In this position paper, the American College of Physicians (ACP) examines the challenges women face in the U.S. health care system across their lifespans, including access to care; sex- and gender-specific health issues; variation in health outcomes compared with men; underrepresentation in research studies; and public policies that affect women, their families, and society.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWomen comprise more than one third of the active physician workforce, an estimated 46% of all physicians-in-training, and more than half of all medical students in the United States. Although progress has been made toward gender diversity in the physician workforce, disparities in compensation exist and inequities have contributed to a disproportionately low number of female physicians achieving academic advancement and serving in leadership positions. Women in medicine face other challenges, including a lack of mentors, discrimination, gender bias, cultural environment of the workplace, imposter syndrome, and the need for better work-life integration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSocial determinants of health are nonmedical factors that can affect a person's overall health and health outcomes. Where a person is born and the social conditions they are born into can affect their risk factors for premature death and their life expectancy. In this position paper, the American College of Physicians acknowledges the role of social determinants in health, examines the complexities associated with them, and offers recommendations on better integration of social determinants into the health care system while highlighting the need to address systemic issues hindering health equity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSubstance use disorders involving illicit and prescription drugs are a serious public health issue. In the United States, millions of individuals need treatment for substance use disorders but few receive it. The rising number of drug overdose deaths and the changing legal status of marijuana pose new challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Gastroenterol
January 2010
Effective management of acute pain should be a primary goal of each health care provider. Acute pain is a complex medical problem with multiple possible etiologies. This article describes the pathophysiology of pain, discusses the ways to assess pain, and reviews the principles of acute pain management, including the use of both pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic measures to treat pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Service quality, defined as patients' self-reported experience of care, is used as a metric for evaluating quality. Most studies rely on retrospective consumer surveys rather then more intensive data collection methods, possibly underestimating the incidence of service quality incidents.
Subjects And Methods: The objective of the study was to characterize patient-reported service quality deficiencies on a general medicine unit.
Purpose: Little is known about how well hospitalized patients can identify errors or injuries in their care. Accordingly, the purpose of this study was to elicit incident reports from hospital inpatients in order to identify and characterize adverse events and near-miss errors.
Subjects: We conducted a prospective cohort study of 228 adult inpatients on a medicine unit of a Boston teaching hospital.
Purpose Of Review: Epidemiological studies consistently link moderate alcohol use with a lower risk of cardiovascular disease, but a number of important issues remain controversial. These include the putative impact of non-alcoholic constituents of some alcoholic beverages, the role of genetic factors, potential mechanisms for this association, and confirmation of the relationship in experimental models.
Recent Findings: Although high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) is considered the primary mediator of the cardiovascular effects of moderate drinking, recent evidence has shown the alcohol-HDL-C relation is not linear beyond the range of moderate drinking.
Pain is unnecessary. Effective tools are available to help doctors evaluate pain in their patients. Unrelieved pain should be treated just like any other vital sign: with aggressive measures.
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