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Preventive Medicine News
FDA misses deadline for decision on e-cigarettes
The FDA announced that it is delaying its decision on whether some e-cigarettes can remain on the market.
YouTube lacks quality information on prostate cancer screening in Black men
The overall quality of YouTube videos that researchers watched about prostate cancer screening in Black men was suboptimal, a recent analysis showed.
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Q&A: Academia lacks structures to support health care professionals in times of grief
Additional support and flexibility in academia following a loss can foster recovery and may help reduce burnout among health care professionals, according to an opinion piece published in JAMA.
Diagnosing autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease
Each year, millions of Americans take charge of their health by visiting their primary care provider for a periodic “check-up” or health maintenance visit.
Millions of Americans lost health insurance coverage at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic
The proportion of Americans without health insurance increased by 1.36 percentage points during the first several weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to findings published in JAMA Health Forum.
Q&A: ACP calls on health systems to prioritize patients over profit
An increasing trend in for-profit entities and private equity investments in medicine could lead to a fragmented health care system, according to a position paper by the ACP.
Leading health journals publish joint editorial on 'climate crisis'
In an unprecedented collaborative move, 220 leading health journals published a joint editorial on climate change, calling on world leaders to take swift action to protect the planet and safeguard public health.
Diabetes onset occurs earlier in Mexican American, Black adults
Mexican American and non-Hispanic Black adults were diagnosed with diabetes at a significantly younger age, 4 to 7 years earlier on average, than non-Hispanic white adults, according to findings published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
World Trade Center responders can still take steps to lower lung injury risk
Reducing excess body fat and adjusting factors of metabolic syndrome can greatly lower the risk for lung disease among World Trade Center first responders, according to data in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
PrEP continuum insufficient in populations at high risk for HIV
Populations disproportionately impacted by HIV were less likely to be engaged in preexposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, continuum of care, according to findings published in JAMA Network Open.
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Headline News
Q&A: Cuts to 2025 physician fee schedule yield ‘catastrophic’ impacts to patient access
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Daily oral semaglutide confers weight loss vs. placebo; similar vs. weekly injectables
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Culture shift needed to reframe cybersecurity as a patient safety issue
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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