&A: Malaria gene research at risk in 'catastrophic' US cuts

The "catastrophic" freeze on U.S. funding for malaria has halted prevention programs across Africa and also threatens to stall advances in genomic research, says Jane Carlton, director of the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research ...

Diseases, Conditions, Syndromes

Could poverty trigger the next pandemic?

Socioeconomic factors may be a driving force behind the emergence and spread of animal-borne disease outbreaks, according to new research from the University of Georgia and Oklahoma State University.

Medical economics

How relative performance feedback can motivate doctors

When physicians receive relative performance feedback on quality of care, the design of the ranking influences whether it motivates them to improve or has a demotivating effect. The specified quality threshold defining outstanding ...

Pediatrics

Opinion: Aggressive online baby formula campaigns must end

Breastfeeding saves lives. It is one of the most powerful, proven investments in child survival, development and health. And yet its practice is being undermined—not by science, but by sophisticated and often misleading ...

Medical economics

What will it take to reduce primary care doctor burnout?

America's primary care doctors are burning out, cutting back their hours, and leaving their practices early, driven in part by the demands of handling the flood of digital messages from their patients.

Health

Why the FDA recalled six popular acne products

In March, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced voluntary recalls of several popular acne products due to contamination with benzene, a known cancer-causing chemical.