Sabatino Bianco, MD, director of the Trinity Mother Frances Neuroscience Institute in Tyler, TX, recently began performing an innovative procedure, the endoscopic transsphenoidal hypophysectomy, or ETH. The latest example of minimally invasive surgery, the procedure allows the removal of pituitary tumors through the nasal cavity. In this podcast, Bianco discusses ETH and the technology involved.
In our November issue you will find a profile I prepared on Donald Hopkins, MD. Hopkins' work overseas eradicating the guinea worm disease takes place in impoverished areas where the technology we take for granted doesn't exist. The tools at his disposal are primitive ones, including screens used to filter water. That's one of the first steps toward eliminating the horrific disease.
Hopkins himself seems a bit uncomfortable in the modern age of technology. He has e-mail, but relies on an assistant to answer it for him. And he has little use for cell phones. Spam is part of the problem. Hopkins keeps a fax machine in his office and commented to me how many "junk faxes" he gets. It is a truism of information technology that it opens the floodgates to unwanted information. But there's more to it than that, he pointed out.
I asked Hopkins what it was like to have worked in such adverse conditions, then return to the United States, where affluence is widespread. He's clearly disturbed by the contrast, and commented about the tremendous amount of waste here. People routinely discard "old" clothes that might be the beginning of a brand new wardrobe in the third world. And we are served huge portions in restaurants when halfway around the globe, youngsters scrape by meal to meal.
Hopkins criticized our media for its celebrity "obsession," and for turning a deaf ear on international health issues that could be tackled if more resources were poured into the effort. Although he didn't say it, he was describing a society wallowing in its own fortunes, oblivious to those less fortunate around us.
No wonder Hopkins looks askance at modern information technology. It's not the technology so much as it is the information. "What makes the nightly news are stories that are photogenic, rather than things that are important for people to understand," he told me.
That underscores the mission of magazines like HealthLeaders. No matter how far off my technology beat I may wander, I will never have to write about Paris Hilton.
Supporters of a bill that would require hospitals to dispense emergency contraception for sexual assault victims said they have enough votes to adopt the bill in the Assembly this month. But they are still facing a challenge from those who oppose the measure and say hospitals shouldn't be forced into such a mandate.
Health Strategies & Solutions, Inc. President Alan Zuckerman discusses the increase in competition in healthcare. If competition is still a dirty word in your organization, you're behind the eight-ball in today's healthcare landscape, Zuckerman says.
During a recent forum held in Palm Beach County, FL, healthcare and business leaders, politicians and doctors came together to come up with changes to cover more of the uninsured, to get more people into primary care and to improve working conditions for doctors.
A numbers of patient advocates, including physicians who coach people on how to get better care, are teaching patients how to communicate better with their doctors. This story provides a list of "do's and don'ts."