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How Technology and Value-Based Models Will Reshape Healthcare by 2035

Mansoor Khan , 2025-04-14 14:19:00 As we navigate through 2025, the American healthcare system stands at a critical juncture. The demographic shifts that have been gradually unfolding are now accelerating, creating challenges that will fundamentally reshape how care is delivered over the next decade. Having worked with healthcare organizations across the country, I’ve observed firsthand…

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Christi Grimm interview, Crisis at HHS, Medicare rates

Bob Herman , 2025-04-14 17:38:00 This is the online version of STAT’s email newsletter Health Care Inc., delivered to your inbox every Monday. Sign up here.  STAT has just won a National Magazine Award for General Excellence. It’s a testament to just how hard everyone here works, and if you’re a subscriber, hopefully it shows you’re…

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New tool guides families on RSV immunization

, 2025-04-14 18:10:00 Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain Researchers from the Wesfarmers Center of Vaccines and Infectious Diseases, based at The Kids Research Institute Australia, have launched an online guidance tool designed to help families and health-care providers in WA learn the best way to protect babies and young children against life-threatening respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)….

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CT Linked to Future Cancer Risk

, 2025-04-14 15:00:00 TOPLINE: CT examinations performed on 62 million patients in the United States during 2023 are projected to result in approximately 103,000 future cancer cases. Adults account for 91% of projected radiation-induced cancers despite higher per-examination risk in children. METHODOLOGY: Approximately 93 million CT examinations are performed on 62 million patients annually in…

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Pfizer Stops Work on Oral GLP-1 Obesity Drug After Safety Signal Surfaces in Clinical Trial

Frank Vinluan , 2025-04-14 16:38:00 Pfizer is playing catch-up in the crowded field of obesity medicines, but it hoped to compete with a daily pill alternative to currently available injectable GLP-1 products. Instead, Pfizer is stopping development of its drug, danuglipron, after a liver complication emerged in a clinical trial. The pharmaceutical giant was evaluating…

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Trump elimina la oficina que establece los niveles de pobreza vinculados a servicios para 80 millones de personas

Arthur Allen , 2025-04-11 09:01:00 Los despidos del presidente Donald Trump en el Departamento de Salud y Servicios Humanos (HHS) incluyeron a toda la oficina que establece las pautas federales de pobreza. Estas pautas determinan si decenas de millones de estadounidenses son elegibles para programas de salud como Medicaid, asistencia alimentaria, cuidado infantil y otros…

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Readout Newsletter: Pfizer, Verve, NIH, CRISPR

Meghana Keshavan , 2025-04-14 14:13:00 Want to stay on top of the science and politics driving biotech today? Sign up to get our biotech newsletter in your inbox. Morning. Today, we discuss interesting new gene-editing data from Verve, see the NIH starting to convene advisory councils again, and more. The need-to-know this morning Third Harmonic Bio, a company that has…

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New device improves mobility among seniors through arm movement

, 2025-04-14 15:01:00 Credit: University of Maine Aging can impair people’s ability to maintain their balance while walking, increasing the risk for falls and injuries. One method for improving motor skills for walking is through training or rehabilitating gait—a person’s walking pattern. With the population of Maine—the oldest in the nation—growing older, a team of…

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New Bill Rocks the Boat

, 2025-04-14 14:10:00 A renewed effort to modernize and stabilize Medicare reimbursement for radiation therapy services is underway.  In mid-March, members of Congress reintroduced bipartisan federal legislation that would shift Medicare reimbursement for radiation oncology services from quantity-based payments to episode-based payments and help stabilize the declining rates of reimbursement in the field.  The Radiation…

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Medication Adherence and Deprescribing Programs Aren’t Enough for Today’s Polypharmacy Patients

Adva Tzuk Onn , 2025-04-14 13:05:00 As the Boomer generation ages, the prevalence of polypharmacy — patients taking multiple medications to manage chronic conditions — is surging. Nearly 40% of older adults take five or more medications, a number that has tripled in the last two decades. While polypharmacy can be necessary, it also significantly increases the…

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A UK wealth tax for better health

Kate E Pickett, David Taylor-Robinson , 2025-04-14 09:31:00 Kate E Pickett, professor of epidemiology1, David Taylor-Robinson, professor of public health and policy2 1Health Sciences, University of York, York, UK 2University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK Correspondence to: K E Pickett kate.pickett{at}york.ac.uk Revenue could reduce funding gaps and inequalities The UK’s health and social care services are…

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Common medications may delay Parkinson’s onset

, 2025-04-14 11:59:00 Dot plots showing the association of PD AAO with a) statin intake, b) NSAID intake, c) adrenergic blockers intake, and d) smoking history, which were the four strongest independent predictors of AAO in the multiple regression analysis. Credit: Journal of Neurology (2025). DOI: 10.1007/s00415-025-12989-2 In a new Cedars-Sinai study of Parkinson’s disease…

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Navigate Hypertensive Disorders During and After Pregnancy

, 2025-04-14 11:44:00 “Roughly 6% of all maternal deaths in the United States are due to a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy,” said Joan Briller, MD, of the University of Illinois, Chicago, in a presentation at the American College of Physicians (ACP-IM) Internal Medicine Meeting 2025. This estimate, based on data from the Centers for Disease…

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What Are the Best Medical Coding Outsourcing Companies?

