Ageism and its impact on health
Ageism - the negative attitudes directed toward older persons simply because of their age – can impact an older person’s health.
An examination of medical ethics and the practitioners who define them. Sign up to receive the Second Opinion topics in newsletter form at kcrw.com/newsletters .
Ageism - the negative attitudes directed toward older persons simply because of their age – can impact an older person’s health.
If we are not careful, disappointment can have devastating long-term consequences.
To reduce over utilization of emergency responders, fire departments are experimenting with a new, more comprehensive approach to home visits.
Determining the fees physicians get paid is anything but transparent and only serves to drive up health care costs.
Conflicts arise when a family does not wish to tell a sick person their diagnosis.
Women are the dominant users of antidepressants and there are many possible reasons why.
Superstitions impact many aspects of our lives, but they can have a profound effect in health care.
Not traditionally considered a part of health care, transportation plays an oversized role in the management of chronic disease.
Veterinarians and Human health providers often deal similar diseases and that would stand a better chance of treatment with improved communication between the two professions.
Armed with good science that shows the drug is ineffective and dangerous people are still using it and often skipping their vaccines that are proven safe and effective. Go figure.
Health messages are often ignored or easily forgotten. Enter a novel approach using Hip Hop Music.
Hospital rankings use metrics that just aren’t very relevant to most of us.
Skeptics are a bit like the grains of sand in an oyster.
Special Olympics is working to protect those inside Ukraine and those fleeing to neighboring countries.
Human are of paramount importance, but the health of animals is important as a part of human health.
The most powerful lobbying groups rarely have our best interests at heart.
Just as we were on the cusp of eradicating polio from the globe we have a new outbreak.
The name of a disease often has greater implications than the disease itself.
Despite lots of advances in simulation, at some point trainees still need to learn on sick patients.
A new treatment with some unusual effects we need to understand before we agree to treatment.
Medical prior authorizations are intended to deter prescribing and save insurance companies money. Their real impact is to decrease the quality of care for people with chronic diseases.
Orphan drugs are often exceedingly expensive which beg the question of how much should we pay for a drug and how do we measure effectiveness?
Can we reach a point when there is nothing left to offer a person with serious mental illness? Can they refuse treatment at this point?
For too long those with disabilities have had poorer health outcomes.
Weight loss is never easy, but is it easier to do together than alone?
Choosing wisely and setting milestones optimizes our chance of success.
It is often easy to miss the signs of elder abuse which can be insidious and deadly.
New research shows that the use of hydroxychloroquine for covid treatment was widespread and did not impact all populations equally.
If we can reliably designate some care as “low value”, then why do we still offer those treatments?
Who owns a patients’ test results and does the health provider have a duty to warn at risk relatives?