
Here is yet another facet of the complicated story about possible suppression of research data about selective serotonin uptake inhibitor (SSRI) anti-depressants.The British Medical Journal just recei…
Here is yet another facet of the complicated story about possible suppression of research data about selective serotonin uptake inhibitor (SSRI) anti-depressants.The British Medical Journal just recei…
The Denver Post has documented the sad decline of the city's Department of Veterans Affaris (VA) Medical Center. A 2004 inspection report found, in the reporter's words, the Medical Center to be "a cr…
It has been fashionable for health care managers and health policy types to foist "single-disease solutions" on doctors. The best examples are single-disease management strategies, based on single-dis…
From Arthritis Medicines and Cardiovascular Events—"House of Coxibs" by Eric Topol, M.D., JAMA. 2005;293:(DOI 10.1001/jama.293.3.366).... Third, there are major concerns about how an entire drug class…
The recent stories from the Los Angeles Times about severe conflicts of interests affecting senior National Institutes of Health (NIH) staff, and an accompanying editorial charging "the appearance of …
From the Chicago Sun-Times: the company that just won a multi-year contract to provide security at Provident Hospital, (an affiliate of Cook County Hospital) has a history of strong political connecti…
An update on the ongoing troubles at the King/Drew Medical Center in Los Angeles.The Los Angeles Times published an editorial proposing major changes, particularly in the hospital's leadership, to add…
Here's yet another story about how health care executives can hide bad news which might have slowed their cash flow, and then delay taking any responsibility for their actions.Based on an ongoing gran…
The articles published by the Los Angeles Times about serious conflicts of interest affecting senior NIH scientists have not yet received much notice. A Google News search reveals two lonely reactions…
A year after their landmark series of articles on conflicts of interest affecting top leaders of the NIH, the diligent investigative reporters at the Los Angeles Times have produced a new series about…
In "Naproxen study halted by NIH" (Rick Weiss, Washington Post, Tue, Dec. 21, 2004) it is reported regarding the new findings about naproxen that:That's a significant indictment of the way postmarketi…
As a physician, my blood pressure goes up every time I see the ad about the little purple pill, or the ad involving the guy throwing the football through the old tire (but which is not about throwing,…
In "The End of Blockbuster Drugs", Adam Feuerstein of TheStreet.com writes:The FDA approved Iressa in 2003 under a program that allows drugs for serious, life-threatening diseases like cancer to be ap…
I will periodically post job descriptions showing how business IT thinking applied to clinical or biomedical research computing environments is as appropriate as the tools of psychiatry applied to tr…
By Jim Molpus, for HealthLeaders News, December 16, 2004Healthcare IT Becomes an AdolescentOr has it?Healthcare clinical information technology has been a kid for a long time. The parents-vendors, the…
The New York Times Magazine published an article about how not-for-profit hospitals charge indigent patients their highest rates, and then often aggressively pursue payment. The author, Jonathan Cohn …
California's new initiative to fund stem cell research has already been mired in politics. The announcement of the new chairman of the committee overseeing the institute has just increased the level o…
As is mentioned in our blog description (unless it has fallen into another soft-ware black hole, as it does periodically), a major manifestation of the current health care system dysfunction are attac…
Hot off the press are wire-service reports that an ongoing trial of Pfizer's Celebrex showed a greater than two-fold increase in risk of myocardial infarction (heart attack) for patients taking the dr…
Marc on the listserv put up an important link to a paper: "Ethical Guidelines for Managing Conflicts of Interest in Health Services Research" It was the product of AcademyHealth, which is "the profess…
Some of the intrepid health care renewal bloggers just published an electronic letter in response to a nice article by Chervenak and McCullough in Academic Medicine. The article proposed an ethical fr…
Kudos to Shannon! "The Drug-Trial Registry" at the New York Times Magazine:(requires free login) Shannon provides a nice snapshot of the issues we have reviewed on the listserv. Problems with ne…
The EMR will likely be of great value in improving the large-scale postmarketing surveillance of new drugs. However, there seems to be a near-complete lack of EMR expertise (especially in Medical Inf…
As the White House prepared an initiative to combat AIDS in Africa, the Associated Press reported that top NIH officials glossed-over severe problems with an ongoing study of nevaripine to prevent mat…
The economics of vaccines are complex, but in the end differ little from other products. In this article from the New Yorker, James Surowiecki notes the difference between "push" and "pull" funding i…
The media today contains a host of stories about health care mismanagement at all sorts of organizations.Not for Profit RI Blue Cross Fights to Keep Paying DirectorsThe Providence Journal reported tha…
The need for seasoned individuals with formal training in Health Informatics is critical to the success of Electronic Medical Records and related clinical IT initiatives. Numerous universities have cr…
From the "Year in Ideas" special issue of the New York Times magazine, two psychologists, Paul Babiak and Robert Hare, have developed the "B-Scan," an instrument designed to detect whether the CEO of …
Information technology (IT) has long been presented as a panacea to many of healthcare's ills. Saying that "health information technology has the potential to greatly improve health care even as it yi…
In Chicago, the Sun-Times reported that the Service Employees Internation Union charged that Advocate Health Care, a not-for-profit hospital system, spends more on capital improvements on hospitals in…
The NY Times reported US Government Accountability Office found that about 30% of callers to a help number for Medicare patients got wrong answers to questions about Medicare's new drug benefit, while…
At its winter board retreat, the board of the Society for General Internal Medicine proceeded with plans to create a brand new movement called the SGIM Clinical Practice Task Force. Listed as part of…
Health care around the world is beset by rising costs, declining access, stagnant quality, and increasingly dissatisfied health care professionals. Discussions with physicians and other professionals…