Latest Articles
- The apples and oranges of cost-effectiveness: A rejoinder
A recent CCJM commentary used straw men to indict cost-effectiveness research.
- Flashing lights, floaters, and reduced vision
A 62-year-old woman has numerous lobulated, yellowish, choroidal lesions in the left eye, and two similar but smaller lesions in the right eye. What is the cause?
- Using the ankle-brachial index to diagnose peripheral artery disease and assess cardiovascular risk
The authors seek to convince you to measure the ankle-brachial index in any patient you suspect may have peripheral artery disease, whether or not they have symptoms.
- Immune thrombocytopenia in adults: An update
Management has changed in the last decade, with new drugs and with increased awareness of treatment side effects.
- In reply: Geriatric patient-centered medical home
Readers comment on synthetic legal intoxicating drugs (April 2012) and on the geriatric patient-centered medical home (May 2012).
- The stethoscope as metaphor
The humanities—and bedside skills—ought to be a fundamental part of medical education. The alternative is a future full of technicians with tricorders, but sorely lacking in healers.
- Regularizing the approach to the irregularly irregular
We have more choices, more data, and more management algorithms, but still no panacea for atrial fibrillation.
- Geriatric patient-centered medical home
Readers comment on synthetic legal intoxicating drugs (April 2012) and on the geriatric patient-centered medical home (May 2012).
- An argument for reviving the disappearing skill of cardiac auscultation
Three case scenarios show how the clinical examination can complement echocardiography in the evaluation of valvular heart disease.
- In reply: Synthetic legal intoxicating drugs
Readers comment on synthetic legal intoxicating drugs (April 2012) and on the geriatric patient-centered medical home (May 2012).