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1.
Tex Med ; 117(4): 34-37, 2021 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855947

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 has made a booming illicit business - ransomware - boom even louder. And the more medical practices and organizations fall victim to ransomware cyberattacks, the more illustrative it becomes how important it is to prevent such an attack.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Computer Security , Commerce , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Texas
2.
Tex Med ; 117(4): 30-33, 2021 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855948

ABSTRACT

Congress in December 2020 passed surprise-billing legislation as part of a wide-ranging coronavirus relief bill, tying a bow on federal lawmakers' primary health care focus just prior to COVID-19. Texas already had set up its own system for state-regulated plans in 2019 with Senate Bill 1264, which took effect last year.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Texas , United States
3.
Tex Med ; 117(4): 26-27, 2021 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855950

ABSTRACT

A court decision siding with chiropractors is the latest of many scope tests in the legislature and the law.


Subject(s)
Chiropractic , Medicine , Texas
4.
Tex Med ; 117(4): 28-29, 2021 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855949

ABSTRACT

The Texas Alliance for Patient Access (TAPA) announced in early March that Sen. Kelly Hancock (R-North Richland Hills) and Rep. Jeff Leach (R-Plano) would soon file COVID-19 liability legislation that would enhance liability protections to shield more physicians from lawsuits for care delivered during pandemics, hurricanes, and other catastrophic events that inject chaos into their good-faith medical efforts.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Disasters , Physicians , Humans , Liability, Legal , SARS-CoV-2 , Texas
5.
Tex Med ; 117(3): 30-34, 2021 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855952

ABSTRACT

Challenges to Texas laws governing end-of-life care, whether through legislative rewrites or judicial override, are nothing new. The recent success of those challenges is. In particular, two recent erosions have physicians like Houston palliative care specialist Mark Casanova, MD, chagrined and concerned about the future of doctors' role in end-of-life treatment.


Subject(s)
Hospice Care , Physicians , Terminal Care , Humans , Palliative Care , Texas
6.
Tex Med ; 117(3): 44-46, 2021 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855953

ABSTRACT

When Andrew Indresano, MD, got a subpoena in January 2019, he found it "a little shocking" and "really invasive." The Fort Worth orthopedic surgeon wasn't even part of the personal-injury lawsuit for which he was being asked to produce a backward-looking swath of documents.


Subject(s)
Documentation , Medicine , Humans , Male , Texas
7.
Tex Med ; 117(12): 32-34, 2021 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855958

ABSTRACT

A decade ago, the Texas Legislature made a funding decision that devasted low-income women's access to health care and the physicians and community clinics that care for them. After 10 years, with the help of TMA advocacy and the formation of the Texas Women's Healthcare Coalition, funding for family planning and overall women's health is in significantly better shape.


Subject(s)
Family Planning Services , Women's Health , Female , Humans , Poverty , Sex Education , Texas
8.
Tex Med ; 117(11): 16-21, 2021 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855963

ABSTRACT

Pushback from patients on medical advice and course of treatment is nothing new. But physicians say the degree of it - a lack of trust in science, medicine, and expertise - has never been as pronounced as it is now, in the era of the highly contagious delta variant, widespread availability of COVID-19 vaccines, and millions of people who simply refuse to avail themselves of them. And it's piling onto the already-existing assaults on physician mental well-being - now increasingly framed as physician "moral injury."


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Physicians , Attitude , COVID-19 Vaccines , Humans , Pain , SARS-CoV-2 , Texas
9.
Tex Med ; 117(10): 22-24, 2021 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855972

ABSTRACT

The Texas Legislature's investment in medical education includes a full commitment to GME.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Graduate , Texas
10.
Tex Med ; 117(9): 30, 2021 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855975

ABSTRACT

Barriers stand in the way of physicians playing a greater role in addressing the social determinants of health, but awareness of those factors is increasing, and progress is happening.


Subject(s)
Physicians , Humans , Texas
11.
Tex Med ; 117(9): 34-35, 2021 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855978

ABSTRACT

"We believe that standardizing those kind of processes will be easier for [those] providing care. Because one of the things we hear a lot is this lack of harmonization of processes and procedures, whether that's in care or measures or processes. That is a really important part of it."


Subject(s)
Accountable Care Organizations , Social Responsibility , Texas , United States
12.
Tex Med ; 117(1): 20-27, 2021 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33641112

ABSTRACT

The way the Texas Legislature conducts business during the 2021 session may look different due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But the Texas Medical Association's commitment to improving health care remains the same. Some of those goals are up against deep cuts to state agency budgets. At the same time, however, the pandemic has created opportunities for medicine to bend lawmakers' ear on some of its longstanding goals, including advancing access to care, vaccines, health coverage, and telemedicine.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Legislation, Medical , State Government , COVID-19/prevention & control , Humans , Texas
13.
Tex Med ; 117(1): 34-37, 2021 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33641113

ABSTRACT

For too long, some doctors say measures of a physician's quality of care have been about process: the average length of a patient stay, for example, or a patient's readmission rate. The bottom line is results, and that's why a shift to patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures is necessary. However, even proponents of PRO measures note that collecting the information from patients for those metrics places burdens on physicians, and some remain skeptical of bonuses and penalties tied to a measure that derives from a subjective factor: what patients think.


Subject(s)
Benchmarking , Patient Reported Outcome Measures , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/standards , Humans , Texas
14.
Tex Med ; 117(1): 32-33, 2021 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33641115

ABSTRACT

As the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services continues to churn out glowing data annually on its Quality Payment Program (QPP), a full picture of the program's impact eludes the agency's reporting. According to the Texas Medical Association's analysis of state-level data in the 2018 QPP Experience Report, it's clear that small practices continue to feel most of the program's punitive pressures.


Subject(s)
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S. , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/economics , Reimbursement, Incentive/economics , Humans , Texas , United States
15.
Tex Med ; 117(1): 39-41, 2021 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33641117

ABSTRACT

A newly revised Texas Medical Association CME teaches physicians how to recognize human trafficking victims who come into their office, and how to help these patients escape what's sometimes referred to as "modern-day slavery."


Subject(s)
Human Trafficking , Mandatory Reporting , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Humans , Texas
16.
Tex Med ; 117(2): 16-21, 2021 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33641118

ABSTRACT

The malaise in physician practice long known as burnout - a term doctors increasingly balk at - has been exacerbated by the pandemic, as an extensive survey by the Physicians Foundation recently showed. It's created its own stressors and made existing ones worse.


Subject(s)
Burnout, Professional/epidemiology , COVID-19/therapy , Burnout, Professional/etiology , Humans , Physicians/psychology , Texas/epidemiology
17.
Tex Med ; 116(9): 44-45, 2020 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33023285
19.
Tex Med ; 116(10): 40-43, 2020 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33126268

ABSTRACT

Each election, TEXPAC, the Texas Medical Association's nonpartisan political arm, throws its support behind candidates who have demonstrated their support for a medicine-friendly agenda.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Legislation as Topic , Medicine , Politics , Societies, Medical/organization & administration , Humans , Texas
20.
Tex Med ; 116(10): 38-39, 2020 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33126269

ABSTRACT

Now that Texas prescribers must check a patient's history in the state's prescription monitoring program (PMP) before prescribing opioids, plus three other drug classes, the errors are becoming more apparent.


Subject(s)
Analgesics, Opioid , Drug Prescriptions , Physician-Patient Relations , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs , Prescriptions , Humans , Texas
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