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  • Title X Problems Worsen with Recent Court Decision

    The recent Title X changes have proven devastating to women depending on family planning centers for their reproductive healthcare needs. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling upheld the Trump administration’s gag rule that prohibits Title X providers from referring patients for abortion care or even answering questions about abortion.

  • How Providers Can Weather the Pandemic

    As pandemic messaging moves from containment to mitigation to recovery, national experts are giving healthcare providers tips on how to weather the storm.

  • COVID-19 Shuts Down Nation; Family Planning Need Not Stop

    The COVID-19 pandemic has affected every aspect of American life, including nonemergency doctor visits. But from a family reproductive health point of view, the consequences of weeks of social distancing and quarantines can present new challenges.

  • This ECG Was in Your ‘Pile to be Read’

    Imagine the ECG in the figure was one of many tracings you received to read from a group of patients seen by other providers in your clinic. Unfortunately, no clinical information about this patient was available. How would one interpret this tracing? Considering no clinical information regarding what happened to the patient was available, what is the next step?

  • Rimegepant Orally Disintegrating Tablet (Nurtec ODT)

    Rimegepant should be prescribed to treat acute migraine with or without aura in adults.

  • Diagnostic Criteria for Small Fiber Neuropathy

    Multiple clinical tools have emerged to assess small fiber nerve dysfunction, but validated diagnostic criteria are needed to optimize diagnostic sensitivity, support clinical management, and facilitate patient selection for clinical trials.

  • Home Oral Factor Xa Inhibitor Treatment for Pulmonary Embolism

    Low-risk pulmonary embolus patients discharged in < 48 hours on rivaroxaban recorded a nominal three-month rate of recurrent emboli or major bleeding, suggesting such patients do not need to be hospitalized for treatment of pulmonary emboli.

  • Low TMAO for a Healthy Heart

    The gut microbial metabolite trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) is a predictor of coronary artery disease (CAD). Long-term changes in TMAO is a predictor of CAD and speaks to the benefits of a plant-based diet to prevent heart disease.

  • Cholesterol Levels and Predicted Survival Rates Among Elderly Women

    Researchers found neither low levels of high-density lipoprotein nor high levels of low-density lipoprotein were associated with predicted survival in older women. This finding is consistent with other studies of cholesterol and mortality in the elderly.

  • ICU to Long-Term Acute Care: Seamless Transition, Fewer Readmissions

    When a seriously ill patient has not stabilized in the ICU, the next step may be a long-term acute care hospital like Spaulding Hospital Cambridge — which often is a difficult transition. Six years ago, Spaulding joined nearby Brigham and Women’s Hospital in creating the Integrated Patient Centered Care in Chronic Critical Illness program to provide a seamless transition of care for these patients and their families.