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Practice Revenues Decline
Medical practice revenues fell in 2008, possibly because of declining patient volumes and payments from people in financial hardship, according to the Medical Group Management Association. Medical practices responded by trimming overhead costs more than 1%, but that wasn't enough to offset shrinking revenues, the MGMA found in its 2009 practice cost survey. Multispecialty group practices saw a 1.9% decline in total medical revenue last year from 2008, with substantial drops in both the number of procedures and the number of patients. Bad debt in multispecialty group practices from fee-for-service charges increased 13% from 2006 to 2008. Practices trimmed their expenses mostly by cutting support-staff costs. Total worker count remained constant, suggesting that practices may have eliminated raises and bonuses or even cut pay, rather than laying off employees, the MGMA said.
Student Posts Are Unprofessional
A majority of medical schools say they have experienced incidents of students posting unprofessional content online, including material that violates patient confidentiality, researchers reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association. However, only 28 of the 78 schools surveyed said they had policies to address such postings, which typically occur on social networking sites, media-sharing sites, blogs, wikis, and podcasts, the authors said. Only six schools said they had encountered patient confidentiality violations, such as online descriptions of identifiable patients, and issues of conflict of interest were rare. But posts using profanity, discriminatory language, depictions of intoxication, and sexually suggestive material were common. Two-thirds of the schools gave students informal warnings, while three schools said they dismissed the students involved. The study authors recommended that medical schools include a digital media component in their training on professionalism.
NIH Grants Total $5 Billion
The National Institutes of Health has awarded more than 12,000 grants for $5 billion in stimulus package funds toward research in HIV, cancer, heart disease, and autism. Announced at a press conference by President Obama, the grants come from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed and signed last spring. “This represents the single largest boost to biomedical research in history,” the president said. Some of the funds will be used to apply findings from the Human Genome Project to treatment and prevention of the target diseases. For example, NIH will expand the Cancer Genome Atlas so that it eventually sequences DNA from 20,000 tissue samples and 20 types of cancer. Other stimulus package funding was designated by the Department of Health and Human Services for chronic disease prevention and wellness programs as well as for information technology at large federally funded health centers. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will administer $373 million for the chronic disease programs and community-based approaches that increase physical activity, improve nutrition, and decrease obesity. Part of that initiative also will focus on reducing tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke, the HHS said. Eighteen grants totaling more than $22 million will fund new electronic health records projects and support existing EHR systems and other information technology in medicine, the department said.
Medicaid Funds More Home Care
Annual Medicaid spending for assisted living and community-based services ballooned by more than 80% in the past 7 years as states sought alternatives to costly nursing home care, a report from the National Center for Assisted Living found. Over the same period, Medicaid's nursing home spending grew only about 10%, and the number of nursing home beds dropped nearly 1.6%, the report said. The program's bills for nursing home care, at $47 billion in 2007, were still far higher than the nearly $17 billion states spent on alternative services such as home care and assisted living. But “consumer preferences for options to institutional care and the states' interest in reducing Medicaid-expenditure growth rates have created a shift in the supply and utilization of nursing homes over the past several years,” the assisted living group concluded in its report.
Resistance Cuts Antibiotic Sales
Antibacterial drugs will soon see a slump in sales, partly because of declining effectiveness and partly because of generic competition, according to the market research company Kalorama Information. The segment had sales growth of just over 3% in 2008 and 2009, but sales will rise only 1.1% in 2010 and will decline by 0.6% in 2011, Kalorama estimated in its report “Worldwide Market for Anti-Infectives (Antifungals, Antibacterials and Antivirals).” The company pegged the 2009 world market for antibacterial drugs at $24.5 billion. It forecast global sales of all classes of anti-infectives to hit $53.3 billion, up from $45.3 billion in 2006. Kalorama predicted that antiviral sales will grow vigorously, with increases of 18% in 2009, 12% in 2010, and 9% in 2011. By 2013, worldwide antiviral sales should hit $34.1 billion.
