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Findings from a study published in the American Journal of Bioethics indicate that patients visiting an ED are willing to wait two hours longer to see a physician rather than a nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or medical resident. Researchers Gregory L. Larkin of Yale University School of Medicine and Roderick S. Hooker of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas surveyed 500 patients at three teaching hospitals in Dallas and Pittsburgh. They found that 80% of patients expected to see a physician in the ED, and that fewer than half wanted to be treated by a midlevel provider.
 
 
   
Hospital Medicine Multimedia
 
Code E876.9
David Lubin, MD

I Read the News Today, Oh Boy…
Dr. Lubin on physicians' acceptance of death as a part of medical practice and a habit shared by many of his colleagues: reading the obituaries.


Nurses' Blogs
Lisa Schulmeister, RN, MN, APRN-BC, OCN, FAAN

E-mail Use by Patients
Less than 1 in 10 utilize this option for contacting their healthcare providers.




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Is insufficient education and/or awareness on the part of clinicians the main reason for the underuse of guideline-recommended aldosterone antagonists in eligible patients who have been hospitalized with moderate to severe heart failure, as revealed in a recent JAMA article?
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