Keith L. Martin

Articles by Keith L. Martin

Physicians in The Sunshine State and The Pine Tree State are engaged in an interesting back-and-forth over the American Medical Association and national healthcare reform. You may remember back in August that the Florida Medical Association (FMA) avoided a vote to end its relationship with the AMA over the national body's perceived inaction when it came to the Affordable Care Act.

Chances are you are going to get audited in the next few years. But don’t panic - use our audit guide to get your practice prepared instead.

In a new ad already generating buzz before it is broadcast on television, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine says go ahead and save money by eating a Big Mac…your family will need the money for your funeral.

For those of you who don’t speak “text-ese,” this is a friendly reminder that it is time to head to the pharmacy for a refill of that prescription you’ve been taking …and the way more and more of your patients prefer to receive this message.

With Labor Day fresh in the rearview mirror, it is only a matter of time until we are handing out Halloween candy, carving the Thanksgiving turkey, and watching Medicare reimbursements drop by 21 percent. Sorry about that last image, but it is becoming more of a reality that Nov. 30 is becoming a date that physicians are watching very closely on their calendars.

Our July/August story titled “Is Board Certification Overrated?” generated a lot of great letters to the Physicians Practice office, some of which you can read in our September issue. But with too many letters to print and not enough space, we wanted to expand the conversation.

The wife of actor Michael Douglas recently said she was “furious” that doctors did not locate and treat her husband’s throat cancer earlier, indicating it would have improved his chance of survival. The Oscar-winner’s diagnosis shocked many, both because of who he is and because what was initially thought to be a sore throat turned out to be something far worse.

When a doctor writes a prescription for pain medications or other narcotics, does his or her responsibility stop once their signature is complete? A California physician thinks so and is defending herself against a criminal investigation alleging her of improperly dispensing the drugs, which in some cases led to overdose deaths of some of her patients.

Just like a Swiss Army knife, your practice management system should do everything you need it to do in one central location to guarantee your office’s survival. However, much like the valued outdoor utility tool, there are so many different options in terms of tools, gadgets, and styles that choosing the right one can be difficult.

We just entered the fifth month of the new, post-federal health reform world and just in case you had any concerns, the White House is here to remind you to relax, take a deep breath and get ready to change nearly everything about the way you practice medicine.In the current issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine, Nancy-Ann DeParle, director of the White House Office of Health Reform, and two medical colleagues have authored a tome on the “opportunities and challenges” presented by the Affordable Care Act , passed on March 23.

A new study raises the age-old question in medicine of when a medical error occurs, do you play offense and deal with it head-on or take a defensive position instead?The study examines the University of Michigan Health System’s medical error full disclosure policy, including an apology and offer of fair compensation.

Everything is “on demand” these days, from television shows and movies, to music available for purchase while you are riding the bus or sitting in your office. The push for on demand medical records also continues to gain steam amid the new EHR-driven landscape of medicine.

New research by the AMA indicates that if you are a physician, you are pretty much going to be sued. Oh, and if you are in certain specialties, you will definitely get sued. And if you are an older, male physician, boy are you going to get sued.

Are you doing all you can to acknowledge and be sensitive to the cultural diversity of those seeking your care? You need to if the healthcare racial and ethnic disparity gap is to ever be closed, according to the American College of Physicians.

It seems Washington, D.C., is taking a lead from Hollywood: When you have a hit, something that grabs headlines, rush a sequel into production even if it seems too soon. In this case, the sequel is the dreaded “public option,” left on the cutting room floor for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, but now getting its own spin-off in the form of a new bill sponsored by a trio of U.S. House Democrats.