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Sounding Board
How Point-of-Care Testing Could Drive Innovation in Global Health
The investment in health services in low- and middle-income countries has increased substantially in recent years. Such investment has been led by unprecedented efforts to combat major diseases, enabled by the availability of lower-cost and effective drug regimens for treatment and prophylaxis,…
Original Article
A Randomized Trial of Nighttime Physician Staffing in an Intensive Care Unit
Most studies suggest that intensivist physicians improve patient outcomes in intensive care units (ICUs).– It is thus tempting to conclude that a "dose–response effect" might exist, such that greater exposure to intensivists would be associated with even better outcomes. Indeed, some authors…
Perspective
Be Prepared — The Boston Marathon and Mass-Casualty Events
On April 15, two improvised explosive devices (IEDs) were detonated in short succession near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, in the middle of a densely packed crowd of thousands of runners, families, friends, and spectators. Three people were killed and 264 were injured, with more than 20…
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Perspective
Lessons from Boston
At 2:50 p.m. on April 15, nearly 3 hours after the first runner completed the Boston Marathon, two blasts ripped through the crowd that was gathered along the approach to the finish line, killing 3 people and injuring more than 260. Within moments, the crowd's initial panic was replaced by…
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Perspective
We Fight Like We Train
As we say in the U.S. Navy, "We train like we fight, and we fight like we train." In Boston, we do the same. That was never more evident than at 2:50 p.m. on April 15, when two explosive devices abruptly shattered the 117th Boston Marathon. On Patriot's Day, the day we commemorate the opening…
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Special Article
Perspectives of Physicians and Nurse Practitioners on Primary Care Practice
The U.S. health care system is at a critical juncture in health care workforce planning. The nation has an acknowledged shortage of primary care physicians at a time when the population is aging and the incidence and prevalence of chronic illnesses are increasing. The implementation of the…
In this national survey, primary care physicians were more likely than primary care nurse practitioners to believe that physicians provide a higher quality of care than nurse practitioners and were less likely to believe that physicians and nurse practitioners should be paid equally for the same services.
Health Policy Report
Expanding the Role of Advanced Nurse Practitioners — Risks and Rewards
As the 2014 expansion of coverage mandated by the Affordable Care Act (ACA) looms larger, one question with no ready answer is how health care providers, policymakers, and payers will cope with an expected surge in patient demand for services. A shortage of primary care physicians to treat newly…
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Editorial
Putting Aside Preconceptions — Time for Dialogue among Primary Care Clinicians
In this issue of the Journal, Donelan and colleagues report that primary care physicians and nurse practitioners often work side by side but inhabit different universes, at least perceptually. Daniel Kahneman, the psychologist and Nobel laureate who helped found the emerging field of behavioral…
Perspective
Discrimination at the Doctor's Office
Doctors dedicate themselves to helping others. But how selective can they be in deciding whom to help? Recent years have seen some highly publicized examples of doctors who reject patients not because of time constraints or limited expertise but on far more questionable grounds, including the…
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Perspective
Leading Clinicians and Clinicians Leading
Stubbornly high costs and the expected care needs of aging baby boomers make more effective models of care delivery a pressing need. Unfortunately, new models often perform below their potential. Their designs — usually comprising some combination of alternative sites of care or caregivers, new…
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Perspective
The Nursing Workforce in an Era of Health Care Reform
The foundation of the health care delivery system is its workforce, including the 2.8 million registered nurses (RNs) who provide health care services in countless settings. The importance of RNs is expected to increase in the coming decades, as new models of care delivery, global payment, and a…
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Perspective
Generalist plus Specialist Palliative Care — Creating a More Sustainable Model
Palliative care, a medical field that has been practiced informally for centuries, was recently granted formal specialty status by the American Board of Medical Specialties. The demand for palliative care specialists is growing rapidly, since timely palliative care consultations have been shown to…
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Correspondence
State Medicaid Eligibility and Care Delayed Because of Cost
To the Editor: Provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) are expected to reduce the number of adults who delay seeking needed medical care because of cost. Reforms are expected to improve the ability to obtain care, in part, by extending Medicaid access to adults with…
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Perspective
Ethical Physician Incentives — From Carrots and Sticks to Shared Purpose
As health care reform's focus turns to change in U.S. health care delivery, concerns about the use of incentives for physicians are intensifying. One fear is that incentives will undermine physicians' professional ethos, leading them astray from the primacy of their duty to patients. Another fear…
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Medicine and Society
The Whole Ball Game — Overcoming the Blind Spots in Health Care Reform
In 1999, psychologists Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris published the results of a now-famous experiment. Study participants were shown a video in which two teams of three persons each, one dressed in black and the other in white, revolved around each other and passed basketballs to their…
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Perspective
Updating the HIV-Testing Guidelines — A Modest Change with Major Consequences
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recently released a draft statement assigning a grade A recommendation to screening for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in the general population 15 to 65 years of age. The proposed guidelines cite an updated systematic evidence review of the…
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Perspective
Becoming a Physician: Service: An Essential Component of Graduate Medical Education
Medicine is a service profession, and commitment to service is a hallmark of humanistic physicians. Despite the importance of service, there are few widely disseminated definitions of it. One comes from the Arnold P. Gold Foundation, an organization whose programs on humanism in medicine have been…
Perspective
A Different Model — Medical Care in Cuba
For a visitor from the United States, Cuba is disorienting. American cars are everywhere, but they all date from the 1950s at the latest. Our bank cards, credit cards, and smartphones don't work. Internet access is virtually nonexistent. And the Cuban health care system also seems unreal. There are…
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Perspective
Speaking Up — When Doctors Navigate Medical Hierarchy
He's the first patient of the day: admitted overnight, he's scheduled for surgery this morning. "Do you want to catch him before or after?" the resident asks. "Is there anything we need to do for him right away?" I say. When she says that the night resident mentioned some pain issues, I decide to…
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Perspective
Preventing Lethal Hospital Outbreaks of Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria
In 2011, a strain of Klebsiella pneumoniae resistant to multiple antibiotics, including carbapenems, was identified in the intensive care unit (ICU) of the Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). This organism has since colonized at least 19 patients and may have caused seven…
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