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Business of Medicine

A Partner in the Business: Practices see mid-level providers as valuable additions

May 2, 2010

When Winston C. Vaughan, MD, told his Stanford University patients he was leaving academia to establish a private group practice, they had one question: “Are you taking Kathleen with you?” Their concern attests to the integral role that Kathleen Low, RN, NP, fills as a patient-care provider in Dr. Vaughan’s otolaryngology practice.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 | Multi-Page

Avoid the Hot Seat: How to prepare for a CMS audit

April 1, 2010

In February, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) began rolling out its national Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC) program, aimed at ferreting out improper payments and preventing fraud, waste and abuse in the Medicare system. If you bill for Medicare fee-for-service, you are fair game for a RAC audit. A three-year demonstration of the RAC program, which ended in March 2008, heavily targeted bronchoscopy, injectable drugs and IV hydration therapy. But auditors are rapidly expanding the list, and the permanent program will include adenoidectomies, tonsillectomies, thyroidectomies and other otolaryngology-related procedures.

Pages: 1 2 | Multi-Page

Show Me the Evidence: Comparative effectiveness research could aid treatment decisions

April 1, 2010

A push at the national level to fund more comparative effectiveness research could mean more information for otolaryngologists about which treatments work best for a given condition and in which patients.

Pages: 1 2 3 | Multi-Page

Scarless Surgery: The benefits and drawbacks of robotic thryroidectomy

April 1, 2010

Using robotic arms, surgeons can now remove the thyroid gland through an incision in the axilla, or armpit, thereby avoiding the large scar on the front of the neck caused by traditional thyroid surgery. The procedure offers no other benefits over the traditional approach developed a century ago by Emil Theodor Kocher, MD, according to head and neck surgeons who perform the robotic surgery. In fact, it takes longer to recover from the robotic surgery, they say, with some patients complaining of chest numbness for months afterwards.

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A New Game Plan: Otolaryngologists and consultants devise solutions to ride out the recession

April 1, 2010

Otolaryngologists understand that even their most loyal patients, with finances ravaged by the lingering economic recession, may postpone or forego endoscopic sinus surgery, tonsillectomy or a chemical facial peel in favor of paying the mortgage.

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Health Care as a Commodity: Competition should be focus of health reform, lecturer says

March 1, 2010

Donald Palmisano, Esq., MD, believes the key to curing the health care crisis in the U.S. involves respecting the sacredness of the doctor-patient relationship and capping the size of malpractice awards.

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Digital Efficiency: Panel discusses the inevitability of EMRs

March 1, 2010

Electronic medical records (EMRs) are costly and require significant staff time to implement but have the potential to bring huge benefits to patients and doctors alike, said speakers at the Triological Society’s Combined Sections Meeting held here Feb. 4-7.

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Borrowing 101: Minimize risk when taking out a loan for your practice

March 1, 2010

For better or worse, medical practices are experiencing change. While many physicians are looking to expand their practice, other physicians are seeking a divorce from their current group.

Pages: 1 2 3 | Multi-Page

The Future of Genomics Is Now: Dr. Thomas C. Spelsberg discusses the clinical implications

March 1, 2010

The genome project sequenced all three billion base pairs of human DNA, revealing the instructions cells need to build all the proteins in the body. But that was just a warm-up, according to Thomas C. Spelsberg, PhD, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

Pages: 1 2 | Multi-Page

The Female Question: Should more be done to increase the ranks of female otolaryngologists?

March 1, 2010

Diana C. Ponsky, MD, assistant professor of otolaryngology-facial plastic and reconstructive surgery at Case Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio, went to medical school wanting to be a pediatrician. She happened upon otolaryngology “by accident, by scrubbing into a very fascinating cancer case. I was hooked,” she now recalls.

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