Practice Revenues Decline
Medical practice revenues fell in 2008, possibly because of declining patient volumes and payments from people in financial hardship, according to the Medical Group Management Association. Medical practices responded by trimming overhead costs more than 1%, but that wasn't enough to offset shrinking revenues, the MGMA found in its 2009 practice cost survey. Multispecialty group practices saw a 1.9% decline in total medical revenue last year from 2008, with substantial drops in both the number of procedures and the number of patients. Bad debt in multispecialty group practices from fee-for-service charges increased 13% from 2006 to 2008. Practices trimmed their expenses mostly by cutting support-staff costs. Total worker count remained constant, suggesting that practices may have eliminated raises and bonuses or even cut pay, rather than laying off employees, the MGMA said.
Student Posts Are Unprofessional
A majority of medical schools say they have experienced incidents of students posting unprofessional content online, including material that violates patient confidentiality, researchers reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association. However, only 28 of the 78 schools surveyed said they had policies to address such postings, which typically occur on social networking sites, media-sharing sites, blogs, wikis, and podcasts, the authors said. Only six schools said they had encountered patient confidentiality violations, such as online descriptions of identifiable patients, and issues of conflict of interest were rare. But posts using profanity, discriminatory language, depictions of intoxication, and sexually suggestive material were common. Two-thirds of the schools gave students informal warnings, while three schools said they dismissed the students involved. The study authors recommended that medical schools include a digital media component in their training on professionalism.
NIH Grants Total $5 Billion
The National Institutes of Health has awarded more than 12,000 grants for $5 billion in stimulus package funds toward research in HIV, cancer, heart disease, and autism. Announced at a press conference by President Obama, the grants come from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed and signed last spring. “This represents the single largest boost to biomedical research in history,” the president said. Some of the funds will be used to apply findings from the Human Genome Project to treatment and prevention of the target diseases. For example, NIH will expand the Cancer Genome Atlas so that it eventually sequences DNA from 20,000 tissue samples and 20 types of cancer. Other stimulus package funding was designated by the Department of Health and Human Services for chronic disease prevention and wellness programs as well as for information technology at large federally funded health centers. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will administer $373 million for the chronic disease programs and community-based approaches that increase physical activity, improve nutrition, and decrease obesity. Part of that initiative also will focus on reducing tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke, the HHS said. Eighteen grants totaling more than $22 million will fund new electronic health records projects and support existing EHR systems and other information technology in medicine, the department said.
Medicaid Funds More Home Care
Annual Medicaid spending for assisted living and community-based services ballooned by more than 80% in the past 7 years as states sought alternatives to costly nursing home care, a report from the National Center for Assisted Living found. Over the same period, Medicaid's nursing home spending grew only about 10%, and the number of nursing home beds dropped nearly 1.6%, the report said. The program's bills for nursing home care, at $47 billion in 2007, were still far higher than the nearly $17 billion states spent on alternative services such as home care and assisted living. But “consumer preferences for options to institutional care and the states' interest in reducing Medicaid-expenditure growth rates have created a shift in the supply and utilization of nursing homes over the past several years,” the assisted living group concluded in its report.
Resistance Cuts Antibiotic Sales
Antibacterial drugs will soon see a slump in sales, partly because of declining effectiveness and partly because of generic competition, according to the market research company Kalorama Information. The segment had sales growth of just over 3% in 2008 and 2009, but sales will rise only 1.1% in 2010 and will decline by 0.6% in 2011, Kalorama estimated in its report “Worldwide Market for Anti-Infectives (Antifungals, Antibacterials and Antivirals).” The company pegged the 2009 world market for antibacterial drugs at $24.5 billion. It forecast global sales of all classes of anti-infectives to hit $53.3 billion, up from $45.3 billion in 2006. Kalorama predicted that antiviral sales will grow vigorously, with increases of 18% in 2009, 12% in 2010, and 9% in 2011. By 2013, worldwide antiviral sales should hit $34.1 billion.
