More articles from Editorial
- Can medicine serve both humanity and the bottom line?
Will the commitment to public health and community service be lost in the shift toward for-profit medicine?
- Further education of those who serve @ ccf.org
The Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine goes online; but how will physicians use the Internet?
- An ounce of prevention…
Managed care could encourage cooperation between mainstream clinical medicine and public health.
- Shark cartilage: the Laetrile of the 1990s
Shark cartilage, like Laetrile, high-dose vitamin C, and coffee enemas, provides patients with emotional support, but does nothing to the cancer.
- Fibromyalgia: more than a label
Fibromyalgia is a useful diagnosis that can reduce wasteful testing and treatment.
- Health quality data: Are flawed data better than none?
Comments on the critique of quality assessment by Vogel and Topol in this issue. A Cleveland project highlights the promise and peril of quality measurements.
- What now for the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine?
As medicine changes, so must the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine. Dr. John D. Clough, the new editor-in-chief, outlines the Journal's educational mission.
- Are calcium antagonists safe?
Recent studies have generated a storm of controversy. A member of the NIH committee on calcium-channel blockers gives his perspective.
- Caring for dying patients: physicians and assisted suicide
Both advocates and opponents can agree on the need for better palliative care.