Remove 2019 Remove Family Remove Family Medicine Remove Government
article thumbnail

"Walking this line:" Primary Care Practice experiences with workforce strain since the COVID-19 pandemic [Practice management and organization]

Annals of Family Medicine

Setting: Eighteen primary care practices and systems across the United States (US) diverse in size, location, composition, and 2019-2020 revenue change. As government relief funds ended, leaders noted needing to cut back on workforce strategies implemented during the pandemic. Instrument: Semi-structured interview guide.

article thumbnail

Breaking ICD Codes: Identifying Ambiguous Respiratory Infection Codes via Regional Diagnosis Heterogeneity [Original Research]

Annals of Family Medicine

METHODS We analyzed national weekly diagnosis data for acute respiratory infections (ICD-10 codes J00-J22) in Poland from 2010 to 2019, covering all 380 county-equivalent administrative regions and encompassing 292 million consultations. Data were aggregated into age brackets.

Diagnosis 130
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Common Skincare Ingredients that Are Linked to Cancer

Health One Family Medicine

The laws governing the skincare and cosmetics industry are very limited. Contaminated Talc In 2019, the FDA advised consumers to avoid using certain cosmetic products because they tested positive for asbestos. The post Common Skincare Ingredients that Are Linked to Cancer appeared first on Health One Family Medicine.

article thumbnail

Debating the pros and cons of Medicare for All

The Health Policy Exchange

Our recent Georgetown Health Policy Journal Club discussed two editorials in the October 1 issue of American Family Physician that offered contrasting answers to the question: "Would Medicare for All Be the Most Beneficial Health Care System for Family Physicians and Patients?" trillion annually. trillion annually.

article thumbnail

Book Review: Booster Shots by Dr. Adam Ratner

Common Sense Family Doctor

In two decades of practicing family medicine, I've never seen a patient with measles. Oh, and the CDC's National Immunization Survey has been canceled by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, even if the Epidemic Intelligence Service seems to have received a temporary reprieve.) this is it.