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Reform will hurt academic medical centers

 Arthur Feldman By Arthur Feldman | January 01, 2010 | Basic Web Registration
Numerous stakeholders are shaping the debate over healthcare reform. However, a key stakeholder, America’s academic medical centers, or AMCs, have had little or no impact. Composed of 131 U.S. allopathic medical schools and their affiliated hospitals, AMCs represent a small portion of the nation’s 5,815 American Hospital Association-registered hospitals, and their political influence is limited. FULL STORY »

Consider the alternatives

 B. Basia Kielczynska By B. Basia Kielczynska | December 04, 2009 | Basic Web Registration
Boards of trustees of healthcare organizations must provide leadership as their institutions seek to expand patient care into the areas of complementary and alternative medicine, or CAM. This requirement flows from the fiduciary duty of such boards to provide healthcare that promotes health and prevention, and relies on the effective, safe, affordable and least-invasive interventions. FULL STORY »

There's no place like home health

Billie Papasifakis By Billie Papasifakis | November 02, 2009 | Basic Web Registration
On the heels of Congress' foray into the healthcare reform debate, there is one overlooked sector of the medical profession that merits increased attention for its ability to actually reduce the overall costs of care: home health. FULL STORY »

Start with common framework on IT security

 Daniel Nutkis By Daniel Nutkis | October 05, 2009 | Basic Web Registration
On Oct. 16, states will submit their health information exchange, or HIE, grant applications in order to receive their incentives under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. FULL STORY »

Innovative research funding encourages breakthrough discoveries

 Jonathan Simons By Jonathan Simons | September 02, 2009 | Basic Web Registration
In healthcare reform, policymakers need to appreciate that true-cost savings can be best achieved through accelerated research that ultimately allows us to cure more and treat less. To this end, we should carefully examine the institutions and the processes that allocate resources for medical research, with the aim of giving greater emphasis, and more funding, to research that can deliver better patient outcomes. FULL STORY »
 
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