JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association
-
Concern about transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis on college campuses has prompted some schools to institute tuberculin skin test screening of students, but this screening has never been evaluated. ⋯ Widespread tuberculin screening of students yielded a low prevalence of skin test reactors and few tuberculosis cases. To optimize the use of limited public health resources, tuberculin screening should target students at high risk for infection.
-
Being selected to provide medical care to other physicians or their family members represents not only a gratifying professional recognition of competence by one's peers but also a challenge. Many personal and psychological factors may influence the medical care of physicians. III physicians may have difficulty with role reversal and "the VIP syndrome," while treating physicians may have to deal with their own anxiety and issues such as confidentiality, privacy, empathy, and intrusion by a physician-relative into the care of medical family members. Based on experience with more than 200 physician-patients and many adult family members of physicians, suggestions are offered for care of these patient groups.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Behavioral vs drug treatment for urge urinary incontinence in older women: a randomized controlled trial.
Urinary incontinence is a common condition caused by many factors with several treatment options. ⋯ Behavioral treatment is a safe and effective conservative intervention that should be made more readily available to patients as a first-line treatment for urge and mixed incontinence.
-
Previous studies have identified methods of decreasing laboratory utilization. However, most were hospital-based, relatively small, single-centered, or of limited duration. ⋯ The combination of guideline dissemination, laboratory requisition form modification, and changes to funding policy was associated with significant reductions in laboratory utilization.