All Medical & Allied Healthcare Articles
  • Some airlines issuing refunds to passengers failing temperature checks…

    Lark Gould Travel, Hospitality & Event Management

    While airports are busy creating new methods for screening passengers for cases of COVID-19 before they board their planes, some airlines are essentially thanking those passengers for not getting on by refunding their tickets. To that end, new thermal screens are being tested at airports to help stem spread of the virus by grounding passengers over any signs of fever.

  • More than 300 healthcare groups encourage Congress to maintain telehealth…

    Scott E. Rupp Medical & Allied Healthcare

    In a step that's reminiscent of the old adage, "We're mad as hell and not gonna take it anymore," American healthcare organizations and lobbying groups are warning Congress not to cut off current reimbursements for care offered through telehealth capabilities, which have exploded during the COVID-19 pandemic. The letter was sent to Congress’ leaders from 340 groups and organizations, including some of the most well-known in the country. These groups are concerned that Congress will roll back telehealth's gains when the public health emergency ends.

  • Interim study report shows that a COVID-19 vaccine could be on the horizon

    Dorothy L. Tengler Medical & Allied Healthcare

    The world anxiously awaits a vaccine against the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which has caused the COVID-19 pandemic. Pharmaceutical companies are moving at an unprecedented rate with at least 120 projects launched worldwide, involving gene-based vaccines, inactivated vaccines, or live vaccines with viral vectors, to name a few. One promising project is triggering stronger immune responses in recipients than those seen in people naturally recovering from an infection of COVID-19.

  • COVID-19 and pre-participation physical evaluations for high school athletes

    Rey Hernandez Sports & Fitness

    The COVID-19 pandemic has limited the public’s access to medical care and many healthcare providers are seeing patients only for acute illness and other urgent health issues. All states and the District of Columbia require that student-athletes obtain a yearly pre-participation physical evaluation (PPE) in order to participate in sports during the school year. The specific requirements can vary from state to state. Some states require a PPE on an annual basis, and in others the required time interval can range to as many as every three years.

  • US employers add 4.8 million jobs in June; jobless rate drops to 11.1%

    Seth Sandronsky Business Management, Services & Risk Management

    Employers added 4.8 million nonfarm jobs in June after hiring 2.5 million workers in May, according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. June’s unemployment rate fell to 11.1% versus May’s 13.3%. Improvement in the labor market for the second straight month was due to a partial resuming of economic activity after nationwide business closures, notably in the hospitality and leisure sectors in March and April, to slow the transmission of the COVID-19 pandemic. That shutdown led to the loss of 22.2 million jobs.

  • Study: ED clinicians hesitant to prescribe buprenorphine for treating opioid…

    Chelsea Adams Medical & Allied Healthcare

    Despite the fact that 2 million Americans are diagnosed with opioid use disorder (OUD) each year, evidence-based medications aren't often prescribed, especially in the ED setting. It's estimated that only a third of those diagnosed with OUD are given methadone, buprenorphine/naloxone or naltrexone for substance abuse treatment. A new study from Yale University seems to confirm that assumption. Researchers surveyed some 400 clinicians at four urban academic emergency departments.

  • What CEOs and other executives need to know about disability insurance

    Colin Nabity Business Management, Services & Risk Management

    As a CEO or senior executive, you have reached the pinnacle of your profession. That success comes with significant responsibility and compensation. Are you prepared for the possibility that an injury or illness could prevent you from fulfilling your duties? Can you and your family withstand losing some or all of your income in the event you can’t work? Here are some other questions CEOs and other high-income earners should ask as they consider the need for disability insurance.

  • Emerging COVID-19 complications in children

    Amanda Ghosh Medical & Allied Healthcare

    The reopening of some daycare programs and summer camps gives parents another reason to monitor their children for signs of a COVID-19 infection carefully. Current data indicates that children are less vulnerable to COVID-19. However, a small proportion of those infected have developed severe complications.

  • When COVID-19 remains front and center

    Keith Carlson Medical & Allied Healthcare

    During the first half of 2020, prognostications regarding the course that the COVID-19 pandemic would take were as diverse as the individuals, countries, and organizations debating what might truly come to pass. The pandemic has remained front and center on the world stage as economies teeter on the brink, millions are sickened, and thousands continue to die. Even so, the possible outcomes for one of the most challenging times in recent human history remain beyond accurate prediction.

  • ‘Travel, as we knew it, is over,’ but hopes remain for a different…

    Linchi Kwok Travel, Hospitality & Event Management

    Airbnb co-founder Brian Chesky talked about the future of travel in a recent CNBC interview. He stated: "Travel, as we knew it, is over. It doesn’t mean travel is over, just the travel we knew is over, and it’s never coming back. It’s just not." His statement made headlines, but he also suggested in the same interview: "… travel is going to come back. It’s just going to take a lot longer than, you know, we would have thought, and it’s going to be different."