Popular Articles

Changing Perceptions About Student Drinking Reduces Alcohol Misuse
Giving students personalised feedback on their drinking behaviour and how it compares to social norms might help to reduce alcohol misuse, according to a Cochrane Systematic Review.

Renowned Surgeon Examines Our Most Significant Contributions To Surgery - From Crude Procedures To Precision Operations
As a result of the scientific advances and medical innovations made in the twentieth century, the United States today occupies an established and unchallenged leading role in the field of surgery. Renowned surgeon Seymour I. Schwartz, MD, gives a sweeping history of American surgical practice in "Gifted Hands: America"s Most Significant Contributions To Surgery" (Prometheus Books). He describes how surgery in the United States has advanced from the comparatively crude practices of pioneering physicians in the pre-Columbian and colonial eras to its current level of preeminence in scientific surgery today.
News of the day
AGTC And National Neurovision Research Institute Collaborate, Funding Research In Two Genetic Retinal Diseases
Applied Genetic Technologies Corporation (AGTC), a privately-held, clinical stage biotechnology company developing novel systems to deliver human therapeutics, announces that AGTC has entered into an agreement with the National Neurovision Research Institute (NNRI), the clinical trial support organization for the Foundation Fighting Blindness(FFB), to collaborate in experiments using the AAV delivery system in the treatment of two genetic retinal diseases known to cause blindness at an early age. The research will be coordinated by AGTC and will be conducted at The University of Florida, Oregon Health & Science University, The University of Pennsylvania, and The University of British Columbia.
Endocrinology

RDAA Survey Shows Widespread Support For Medicare Loading For Rural And Remote Doctors

Over 80% of rural and remote doctors recently surveyed by the Rural Doctors Association of Australia (RDAA) believe adding a significant rural and remote loading on Medicare items would assist in recruiting and retaining doctors in their communities. The online poll conducted by RDAA during April and May backs RDAA"s ongoing call for an extra loading to be added to Medicare fees paid to rural and remote doctors. RDAA President Dr Nola Maxfield said the poll showed rural Australia needed "better incentives that demonstrate to doctors currently working in the bush they are valued, and shows those considering a move to the bush that it is an attractive option". "We have to do something significant, and urgently, to turn around the declining number of doctors in the bush," Dr Maxfield said. "Incentives would be calculated as a loading on rural doctors" Medicare billings or as a special payment for salaried rural doctors. The loading would increase the more remote the location the doctors worked in. "The Federal Government must look seriously at building a rural loading into Medicare." The RDAA survey paints a clear picture of the existing rural medical workforce crisis and the significant concerns over the sustainability of the workforce. When asked if their rural town or community had enough doctors to service the health and medical needs of its residents nearly 60% of respondents described their towns as "underserviced" and 9% said they were "severely underserviced". One respondent drolly remarked, "clone the doctors!" A considerable number of the rural and remote medical workforce polled reported overwhelming on-call demands, with 17% on call seven days a week. Nearly 30% of the workforce was on-call at least one day a week. The average weekly hours worked by the doctors surveyed, was a staggering 47.4 hours. This compares with the national weekly hours worked of 34.7 hours. Much of the feedback received as part of the survey reflected these views, with comments such as this one common, "...until rural and remote work is reclassified as a specialty nothing will change." Along with calling for a rural loading on Medicare items as a remedy for the current workforce shortage, the survey found doctors want a range of other supports, including improved after-hours and on-call arrangements, better education and professional supports, better locum availability, capital funding to improve practice infrastructure and nearly 100% of respondents reported family friendly working arrangements as important or very important. Feedback provided as part of the survey also reflects frustrations with health and hospital administration, with comments such as this: "...sack the bureaucrats and replace them with clinicians who understand healthcare delivery ..." and this: "...anaesthetists should run hospitals, plan theatres - not accountants or business men who do not actually work in health care." The comments also reflect dissatisfaction at the loss of rural health facilities, in comments like this "...replace lost maternity service." Rural Doctors Association of Australia


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):