Tuesday, May 24, 2011

NYT: "When Doctors Are Called to the Rescue in Midflight"

Bring your stethoscope, carry-on, this summer!

"Dr. Matthew Rhoa is still haunted by one of his lowest moments as a physician. Several years ago, on the first leg of an international flight, he was just settling in for a nap when a flight attendant came on the public address system to ask, “Is there a doctor on the plane?”
Leif Parsons

Dr. Rhoa, who lives in San Francisco, didn’t push his call button. “As a gynecologist, I always waited for another doctor,” he said. “There’s never a need for a Pap smear at 30,000 feet.”

He fell asleep, only to be awakened an hour later by a second call for medical help. This time he answered, and at the back of the plane he found two anxious parents with their 18-month-old toddler, who had a cast on her broken leg and was crying inconsolably.
The girl’s toes were blue. Limbs can often swell in flight, and it was clear that the cast was much too tight. Dr. Rhoa slit the cast and pried it open. The girl stopped crying at once.

“I have been riddled by guilt to this day,” said Dr. Rhoa, who now promptly answers every call for medical help on a plane. “I never want that feeling again of a kid suffering like that when I could have done something sooner.”
Since the earliest days of commercial aviation, airlines have coped with medical emergencies in flight by calling on physicians who happen to be passengers. And as more people travel by air, the number of emergencies has risen accordingly.

“Passenger health is becoming more and more of an issue, because of increased life expectancy and more people flying with pre-existing conditions..."

[To see full article at the New York Times, click here:
"When Doctors Are Called to the Rescue in Midflight"
By KATIE HAFNER
Published: May 23, 2011]

Read More...

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Multimedia NYT: "Patient Voices"

A recent discovery--a late one--of this New York Times feature from 2009 called "Patient Voices," with personal audiovisual narratives from people sharing their experiences living with various well-known, and very un-well-known illnesses.  38 illnesses are included, to be exact, of everything from A.D.H.D., Tourette's syndrome, and stroke, to Lou Gehrig's disease, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, and sleep apnea. 

Couldn't resist passing along this must-see feature for med students, patients, caretakers, friends, family members--everyone, really.  NYT: Patient Voices

Read More...

Friday, March 25, 2011

Health Care Reform Has Begun! So how does it benefit you and yours?

Democrats.org has a cool quick-tool to find out how Health Reform now specifically helps you and the people you know: "Right now, the Affordable Care Act is helping millions of Americans like you, your friends, and family. Take a minute to answer the questions below and find out how health reform helps you and your nearest and dearest."

Also, here is a pointed summary from Doctors for America--spread the word!:

Moving Forward: 10 Ways Health Reform is Helping America

Here are 10 ways health reform is moving forward. Please share this far and wide! 
1. Patients are no longer threatened with lifetime caps on coverage.  Families no longer have to make the hard choices of delaying care or facing bankruptcy.
2. Children with pre-existing conditions are no longer being denied coverage.  Insurance companies can no longer deny coverage to children under the age of 19 because of a pre-existing condition or disability.
3. Young adults are getting covered on their parents’ insurance.  Many medical students in Doctors for America are now covered thanks to this provision.  Over 1.2 million people age 19-26 are eligible!    
4. Medicare fraud prevention is getting ratcheted up!  $350 million was invested in 2010 for enhanced efforts to prevent criminals from defrauding Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP – contributing to a record $4 billion recovered in 2010.
5. People and communities are focusing efforts on preventing disease.  $750 million in 2010 and $500 million in 2011 have already gone to programs in tobacco cessation, obesity prevention, care coordination, behavioral health, and more in all 50 states.
6. Seniors (4 million of them!) are getting help with prescription drugs.   Seniors in every state got rebate checks in 2010.  In 2011, they get a 50% discount on brand-name drugs in the Medicare prescription drug coverage gap – so they don’t have to cut pills to make them last longer!
7. Hospitals are gearing up to improve quality and safety.  Medicare reimbursement changes in 2012 are getting hospitals around the country to step up efforts to prevent hospital-acquired infections and to keep people from landing back in the hospital within 30 days of going home.
8. Small businesses are getting help covering employees.  Up to 4 million small businesses that employ 16 million people are eligible for 35% tax credits on health insurance premiums right now.  Note: small businesses will not be required to buy insurance under the law.
9. Insurance companies have a new cap on profits.  As of January 1, insurance companies have to spend at least 80% of premium dollars on health care. In the large-group market (big employers), they must spend at least 85% on health care -- so more of our premium dollars go to health instead of corporate vacations and CEO bonuses.
10. We are training thousands more health care providers to take care of the population.  $320 million in grants is already boosting primary care residency programs, training physician assistants, and helping states create innovative plans for their unique health care workforce needs.


Are you a doctor or medical student?  Sign our pledge to Return to Core Values as we work together to build a patient-centered health care system that puts justice, integrity, and compassion first!

Read More...

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Doctors for America: Take action TODAY and "Tell Congress To Vote No On Repeal"

"On Wed, January 19th, the House of Representatives is voting on a bill to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), just as many of the new provisions take effect. As physicians and medical students, we see firsthand the need for health reform. Already, many of our patient's lives are improving because of reform.

Thousands of doctors have stood up to tell Congress to let health reform move forward.  Congress needs to hear your voice again!  Take a look below for the phone number and sample script.  Then call your Representative today and tell to vote NO on repealing health reform.

Note: if you are not a doctor or medical student, you're welcome to use our call Congress tool for the general public!


Fill out the form below so we can find your congress members' phone numbers for you to call..."  [Go to webpage]

Read More...