Category: Quality Control (Page 50 of 74)

Surgeons Don’t Discuss Post Operative Options With Their Patients.

Surgeons don’t discuss options with their patients.

The survey’s results, published in the Annals of Surgery, found that more than four out of every five surgeons discussed which forms of life support the patients would like to limit. But only about one half specifically asked about the patient’s advance directive, which can include restricting the use of feeding tubes and ventilators to keep a person alive.

Wen it comes down to specifics, surgeons are reluctant to discuss directives which could greatly impact the care received if a surgery fails.

Patients could be kept alive against their will leaving families with crippling medical bills.

The American Lifestyle is Making Us Sick

The American lifestyle is the biggest threat that our nation faces today.

Better treatments are saving and preserving lives, however, lifestyle and overall health does not account for any drop in fatalities due to cardiovascular illness.

Lives may be saved but the quality of life enjoyed on an expensive diet of pharmaceuticals comes with it’s own disadvantages.

The authors of the report, which appears online Dec. 15 in the journal Circulation, looked at seven markers of cardiovascular health: smoking, weight, exercise, diet, cholesterol, blood pressure and fasting blood sugar levels, as well as whether or not a person had a diagnosis of heart disease.

Using those criteria, 94 percent of U.S. adults — that’s almost everyone — have at least one risk factor for heart disease. For example, one-third of U.S. adults have high blood pressure while 15 percent have high cholesterol.

American’s demand for fast food and sedentary entertainment is undoing the health of men, women and children nation wide.

The Top Ten Health Stories of 2010

2010 was wrought with health controversy from flip flopping on cell phone safety to mammograms and barefoot running shoes.

Being an informed consumer is the best way to navigate the overwhelming amount of information.

Having good relationship with your physician will enable you to design the best health care strategies for your needs.

Read the top 10 health stories that made the news.

Almost Everyone is Wearing Dirty Contact Lenses

Contact cleanliness has come under the microscope as more eye infections surface in contact lens wearers.

In a survey of more than 400 contact lens wearers, Cavanagh found that just 2 percent of them are following the rules for safe contact lens use. Chief among the sins is showering or swimming while wearing contacts, sleeping in them and using them longer than recommended before throwing them out.

With more and more people eschewing glasses for contacts the incidence of infections is on the rise and awareness is the best way to avoid illness.

Doctors Dodge Weight Issues

Doctors seem to have trouble discussing weight issues with their overweight patients.

Lisa Flowers says weight is something she wishes her doctor would address more directly. At 47, Flowers stands 5 foot 7 and weighs nearly 300 pounds. She wasn’t always obese. But after she had a baby five years ago and moved from Washington, D.C., to Delaware, she says her workout and eating habits got off track.

Flowers says she’s brought up her weight with her doctor, but the topic is “kind of avoided, almost as if he’s uncomfortable.”

Doctors feel discouraged by the lack of commitment they perceive in their patients to losing weight.

And as patients look to their doctors for answers their expectations may be unrealistic in that they are looking for a “magic bullet” to tackle their weight issues.

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