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POPSDon't confuse Obama Care with our homegrown healthcare reform
So why Grand Junction? Because Grand Junction has one of the most cost-effective and high-quality health-care systems in the country. So effective, in fact, that it was recently featured in The New Yorker (along with the Mayo Clinic) as an example of health care reform that works. As The New Yorker piece explains, in Grand Junction, doctors “agreed to meet regularly on small peer-review committees to go over their patient charts together. They focused on rooting out problems like poor prevention practices, unnecessary back operations and unusual hospital-complication rates. Problems went down. Quality went up.” The article goes on to talk about how the physicians cooperated with Rocky Mountain Health Plans to create a “communitywide electronic-record system that shared office notes, test results, and hospital data for patients across the area.” And that is likely why the president is coming to Grand Junction — to tell America that Mesa County makes the case for a single-payer
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POPSH Miracle - the Best Hemorrhoid Treatment There are many other treatment options that are worth considering, such as the insertion of suppositories into the patient’s rectum, popping pills or the use of hemorrhoid ointment or hemorrhoid cream
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POPSYour Most Important Health Document To me it's kind of ridiculous to even question whether having constant access to your personal health records could make a difference in your health. First off, people move, change jobs and doctors pretty frequently today. New patient intake forms are supposed to fill docs in on people's medical histories, but which would you trust more - a document containing all of your health details or your memory? Second, having access to a document listing details like your blood pressure and cholesterol levels should make you at least slightly more aware of your health problems and might even change your behavior. While I'm sure there would be downsides, including security concerns, I'd bet the positives end up outweighing the negatives here.
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POPSThis makes the terrorists look like pussycats I would wager to bet that almost all people alive today have a story of someone they had known who died at the hands of a doctor. No wonder they say : Doctors Bury Their Mistakes The following are actual, unedited, notes written by doctors on patients' medical charts: Patient has chest pain if she lies on her left side for over a year. On the second day the knee was better, and on the third day it disappeared completely. She has had no rigors or shaking chills, but her husband states she was very hot in bed last night. Patient has two teenage children, but no other abnormalities. More click this site: http://www.thebrolly.co.uk/elric/docsbury.html