How Quality Improvement Links to Real Change in Patient Care
October 29th 2014The era of accountable care and pay for performance is here, and physicians will have to embrace these novel reimbursement models. In a plenary session, Rubin Cohen, MD, FCCP, a member of the American College of Chest Physician's quality improvement committee, discussed the relationship between quality improvement and outcomes.
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Managing Ebola: How ICUs Can Prepare for an Outbreak in the United States
October 29th 2014During a plenary session at the American College of Chest Physicians' CHEST meeting in Austin, Texas, Edgar Jimenez, MD, FCCM, vice president of critical care integration at Baylor Scott and White Health in Central Texas, discussed how to prepare for Ebola in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) setting. Dr Jimenez began by introducing the session as a way to answer questions and to provide hospital ICU staff with key considerations for Ebola preparation in the United States.
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Pirfenidone: A Recently Approved Option for Patients With IPF
October 29th 2014A symposium on idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), which was presented on behalf of InterMune, Inc, highlighted clinical data supporting the use of pirfenidone in patients with IPF. Leading the panel discussion was Steven Nathan, MD, FCCP, a principal investigator involved in studies of pirfenidone. Dr Nathan was joined by IPF experts Lisa Lancaster, MD, of Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Marilyn Glassberg, MD, of the University of Miami Health System.
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Dr David R. Nunley on Re-Categorizing Lung Allograft Dysfunction
October 29th 2014The categorization of lung allograft dysfunction is changing, David Nunley, MD, clinical director of lung transplant at the University of Louisville Health Care Outpatient Center, said at the 2014 CHEST meeting in Austin, Texas.
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Dr Chris Carroll Expounds the Risk of Avoiding Social Media
October 29th 2014Fear is the biggest barrier preventing providers from using social media to its fullest potential, according to Christopher Carroll, MD, social media editor at CHEST and research director for the Division of Critical Care at the Connecticut Children's Medical Center.
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Implementing Change in Organizations and Healthcare Systems
October 28th 2014Dan Heath, a senior fellow at the Center for Advancement of Social Entrepreneurship at Duke University, outlined strategies for implementing change within an organization, including looking for solutions that are already present within an organization, as a solution to a large problem may already have been implemented on a small scale.
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Keeping Pace With Evidence-Based Medicine: Pulmonary Hypertension Guideline Updates and Beyond
October 28th 2014During a panel discussion, Darren Taichman, MD, PhD, executive deputy editor of the Annals of Internal Medicine and adjunct associate professor of medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, presented updates to pulmonary hypertension treatment guidelines, and Daniel Oulette, MD, FCCP, leader of the American College of Chest Physicians guideline oversight committee, discussed the move toward evidence-based guidelines that allow for continuous updates.
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Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis: Biomarkers and New Treatment Options
October 28th 2014The molecular heterogeneity of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) may be important when selecting treatment strategies, including 2 new medications for delaying the progression of IPF-pirfenidone and nintedanib. In a featured lecture, Steven K. Huang, MD, an expert in IPF and an assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan, discussed characterization of the disease from the perspective of genetics.
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Dr Steven Nathan Discusses the 2 Newly Approved Drugs to Treat IPF
October 27th 2014The big news at the 2014 CHEST meeting in Austin, TX, was that 2 new drugs - pirfenidone and nintedanib - were approved to treat idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, according to Steven Nathan, MD, medical director of the Lung Transplant Program at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church, VA.
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Guidelines for the treatment of healthcare-associated pneumonia recommend the use of broad-spectrum therapy. But based on current evidence, use of broad-spectrum therapy may not be warranted, according to Marcos I. Restrepo, MD, MSc, of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.
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Targeting NSCLC Through Molecular Markers
October 27th 2014In this session, Gerard A. Silvestri MD, MS, a professor at the Medical University of South Carolina, discussed the evolution of therapy for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The use of targeted therapies has led to a dramatic improvement in survival for a certain subset of patients with NSCLC whose cancers have specific driver mutations.
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Lung cancer is a good candidate for broad, population-based screening because it is a common disease with a high mortality rate that is often more successfully treated when a diagnosis is established early in the disease process. In an educational session, Gerard A. Silvestri, MD, MS, a professor at the Medical University of South Carolina, discussed the state of the art in lung cancer screening.
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Session Explores Use of Lurasidone in Bipolar Depression
September 23rd 2014Treating bipolar depression with standard antidepressants has long been controversial, because some patients do not respond and it is believed that the drugs trigger manic episodes. Two physicians outline data on an antipsychotic initially approved for schizophrenia that received an additional indication for bipolar depression.