Luidgi Faubert , 2025-04-09 13:34:00 Medical coding is a complex yet essential part of any health care facility. The impact of inaccurate coding can directly impact revenue cycles, compliance and patient care. Fortunately, errors can be mitigated with the help of a specialized medical coding partner. These organizations possess the expertise, technology and commitment to…

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CRISPR progress is incremental — and that’s OK

Kelly Banas and Eric B. Kmiec , 2025-04-14 08:30:00 The medical promise of CRISPR gene editing can be seen most easily in current research on oral cancer, which affects more than 50,000 Americans every year. An increasing challenge in the treatment of oral cancer is that tumors become resistant to chemotherapy. By injecting CRISPR gene…

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Reparative justice and COP29 | The BMJ

Eugene T Richardson, Lulwama Mulalu, Harjeet Singh , 2025-04-14 09:41:00 Eugene T Richardson, professor of global health and social medicine1, Lulwama Mulalu, researcher2, Harjeet Singh, founding director3 1Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA 2McMaster University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Hamilton, Canada 3Satat Sampada Climate Foundation, Noida, India Competing interests:…

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Mathematical model demonstrates ratio of potassium to sodium intake key to regulating blood pressure

, 2025-04-14 09:42:00 Graphical abstract. Credit: American Journal of Physiology-Renal Physiology (2024). DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00222.2024 New research from the University of Waterloo suggests increasing the ratio of dietary potassium to sodium intake may be more effective for lowering blood pressure than simply reducing sodium intake. The study, “Modulation of blood pressure by dietary potassium and sodium:…

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A new approach to morning wakefulness using sunlight

, 2025-04-14 09:00:00 Sleep is a necessary part of people’s daily routine, but modern lifestyles and technology have ushered in an era of decreased rest time and subsequent fatigue. Further, the bedroom environment, such as light, sound, and temperature, is important for a good night’s sleep, though this is often neglected in residential architecture. In…

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Disjointed Long-Term Care Putting Patients at Risk: Report

, 2025-04-14 09:06:00 An investigation has found that poor coordination of care in the NHS is putting patients with long-term or complex conditions at greater risk of harm. The Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) found that fragmented care is leaving patients and those caring for them feeling distressed and “burnt out.” It also leads…

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Hurricanes and pandemic disrupt colorectal cancer screenings, leading to late diagnoses in Puerto Rico

Summarize this content to 100 words: Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain Rates of colorectal cancer (CRC) diagnoses dropped during and shortly after Hurricanes Irma and Maria and the COVID-19 pandemic in Puerto Rico, according to a recent analysis. However, late-stage diagnoses eventually exceeded expectations, suggesting that limited access to cancer screening services due to these disasters…

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Moderate iron intake linked to lower colon cancer risk

A new study reveals that moderate consumption of total and non-heme iron may reduce colorectal and colon cancer risk in South Korea, highlighting the role of plant-based iron in cancer prevention. Study: Iron Consumption and Colorectal Cancer in Korean Adults: A Prospective Cohort Study. Image Credit: Shutterstock AI Generator / Shutterstock.com A recent Nutrients study investigates the…

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Living Alone With Depression, Anxiety May Up Suicide Risk

[gpt3]Summarize this content to 100 words: TOPLINE: Living alone and having both depression and anxiety was associated with a 558% increase in risk for suicide compared with living with others and without these conditions, a new population-based study showed. METHODOLOGY: Researchers assessed data for more than 3.7 million adults (mean age, 47.2 years; 56% men)…

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New Way To Tackle HIV? Answer Might Lie In Controlling A Tiny Parasitic Worm

[gpt3]Summarize this content to 100 words: Think a tiny parasitic worm has nothing to do with HIV? Researchers have discovered that infection with Wuchereria bancrofti, a thread-like parasite responsible for lymphatic filariasis, increases the risk of contracting HIV, and tackling these worms could help reduce new HIV infections. Lymphatic filariasis is a tropical mosquito-borne disease…

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Rekindling the Doctor, Patient Relationship

[gpt3]Summarize this content to 100 words: There is a palpable tension eating away at the doctor-patient relationship. Doctors are over-capacity. Patients are under-informed and lack the confidence needed to properly self-advocate for their health care needs.  The doctor-patient relationship is experiencing a communication breakdown which is resulting in gaps in care, and a relationship that…

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Micky Tripathi, former top HHS official, to join Mayo Clinic

[gpt3]Summarize this content to 100 words: Mayo Clinic has hired Micky Tripathi, a former top health technology official under President Biden, to be its chief AI implementation officer, a role that involves overseeing the technology’s development and adoption within the sprawling health system. Tripathi most recently was the assistant secretary for technology policy and the…

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Sleep fragmentation in diabetes triggers lasting liver damage and cardiovascular risk

[gpt3]Summarize this content to 100 words: This new article publication from Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B, discusses how diabetes-associated sleep fragmentation impairs liver and heart function via SIRT1-dependent epigenetic modulation of NADPH oxidase 4. Although clinical evidence suggests that nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is an established major risk factor for heart failure, it remains unexplored whether…

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Cephalexin BD as Effective as QID for UTIs in the ED

[gpt3]Summarize this content to 100 words: TOPLINE: Cephalexin administered twice vs four times daily showed comparable treatment failure rates for urinary tract infections (UTIs) diagnosed in the emergency department (ED), potentially offering a more convenient option without compromising effectiveness, a new study showed. METHODOLOGY: Researchers conducted a retrospective, single-center cohort study of 214 adults diagnosed…

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