Black and Hispanic/Latinx adults report experiencing discrimination when seeking health care at higher rates than white adults, which raises the question: How might these reported experiences adversely affect health care?
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This qualitative study examines both negative and positive attitudes expressed by physicians about patients in electronic medical records.
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The latest Covid-19 surge felt extra personal as more and more of my patients' names were appearing in my email's 'postmortem' folder.
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Many people with intellectual and developmental disabilities receive substandard and even harmful healthcare. Tragically, they die preventable, premature deaths, including from extraordinarily high rates of suicide and accidents.
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Covid-19 made virtual medicine a popular investment. But patients should beware.
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Informed consent is fundamental to the ethical and legal doctrines respecting research participants’ voluntary participation in clinical research, enshrined in such documents as the 1947 Nuremberg Code; reaffirmed in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki, revised in 1975, and the 1978 Belmont Report; and codified in the United States in the 1981 Common Rule, revised in 2018 and implemented in 2019.
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As the pandemic brings long-standing health disparities into sharper view, community health workers are being asked to help the public health response.
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As the nation copes with Covid-19, it sorely needs a plan to allow family visits to and communication with hospitalized loved ones.
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A nudge based on artificial intelligence helps cancer doctors start conversations with their dying patients about their end-of-life wishes.
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Perspective from The New England Journal of Medicine — #WhiteCoatsForBlackLives — Addressing Physicians’ Complicity in Criminalizing Communities
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Female physicians spend more time with each patient than male doctors do and their patients report increased satisfaction. But the extra time adds up and results in less money.
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I hit the aorta was flashing in my mind.
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This essay discusses the difficulties associated with mourning in the time of coronavirus 2019.
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Research shows that doctors' unconscious bias can hurt patients of color. Some hospitals are trying to train doctors and stop disparate treatment.
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Telehealth forces clinicians to keep their distance and do exactly what is "essential." We have much to learn about the long-term implications of that.
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In my cancer care so far, shared decision-making between doctor and patient is only half-working.
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Because clinicians understand the meaning of a new event or diagnosis, it’s easy to forget patients and families often don’t.
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As the COVID-19 crisis pushs medicine to a “new normal,” we need to adapt our care of patients — especially at-risk children.
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For the coronavirus patients they care for each day at Boston Medical Center, two ICU nurses have become lifelines to beloved grandparents, mothers and fathers, and worried children.
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Some doctors who have switched to telehealth during the pandemic are finding that it can offer personal and lighthearted connections with their patients.
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