Main Directory
Articles 2591
CME 2
eCommerce 0
Medical Web Sites Directory 93
Podcasts 94
Web Design and Hosting 2




Aggressive Malpractice Environments Dictate How, Not Where, Neurosurgeons Practice
Link ID 5367
Title Aggressive Malpractice Environments Dictate How, Not Where, Neurosurgeons Practice
Url http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/573903?src=rss
Description New research suggests aggressive medical malpractice environments do not influence where neurosurgeons practice but may cause them to limit their practice, which may result in a critical erosion of care in some of the most seriously ill neurological patients. Medscape Medical News
Category Articles > Business of Medicine
Keywords
Date May 2, 2008
Contact Name
Email
Write a Review   Add to My Favorite   Refer it to Friend   Report Broken Link  

Average Visitor Rating: 0.00 (out of 5)
Number of ratings: 0 Votes
Visitor Rating

 Other links at Articles > Business of Medicine
1. Improve Physician Quality of Life to Enhance Patient Care
  Take better care of doctors so they can respond to the needs of patients, experts advise. Medscape Medical News
Category:   Articles > Business of Medicine


2. Dengue Fever May Threaten U.S.: Report
  Dengue fever may be poised to spread across the United States, health officials said on Tuesday. Reuters Health Information
Category:   Articles > Business of Medicine


3. Perspectives on Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus: The Persistent Pathogen
  MRSA persists as a costly threat. Read updates on prevalence, prevention, and treatment from the ATS 2008 meeting.
Medscape Pulmonary Medicine
Category:   Articles > Business of Medicine


4. WHO Health Chief Urges Fast Action on Cheap Drugs
  World Health Organisation (WHO) chief Margaret Chan called for quick global agreement on Monday to ensure people in poor countries can get the drugs they need at affordable prices. Reuters Health Information
Category:   Articles > Business of Medicine


5. CTA in the ER Can Safely and Effectively Screen for Acute Coronary Syndrome
  Patients admitted to the emergency department for acute coronary syndrome were screened with a high-resolution computed tomography angiography, which identified patients ready for discharge. Medscape Medical News
Category:   Articles > Business of Medicine




Home      New Listings      Hot Listings      Top Rated      Editor Pick      Add a Listing      Update a Listing      Get Rated      Upgrade a Listing
Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional   Valid CSS