A medical helicopter crashed in Mississippi on Monday, killing a pilot and two hospital workers on board, officials said. The University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jacksonville uses the helicopter, which is based out of the southern city Columbus, for air transports. The helicopter "had an accident" in a rural area not far from its base, according to the hospital. Two crew members on board were employed by the medical center, and the pilot was from Med-Trans, the company that owns and operates the helicopter. No patients were on board. The helicopter was returning to Columbus from a patient transport when it crashed in Madison County at around 12:30 pm, killing everyone on board.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is poised to revolutionize numerous aspects of human life, with health care among the most critical fields set to benefit from this transformation. Medicine is a complex, costly and high-impact field, facing challenges in data management, diagnostics and cost reduction. AI offers solutions to these issues, enhancing care and cutting costs. However, its adoption lags behind other industries, underscoring the need to address key barriers.
A new review identified 10 healthcare communication practices that clinicians can use to create unhurried healthcare conversations with their patients.
What happened during the early weeks and months of the COVID pandemic changed the face of health care — both in terms of the people working within it and the way that health care is delivered.
The WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and WVU Medicine Geriatric Medicine are opening the WVU Frailty Clinic, which will help patients regain strength, mobility, and independence by offering specialized assessment, treatment, and rehabilitation. The Clinic, which will officially open March 20, will be the first of its kind in the state.
Two people have now died in the growing measles outbreak in west Texas and New Mexico. New Mexico Health officials on Thursday confirmed the death of an unvaccinated adult who tested positive for measles. The first death was a school-age child in Gaines County, Texas last week. News of a second death comes as infectious disease doctors worry that the federal government's messaging about the outbreak is putting more emphasis on treatments like vitamin A than on vaccination, even as misinformation about some of these treatments is spreading online.