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Doctoring General Medicine Health Care Health Care Reform ICD/Pacemaker Knowledge

Right Care Action Week — Be skeptical

Right Care seeks to be smart care. In the first part of my career, I rarely looked critically at the evidence. I was too busy; and I was more trusting of the vertical hierarchy of medicine. Eminence-based medicine seemed normal. Listen to the experts, for they are experts, went my mindset. Then something happened. When […]

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AF ablation Doctoring General Medicine Health Care Health Care Reform ICD/Pacemaker Knowledge

Right Care Action Week – Un-informed Consent

The current state of informed consent in the US is best described as un-informed consent. A study this May reported that only 3% of patients with coronary artery disease received full informed consent before having an invasive procedure. Findings like these, and there are many other similar studies, reflect the ill-health of the medical decision […]

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Cardiac Stem Cells Cycling Stuff General Cardiology General Medicine Health Care Health Care Reform ICD/Pacemaker inflammation Knowledge

Right Care Action Week — rational care

I wrote yesterday about how a broken healthcare system favors overuse of procedures. Today I will discuss rational care. Remember the goals of the Lown Institute: We think healthcare should be affordable, effective, rational and available to all. Rational means in accordance with reason or logic. Hardly a day goes by that I don’t see […]

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Doctoring Health Care Health Care Reform

RightCare Action Week — a broken healthcare system

I am proud to be part of the Lown Institute. Founded by Bernard Lown, a cardiologist, mentor, activist, and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, the Lown Institute is an organization committed to making things right in the US healthcare system. In case you wondered, yes, there is right and wrong in healthcare. At this […]

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Doctoring General Cardiology

Possible clot issue on replacement aortic valves slows momentum of TAVR

The next frontier in cardiology is the replacement of cardiac valves via catheters rather than open-chest surgery. This new branch of cardiology is called “structural” cardiology. Trainees do entire “structural” fellowships in which they learn to do things with catheters that surgeons once did with open chest techniques. You may have heard about TAVR–or transcatheter […]

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Doctoring Health Care

What is normal and what is disease?

Future generations of doctors will face different challenges than I did. When I started training, disease was easier to spot than it is now. Today, the line between sickness and wellness has blurred–and it gets blurrier all the time. The quantified self movement stands to make this worse. In a profit-driven healthcare climate, disease feeds […]

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General Cardiology General Medicine Health Care

Medical evidence — Don’t get fooled again

I’ve never been more convinced that the ease with which knowledge is shared in the digital age is a force for good. I loved the video below. These two guys read conclusions of medical studies for humor. That’s a good one. James McCormack is a pharmacist, professor, medication mythbuster, and healthy skeptic at the Faculty […]

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Doctoring General Cardiology General Medicine

Think twice before having carotid artery surgery

Hundreds of thousands of people have undergone surgery or stents to “fix” blockages in their carotid arteries. (The left and right carotids are the main arteries to the brain.) Most of the these people (about 90%) reported no complaints. We say they are asymptomatic. The blockages were discovered on exam or by ultrasound of the […]

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Doctoring General Cardiology General Medicine Health Care Reflection

Do cardiologists prescribe too many drugs?

One of the most common reasons people require medical care is their medical care. This is a distinctly modern problem. In times past, doctors treated disease. Patients saw their doctor when they were sick. They had a problem; doctors offered help. The doctor of today often improves health by removing healthcare. It’s one of my […]

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AF ablation Atrial fibrillation

In AF ablation, ask tough questions about left atrial appendage isolation

A study presented recently at the 2015 European Society of Cardiology meeting promoted electrical isolation of the left atrial appendage as a useful strategy for the ablation of long-standing persistent AF. The study came from an influential research group. ESC increased the influence of this trial by making it a “Hot-Line” session presentation. The BELIEF […]

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AF ablation Atrial fibrillation Doctoring Exercise General Cardiology

A cautionary note on AF ablation in 2015

It’s time to write an update on AF ablation. Things have changed. The major change is that I am doing many fewer ablations for AF. The reason is we have a better understanding of the disease, or should I say, condition? In the last 2-3 years, good science has changed the way specialists see AF. […]