Popular Articles

Cancer; Not Simply A Question Of Life Or Death, Macmillan Cancer Support
Health and social care services are overlooking the long-term physical and emotional effects of cancer survivors, leaving many of the two million people living with or beyond the disease in the UK suffering alone and in silence. According to Macmillan Cancer Support, cancer survivors are suffering needlessly and in silence: overlooked by health and social care services that frequently miss the long-term physical and emotional effects of the disease.
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IGEL Demonstrates The Healthcare Benefits Of Its Thin Client Technology At Smart Healthcare Live
Fast and secure access to patient files whilst on the move will be just one of the benefits IGEL Technology will be demonstrating using thin clients at Smart Healthcare Live in Earls Court, London, from June 9-10. Using IGEL Universal Desktops with integrated smartcard devices, healthcare professionals can securely log-in to any IGEL device and access patient records in under 10 seconds.
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Snoring May Impair Brain Function
It has been linked to learning impairment, stroke and premature death. Now UNSW research has found that snoring associated with sleep apnoea may impair brain function more than previously thought.
Mental Health

Texas "Medical Home" Provides Personal And Coordinated Health Care

The Houston Chronicle reports on a medical philosophy that focuses on providing coordinated care and personal care to older patients, mostly indigent seniors. The paper examines Select Senior Clinic, a Texas facility that ascribes to the medical home concept. Dr. Clive Fields founded the clinic where doctors "use "concierge-style" medicine - a service usually found in affluent areas - to give the patient improved access to physicians. Their aim is for patients to spend less time waiting for their appointment and more time actually speaking with a doctor. Patients will be able to call physicians when they are not in the office and, on occasion, doctors will make house calls... Patients can use the clinic"s Wellness Center to exercise on senior-friendly machines and attend talks on health issues." "There will be one physician for every 800 patients - a number that is six times lower than the caseload of the average primary care physician," Dr. Clive Fields, one of the clinic"s founders, told the Chronicle. Trevor Rabie, a doctor who works at the medical home, "said he also hopes to bring in other specialties, such as a dietitian or exercise physiologist." The clinic accepts only Medicare, Medicaid and the TexanPlus Medicare Advantage Plan (Winchester, 6/18). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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