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Physician burnout and depression continue to climb: Medscape
A recent Medscape report found physician burnout has increased to 53 percent — up 6 percent since 2021 — and 23 percent of physicians reported experiencing depression. -
Nurse practitioners at physician offices served with more malpractice claims: study
New research found that nurse practitioners have more malpractice suits when working in a physician office than in an office owned by a nurse practitioner. -
Novant Health lays off physician executive
Charlotte, N.C.-based Novant Health has laid off Philip Brown, MD, according to a Jan. 25 report from NBC affiliate WECT. Dr. Brown was the health system's chief community impact officer and former executive vice president and chief physician executive at Novant Health New Hanover Regional Medical Center in Wilmington, N.C. -
3 ways Geisinger is combating the rise of workplace violence
Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, violence and abuse toward healthcare workers has skyrocketed. In fact, the Bureau of Labor Statistics found that professionals in the healthcare industry experience violence at five times the rate of individuals in other branches of the workforce. -
Indiana physician noncompete ban passes Senate committee
A bill to ban new physician noncompete agreements passed the Indiana Senate Health and Provider Services Committee on Jan. 25, Indiana Public Media reported. -
Letter to the editor: Aid-in-dying laws fall short with marginalized patients
Editor's note: This letter to the editor is in response to the article New York physicians push for aid-in-dying law. It has been lightly edited. -
New Jersey hospitals secure $10M for violence intervention
New Jersey's Hospital-based Violence Intervention Program secured a $10 million grant in the form of American Rescue Plan funds, TapInto reported Jan. 23. -
UW Medicine creates historic $20M deanship to honor retired Dr. Paul Ramsey
Seattle-based University of Washington Medicine created a $20 million deanship to honor retired dean Paul Ramsey, MD. -
48% of physicians are happy at work, survey finds
Physicians' happiness fell amid the pandemic and is not rebounding easily, according to Medscape's 2023 Physician Lifestyle and Happiness Report. -
Online rating platforms direct patients to higher-quality physicians: Study
Nearly 75 percent of patients turn to online reviews as the first step when searching for a new physician. Despite their popularity, it's largely been unclear whether online ratings are reliable or signal quality information to patients. A new study suggests they do. -
A peek into healthcare's future? AI passes medical licensing exam
An artificial intelligence chatbot that generates humanlike responses passed all three parts of the U.S. Medical Licensing Exam, according to findings published in the preprint server medRxiv. -
Sanofi Promise Warranty Program for Cablivi® (caplacizumab-yhdp) Seeks to Help Support Physicians Managing aTTP
Acquired thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (aTTP is also known as iTTP) is a rare, life-threatening medical emergency that can cause microvascular thrombi and consequent thrombocytopenia, hemolytic anemia, and organ ischemia.1,2,3 In the US, aTTP affects fewer than 2,000 adults each year.4 The disease course of aTTP is unpredictable and can be rapidly fatal, making its diagnosis and management an urgent need.1,5-7 -
In-hospital mortality rates rose, readmissions declined in Pennsylvania hospitals
A hospital performance report found deaths related to sepsis, heart attacks and respiratory failure rose in Pennsylvania hospitals, PBS affiliate WHYY reported Jan. 14. -
47% of physicians are 55 or older: 8 things to know about the physician workforce
Of active physicians in the U.S. in 2021, 46.7 percent were 55 or older, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges' "2022 Physician Specialty Data Report." -
North Carolina Medical Board, state auditors spar over information sharing
State auditors say they were blocked from completing a thorough audit of the North Carolina Medical Board's investigations into physician misconduct, public radio station WUNC reported Jan. 12. -
Physician specialty preferences are shifting: 5 that grew, fell most
Sports medicine as a specialty grew significantly from 2016 to 2021, while pulmonary disease fell most, according to the Association of American Medical College's "2022 Physician Specialty Data Report." -
Presbyterian taps physician staffing firm for 1 of its EDs
Albuquerque, N.M.-based Presbyterian Healthcare Services has selected a Tacoma, Wash.-based national staffing company to provide emergency department and hospital medicine physician and advanced practice provider services for its Santa Fe (N.M.) Medical Center, the Albuquerque Journal reported Jan. 11. -
UC Health physicians push for stronger treatment protections with religious affiliates
The University of California's health system is renewing contracts with hundreds of outside hospitals and clinics, many with religious affiliations, and some of its physicians and faculty fear they could be barred from providing some forms of treatment to patients, the Los Angeles Times reported Jan. 11. -
Physician debt should be considered among diversity efforts, study suggests
Black medical residents are much more likely to have any type of debt than other racial and ethnic groups, according to a new report from Health Affairs. -
Productivity varies between physicians and NPs, economists suggest
A study led by two economists suggested nurse practitioners may be less productive than physicians in the emergency department setting.
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