This study is about a patient for whom suspension microesophagoscopy was performed and describes how this approach allowed for improved management.
Search Results for: feed
How Otolaryngologists Are Adjusting to Value-Based Compensation Amid Mixed Success in Primary Care Settings
Value-Based Compensation model can be considered advantageous because it evens the playing field between proceduralists and non-proceduralists, but defining value and implementing VBC can be challenging.
New Standardized Otolaryngology Curriculum Launching July 1 Should Be Valuable Resource For Physicians Around The World
New standardized otolaryngology curriculum’s goal is to deliver a comprehensive and appropriately detailed curriculum that will help direct self-learning and serve as a jumping-off point for residency programs’ didactic learning.
Imaging Of Parathyroid Adenoma, Treatment Of Respiratory Papillomatosis, And More Discussed In Sections Meeting
Imaging of parathyroid adenomas, efficacy of functional rhinoplasty, an emerging therapy for recurrent respiratory papillomatosis, betahistine for ménière’s disease, and the state of surgical training were all tackled by a panel of experts at the Triological Society Combined Sections Meeting in a series of Best Practice talks.
How Do We Ensure Quality in Value-Based Care?
While proponents of value-based care indicate that the cost savings and efficiency of the system are inherently quality based, it remains to be seen how that will play out at the patient–physician relationship level
Everything AI and Its Effect on Otolaryngology
Virtual (VR), augmented (AR), and mixed realities (MR) all fall under the umbrella of extended reality (XR) and are characterized by extending a user’s experience into different worlds via technology that simulates those realms. In healthcare, currently, one of the main uses of XR occurs during surgery.
How to: Modified Single-Stage Endoscopic Repair for Bilateral Choanal Atresia Minimize Damage to Adjacent Sinonasal Structures
Ideally, the optimal surgical procedure to address choanal atresia should safely restore nasal patency, minimize damage to adjacent sinonasal structures, and eliminate reoperation with minimal disease associated morbidity.
Giving Residents Working Knowledge of Private Practice Operations Could Benefit All of Otolaryngology
A significant amount of medical training, at both the medical school and residency levels, occurs at larger academic hospital systems, however. This can make getting a firsthand view of private practice a challenge for physicians in training.
PROMS Can Help With Patient Outcomes And With Patient-Centered Research
PROMs are important in otolaryngology because many of the issues that patients have (e.g., hearing loss, nasal issues, snoring, swallowing, dizziness) have a big subjective component. One of the benefits of performing PROMs is getting a measure of how a patient is doing at that visit, as well as giving the clinician a point of focus, whether it’s a specific physical, functional, or emotional issue.
New study findings suggest that cochlear implantees have a dampened emotional experience with music
People with bilateral cochlear implantation have diminished perception of musical attributes, which limits their emotional response when listening
- « Previous Page
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- …
- 31
- Next Page »