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In Pediatric Cases, Benefits of Treating Disorders Outweighs Risks
September 23rd 2014Treating psychiatric disorders in children and teenagers offers benefits that far outweigh risks, according to Craig Donnelly, MD, of Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. If mental health problems go untreated, the teenager runs the risk of developing a more serious disorder as an adult.
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Mentally Ill Die Young From Chronic Disease. Can Psychiatrists Fill a Medical Gap?
September 23rd 2014Patients with serious mental illness die 15 to 20 years earlier than those with similar cardiovascular conditions. According to Joseph P. McEvoy, MD, of the Medical College of Georgia, "There's no mystery here." Cognitive deficits, issues, and lack of access can make it hard for these patients to get primary care, and to stick with the instructions they do receive. To help this group, Dr McEvoy believes psychiatrists can gain competency to treat hypertension, diabetes, obesity and to help these patients quit smoking.
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Work Proceeds to Address Cognitive Impairment in Schizophrenia
September 22nd 2014The better-known symptoms of schizophrenia are devastating enough: hallucinations, delusions, agitated body movements, the inability to experience pleasure. Yet even when these facets are controlled with antipsychotic drugs, cognitive deficits that make it hard to maintain relationships or hold a job can still consign patients to a life in the shadows, with few friends or little contact with family.
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Mindfulness-Based Techniques Aim to Help Patients Reduce Stress, Manage Pain
September 22nd 2014Steven D. Hickman, PsyD, associate clinical professor at the University of California, San Diego, invited a roomful of conference attendees to put down the notes, close their eyes, set an intention, and breathe, gaining an "awareness of the breath." His session, "Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Patients with Chronic or Life-Threatening Illness," highlighted techniques based on 2000-year-old Eastern philosophy that can help patients learn to respond to pain, not react to it.
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Evidence Base Growing, But More Needed to Tailor Treatments to Patients in PTSD
September 22nd 2014Evidence of who gets post-traumatic stress disorder, how genetics plays a role, and how to treat it is growing, but much work remains to help the estimated 3.5% of the population who suffer its effects in any given year, according to Murray B. Stein, MD, MPH, professor of Psychiatry and Family and Preventive Medicine, and vice chair for Clinical Research in Psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego.
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New Therapies to Fight Addiction
September 21st 2014For more than 70 years, standard care for those addicted to alcohol or drugs has called for the afflicted person to abstain from the substance completely, and to become immersed in a community of fellow sufferers for support. This is particularly true in the early months, when the "phenomenon of craving" remains acute.
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Building Therapeutic Alliances Essential in Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Personality Disorders
September 21st 2014Building trust, or a "therapeutic alliance," between the therapist and patient with personality disorder is needed to help the patient work through core beliefs of worthlessness and unlovability that affect behavior, according to Judith S. Beck, PhD, who was the featured speaker Saturday at the US Psychiatric and Mental Health Congress, being held in Orlando, Florida.
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Quality Measurements Hold Key to Accountability in Mental Health
September 20th 2014If psychiatrists and other mental health professionals don't actively measure their effectiveness, they typically don't know things have gone awry until it's too late, said Mark Zimmerman, MD, director of Outpatient Psychiatry and the Partial Hospital Program at Rhode Island Hospital.
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The National Bone Health Alliance working group expanded criteria for the clinical diagnosis of osteoporosis to include T-score < 2.5 at the spine or hip; low-trauma hip fracture; low-trauma vertebral, proximal humerus, pelvis or some distal forearm fractures in the setting of osteopenia; or FRAX score in a patient with osteopenia meeting or exceeding the National Osteoporosis Foundation Guidelines.
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The Current State of Fracture Liaison Services in the United States
September 15th 2014Fracture Liaison Services (FLS) attempt to ensure that patients with potentially osteoporosis-associated fractures are followed appropriately with screening and intervention. In the United States, industry, non-profits, and governmental steering committees support FLS.
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Understanding Pathways and Pathophysiologic Implications of Autophagy
September 13th 2014Autophagy functions in numerous critical ways, including in quality control, cell remodeling, and energy production. Understanding the molecular pathways of autophagy can result in understanding and treating neurodegenerative disorders, metabolic disorders, and physiologic changes associated with aging.
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Making Treatment Decisions When There Is an Abundance of Options
September 13th 2014Despite the benefit of having more choices than ever before to treat patients with multiple sclerosis, the abundance of options has led to more complexity, according to speakers at the 2014 ACTRIMS-ECTRIMS Joint Meeting in Boston, Massachusetts.
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Novel Approaches for the Prevention and Treatment of Inflammatory Bone Loss
September 13th 2014Current novel therapeutics for the prevention and treatment of bone loss in patients with inflammatory joint disease target cytokines and other inflammatory mediators. Mesenchymal stem cell therapy is a compelling new treatment currently being studied in clinical trials.
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