Practice Revenues Decline
Medical practice revenues fell in 2008, possibly because of declining patient volumes and payments from people in financial hardship, according to the Medical Group Management Association. Medical practices responded by trimming overhead costs more than 1%, but that wasn't enough to offset shrinking revenues, the MGMA found in its 2009 practice cost survey. Multispecialty group practices saw a 1.9% decline in total medical revenue last year from 2008, with substantial drops in both the number of procedures and the number of patients. Bad debt in multispecialty group practices from fee-for-service charges increased 13% from 2006 to 2008. Practices trimmed their expenses mostly by cutting support-staff costs. Total worker count remained constant, suggesting that practices may have eliminated raises and bonuses or even cut pay, rather than laying off employees, the MGMA said.
Student Posts Are Unprofessional
A majority of medical schools say they have experienced incidents of students posting unprofessional content online, including material that violates patient confidentiality, researchers reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association. However, only 28 of the 78 schools surveyed said they had policies to address such postings, which typically occur on social networking sites, media-sharing sites, blogs, wikis, and podcasts, the authors said. Only six schools said they had encountered patient confidentiality violations, such as online descriptions of identifiable patients, and issues of conflict of interest were rare. But posts using profanity, discriminatory language, depictions of intoxication, and sexually suggestive material were common. Two-thirds of the schools gave students informal warnings, while three schools said they dismissed the students involved. The study authors recommended that medical schools include a digital media component in their training on professionalism.
NIH Grants Total $5 Billion
The National Institutes of Health has awarded more than 12,000 grants for $5 billion in stimulus package funds toward research in HIV, cancer, heart disease, and autism. Announced at a press conference by President Obama, the grants come from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed and signed last spring. “This represents the single largest boost to biomedical research in history,” the president said. Some of the funds will be used to apply findings from the Human Genome Project to treatment and prevention of the target diseases. For example, NIH will expand the Cancer Genome Atlas so that it eventually sequences DNA from 20,000 tissue samples and 20 types of cancer. Other stimulus package funding was designated by the Department of Health and Human Services for chronic disease prevention and wellness programs as well as for information technology at large federally funded health centers. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will administer $373 million for the chronic disease programs and community-based approaches that increase physical activity, improve nutrition, and decrease obesity. Part of that initiative also will focus on reducing tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke, the HHS said. Eighteen grants totaling more than $22 million will fund new electronic health records projects and support existing EHR systems and other information technology in medicine, the department said.
Medicaid Funds More Home Care
Annual Medicaid spending for assisted living and community-based services ballooned by more than 80% in the past 7 years as states sought alternatives to costly nursing home care, a report from the National Center for Assisted Living found. Over the same period, Medicaid's nursing home spending grew only about 10%, and the number of nursing home beds dropped nearly 1.6%, the report said. The program's bills for nursing home care, at $47 billion in 2007, were still far higher than the nearly $17 billion states spent on alternative services such as home care and assisted living. But “consumer preferences for options to institutional care and the states' interest in reducing Medicaid-expenditure growth rates have created a shift in the supply and utilization of nursing homes over the past several years,” the assisted living group concluded in its report.
Resistance Cuts Antibiotic Sales
Antibacterial drugs will soon see a slump in sales, partly because of declining effectiveness and partly because of generic competition, according to the market research company Kalorama Information. The segment had sales growth of just over 3% in 2008 and 2009, but sales will rise only 1.1% in 2010 and will decline by 0.6% in 2011, Kalorama estimated in its report “Worldwide Market for Anti-Infectives (Antifungals, Antibacterials and Antivirals).” The company pegged the 2009 world market for antibacterial drugs at $24.5 billion. It forecast global sales of all classes of anti-infectives to hit $53.3 billion, up from $45.3 billion in 2006. Kalorama predicted that antiviral sales will grow vigorously, with increases of 18% in 2009, 12% in 2010, and 9% in 2011. By 2013, worldwide antiviral sales should hit $34.1 billion.