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Practice Management News
One in 10 solid organ transplant recipients develops bacteremia 1 year after transplant
Nearly 10% of solid organ transplant recipients may develop bacteremia in the first year after transplant, according to a study published in Open Forum Infectious Diseases.
Patients with long COVID report barriers to health care access
People with long COVID were more likely to report unmet health care needs in the last year due to challenges like cost and access to care, according to research published in JAMA Network Open.
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Bacterial infections less common among infants with SARS-CoV-2
A study of more than 14,000 febrile infants found that UTIs, bacteremia and bacterial meningitis were less common among those who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 than those who did not, according to findings published in JAMA Network Open.
Q&A: What impact did ID experts have on the COVID-19 pandemic?
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, infectious disease experts made contributions to help control the outbreak and improve public understanding of the new disease.
Consider fundamental long-term strategy of tax diversification
Investors often hear the phrase “don’t put all your eggs in one basket,” and interpret it as a warning against owning too much of one individual stock in a portfolio.
FDA loosens restrictions on blood donations for gay, bisexual men
The FDA has released new recommendations to measure blood donor eligibility that will eliminate time-based deferrals and screening questions targeting men who have sex with men and the women who have sex with them.
First US cases of tinea caused by T. indotineae reported in New York
Health officials identified the first cases of severe tinea, or ringworm, caused by Trichophyton indotineae in the U.S., according to case reports published in MMWR.
BLOG: Health care regulatory 101: Family members’ financial relationships
You might remember our earlier blog post on the Physician Self-Referral Law, aka the Stark Law.
Infants with salmonellosis experience 'substantial illness,' surveillance data show
Cases of salmonellosis continue to cause significant morbidity in infants, according to an analysis of surveillance data published in Pediatrics.
Intensively screening people at low risk for N. gonorrhoeae has little impact on transmission
A network-based model demonstrated that men who have sex with men drive the Neisseria gonorrhoeae epidemic and that intensive screening in the low-risk population had little impact on decreasing transmission rates.
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Headline News
Q&A: Cuts to 2025 physician fee schedule yield ‘catastrophic’ impacts to patient access
November 11, 20246 min read -
Headline News
Daily oral semaglutide confers weight loss vs. placebo; similar vs. weekly injectables
November 11, 20243 min read -
Headline News
Culture shift needed to reframe cybersecurity as a patient safety issue
November 11, 202410 min read
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Headline News
Q&A: Cuts to 2025 physician fee schedule yield ‘catastrophic’ impacts to patient access
November 11, 20246 min read -
Headline News
Daily oral semaglutide confers weight loss vs. placebo; similar vs. weekly injectables
November 11, 20243 min read -
Headline News
Culture shift needed to reframe cybersecurity as a patient safety issue
November 11, 202410 min read