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First Patient Of NOTES Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) Study Successfully Treated With Ethicon Endo-Surgery Devices
Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc. announced the successful treatment of the first patient of its IDE feasibility trial. The case, which was performed at The Ohio State University Center for Minimally Invasive Surgery, marks the first natural orifice translumenal endoscopic surgery (NOTES) procedure involving the company"s investigational devices. NOTES is a surgical method in which external incisions are eliminated, potentially leading to reduced pain, a quicker recovery and a faster return to normal activities for the patient.
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Rabies: How To Protect Yourself And Your Pets
Rabies is a virus that occurs in mammals and infects the central nervous system; the disease can cause death in humans if it is not treated. Nearly 90 percent of cases occur in wild animals (raccoons, bats, foxes etc.); less than 10% of cases occur in domestic animals like dogs or cats. Humans usually become infected when they are bitten by an infected animal.
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Better Monitoring, Better Prognosis In Liver Disease
The latest research in liver disease being presented at Digestive Disease Week® 2009 (DDW®) has important implications for tracking disease development in patients and for current and future transplant recipients. Researchers are making great strides in diagnosing and treating liver disease.
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Physician Shortage Could Hinder Health Reform

The number of new primary care doctors each year has fallen nearly 50 percent since 1997, the Dallas Morning News reports, leaving a shortage that could hinder Congress"s ambition to reform health care and cover millions of uninsured Americans. One cause of the shortage is that primary care doctors earn less - the average pediatrician makes $171,000 compared with $480,000 for orthopedic surgeons, according to one study - but must pay back medical school debts similar to those drawn by their higher-paid colleagues. As a result the higher paid specialists outnumber primary care physicians 2 to 1 (Roberson, 7/6). "Simply put, there aren"t enough primary-care doctorsò€¦ to meet the demand of American now, much less the 46 million uninsured people," the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot reports. "The national situation is dire enough that federal officials and legislators are proposing solutions, including: granting medical-school debt relief to students entering primary care; retooling the insurance system to better compensate primary-care doctors; and expanding the National Health Service Corps, which funds doctors and nurses in rural areas and poor neighborhoods" (Simpson, 7/5). While fast-growing cities have drawn a surplus of specialists and too few primary care doctors, much of the primary care decline has fallen on rural areas, the Raleigh News & Observer. The paper adds: "The hours are long and unpredictable. In rural communities, family doctors can be on call perpetually. Their local hospitals seldom have staff doctors, so when their patients are admitted, they often must travel miles from their homes and offices to make rounds" (Avery, 7/5). Meanwhile, newly minted nurses are finding that jobs are scarce, even as "experts continue to warn of a looming shortage of nurses in Iowa and across the nation. And some nursing schools are touting the profession as a safe alternative for workers who have been laid off from other careers," the Des Moines Register reports. One new nurse, Rachel Seltz, told the register the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota withdrew its job offer because of the economic recession (Leys, 7/6). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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