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RDAA Survey Shows Widespread Support For Medicare Loading For Rural And Remote Doctors
Over 80% of rural and remote doctors recently surveyed by the Rural Doctors Association of Australia (RDAA) believe adding a significant rural and remote loading on Medicare items would assist in recruiting and retaining doctors in their communities.
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If You Have Taken Flomax(R), Tell Your Ophthalmologist BEFORE Having Cataract Surgery
The results of a new study reinforce an advisory that patients taking
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Reducing Medical Residents' Hours Would Cost $2.5B Annually, Study Says
Implementing proposed reductions in the number of hours medical residents work could cost as much as $2.5 billion annually, according to a recent study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, the Baltimore Sun reports. The study follows an Institute of Medicine report that proposed reducing the maximum hours that residents can work without sleep from 30 to 16, increasing the number of days they must take off and improving their supervision (Desmon, Baltimore Sun, 5/21). In 2003, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education reduced the number of hours residents at teaching hospitals could work weekly from more than 100 hours to 80 hours. In the recent study, which was partially funded by IOM, researchers examined post-2003 literature on resident work hours and patient harm and evaluated it against additional labor costs. The authors concluded that the IOM recommendations "would be costly, and their effectiveness is unknown" (Shishkin, Wall Street Journal, 5/21). Teryl Nuckols, the lead author of the study, said that teaching hospitals would most likely need to hire more residents and experienced physicians to take care of patients, which would likely cost each teaching hospital $3.2 million annually (Baltimore Sun, 5/21). The study was accompanied by an NEJM editorial in which the authors "strongly disagree" with the IOM recommendations, claiming that reducing resident work hours "leads to an increase in the number of handoffs in care, and this increase outweighs the potential benefits of reducing residents" fatigue." The accreditation council said that more research is needed before it decides whether to adopt the IOM recommendations. The council"s decision will be announced in February 2010 (Wall Street Journal, 5/21).
Public Health

"What Must EPS Pilot Prove?" Asks NPA

The NPA is asking its members to utilise the new NPA IT forums website to comment on the criteria that should be used to demonstrate that EPS is operationally functional ahead of national roll-out. The NPA believes that EPS must work technically, be business and operationally functional, improve service delivery at pharmacies, and is safe for patients, before full roll-out can be contemplated. The website, http://itforums.npa.co.uk, provides an opportunity for members throughout the UK to voice their opinions on the IT programmes affecting their country or on general IT topics which affect all nations. Gareth Jones, NPA NHS Liaison Manager said: "The NPA is playing an active role in shaping the development of how pharmacy IT programmes will roll out. The IT forums website, we hope, will stimulate debate and give us another way of collecting members" views and concerns about the new programmes being implemented." "We would like active discussion from members on EPS in England, EPES in Northern Ireland, the epharmacy programme in Scotland and 2DRx in Wales. It is important to recognise that effective IT will be increasingly important if community pharmacy is going to meet its future challenges. The NPA has used the forum to re-state its position on EPS and in the next few weeks will be adding EPS dispensary workflows for debate, and asking participants about how they would like to see PMR systems develop. The NPA wants to encourage dialogue on what all these issues will mean for the pharmacist and the pharmacy team and this website provides a platform for that." National Pharmacy Association


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