Wageningen Academic Publishers - Journal Article
Links shared publicly online about this topic.
- 37total visits
Wageningen Academic Publishers - Journal Article
wageningenacademic.metapress.com —
View full resource at wageningenacademic.metapress.com
Tags: Allergies, Disease and Condition, Probiotic, disease
Most Recently Shared on August 29, 2011 at 12:03 pm By:
Some strains of probiotics appear to be useful in the treatment and/or prevention of allergic disease http://t.co/mdourhf
A New Model: Physician-Patient Collaboration in Online Communities and the Clinical Practice of Oncology - ASCO
asco.org — “A New Model: Physician-Patient Collaboration in Online Communities and the Clinical Practice of Oncology - ASCO - The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) is the world's leading professional organization representing physicians who treat people with cancer. ASCO's members set the standard for patient care worldwide, and lead the fight for more effective cancer treatments, increased funding for clinical and translational research, and, ultimately, cures for the many different cancers that” View full resource at asco.org
Most Recently Shared on May 4, 2012 at 9:07 pm By:
Yaaay, ASCO oncology society sent me a note: "Dear Dr. deBronkart, your article has been published" :-) http://t.co/dQPFv63d
AR: Value-based reimbursement can fuel innovation, improve outcomes
healthimaging.com — “Two decades of experts calling for value in Medicare reimbursement has gone largely unheeded. However, transitioning toward value-based reimbursement for imaging could optimize innovation and reward advances that deliver improved health and economic outcomes, according to an article published in the September issue of Academic Radiology.” View full resource at healthimaging.com
Most Recently Shared on August 26, 2011 at 2:29 pm By:
AR: Value-based reimbursement can fuel innovation, improve outcomes http://t.co/QU0SgP1
AR: The $1.1B, double-edged sword of comparative effectiveness
healthimaging.com — “Comparative effectiveness research (CER) presents both opportunities and challenges for radiology, according to an article published in the September issue of Academic Radiology. Patient communication, decision support and policy changes are essential to radiology’s survival in the comparative effectiveness era.” View full resource at healthimaging.com
Most Recently Shared on August 25, 2011 at 2:29 pm By:
AR: The $1.1B, double-edged sword of comparative effectiveness http://t.co/OIPzlUE
Pediatric Fracture Reductions in the Emergency Department - Thoughts on Life in the ER
emergencydocs.typepad.com — “An article recently published in Academic Emergency Medicine (Khan S et al. Closed reduction of distal forearm fractures by pediatric emergency physicians. Acad Emerg Med 2010 Nov; 17:1169) attempts to --determine if there exist differences in length of stay (LOS) in the emergency department (ED) and need for reintervention to...” View full resource at emergencydocs.typepad.com
Most Recently Shared on December 13, 2010 at 8:34 pm By:
Pediatric Fracture Reductions in the Emergency Department http://bit.ly/dWA53c
The Public Editor - Scholarly Work, Without All the Footnotes - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com
nytimes.com — “A dispute about a Times Magazine article illustrates the differences between academic publishing and the popular press.” View full resource at nytimes.com
Most Recently Shared on October 3, 2010 at 4:00 pm By:
Public Editor: on Scholarly Work, Without Footnotes (note ending, suggests links can add value in science pieces) - http://nyti.ms/aU9Ow7
Spare the Policy, Spoil the Profession :: Longwoods.com
longwoods.com — “Longwoods publishes academic and scientific reports, commentary and information about healthcare and sciences. We explore ideas, share best practices and enable excellence.” View full resource at longwoods.com
Most Recently Shared on August 23, 2010 at 6:27 pm By:
Thought provoking article on why #interprofessional collaboration goes no where: http://tinyurl.com/26lnlhc #medicine #Canada #NP
Why we go doolally | Psydir News
news.psydir.com — “Someone who acts strangely or ‘goes mad’ is often described as having gone ‘doolally’. The military origin of this curious term is discussed in an aside in an academic article published in Twentieth Century British History. The article discusses the changing concepts of how imprisonment during war impacts on soldiers’ mental health: POWs were originally [...]...” View full resource at news.psydir.com
Most Recently Shared on August 12, 2010 at 1:08 am By:
Advertisement

