Archive for September 10th, 2009

OMNI Postings of 9/10/09

In Congress, one Wilson named Joe

Put on a spectacularly bad show

 

To the Prez he shouted, “You lie”

And we all wanted to die

 

As the world saw such an uncouth schmoe!

 

 

But I digress…….

 

 

Here is the official response from AMA on President Obama’s speech last night.  Did I see it?  Nope.  Was watching Jeter tying Gehrig’s record.  Anyway,  the AMA response is full of the usual platitudes, but it at least addresses tort reform.

http://omniphysicians.com/2009/09/10/ama-on-obamas-speech/

 

 

Here is an abstract from Emerg Med J about Tasers.  Are there immediate cardiac and cardiovascular effects of Taser X26 conducted electrical weapon (CEW) exposure in human volunteers?  84 Taser exposures were monitored among 28 subjects (24 men, four women) with an average age of 34 years (range 24-46, SD 5.6). No cardiac dysrhythmias or aberrantly conducted beats were seen. Mean heart rate increased by 10.9 beats per minute (bpm) (95% CI 8.2 to 13.7) from 121.7 to 132.6 (p<0.001). The QRS and QTc cardiac intervals did not change significantly. Mean blood pressure increased from 138.6/82.8 mm Hg at rest to 145.8/85.6 mm Hg after the standard 5-s CEW discharge.

http://omniphysicians.com/2009/09/10/tase-me-bro/

 

 

Wanna see a picture of a  Baker’s Cyst?   It’s larger than Nancy Pelosi’s ego.

http://omniphysicians.com/2009/09/09/bakers-cyst/

 

 

Paul R.

Most Recent Weekly College ILI Cases

 

1

FDA Panel: Gardasil OK for Young Males

Link:  http://healthday.com/Article.asp?AID=630791

HealthDay, 9/9/09

FDA Panel Backs Giving HPV Vaccine Gardasil to Young Males
The advisors also recommend approval of second HPV vaccine, Cervarix, to prevent cervical cancer

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 9 (HealthDay News) — U.S. drug advisors recommended Wednesday that use of the vaccine Gardasil, already administered to help prevent cervical cancer in women, be expanded to help prevent genital warts in young males.

A U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisory panel voted to recommend the expanded use of the vaccine for males 9 to 26. The FDA is not required to follow its advisory panels’ recommendations, but it typically does.

The vaccine targets the human papilloma virus, which can cause genital warts in both males and females, cervical cancer in women and also penile and anal cancer in men — although these remain much rarer than cervical malignancies.

The vaccine is manufactured by drug maker Merck & Co.

Merck had asked the FDA to approve Gardasil for males ages 9 to 26. It is already approved in females 9 and older to help prevent cervical cancer.

Before the Gardasil vote, the committee on Wednesday also voted that a second HPV vaccine, GlaxoSmithKline’s Cervarix, seems safe for girls and women ages 10 to 25 for the prevention of cervical cancer. Studies have shown that the vaccine prevents infection with HPV 93 percent of the time. The introduction of Cervarix was delayed in 2007 when the FDA said it needed more research on the vaccine.

The FDA advisors — comprising the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee — said Wednesday that newer studies suggest the Cervarix vaccine is safe, but they recommended follow-up studies to look for miscarriages and muscular problems reported by a small number of patients, the Associated Press reported.

The vote to expand the use of Gardasil to males was not unexpected among health experts.

“It is really hard to get a read on these things, but I don’t think anybody is going to be shocked if eventually this is extended to boys, especially since the science is pretty solid here,” Fred Wyand, a spokesman for the American Social Health Association, in Research Triangle Park, N.C., said before the vote.

“I would not be surprised at all if FDA approved the new indication,” agreed Dr. Jonathan L. Temte, a professor of family medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison.

Temte is also a voting member of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) and explained that if the FDA approves the new use for males, the CDC committee can expect to see the item on its agenda in October.

Health experts believe it makes sense to vaccinate boys against the HPV virus.

“We’re supportive in general of giving vaccines to boys for a number of reasons,” Wyand said. “Clinical trials have shown it’s pretty effective — 90 percent effective in preventing genital lesions [in boys]. Trials in a subset of gay men also found the vaccine to be effective in preventing external lesions, so the signs are pretty clear that it works in guys.”

Vaccinating boys would help shield girls, too, the experts added.

“It’s a sexually transmitted disease, and it takes two people to transmit the virus,” said Dr. Jay Brooks, chairman of hematology/oncology at Ochsner Health System in Baton Rouge, La. “If the vaccine can reduce the risk of infection in men as well as women, then I believe it should be given to both men and women.”

But Gardasil has generated controversy, especially with some conservatives and parents’ rights groups who contend the vaccine could promote premarital sex.

Gardasil, which was approved for girls in 2006, covers four types of HPV, two of which cause about 70 percent of cervical cancers worldwide.

Since its approval, Gardasil has proven to be safe and nearly 100 percent effective in preventing precancerous cervical lesions from the four HPV strains targeted by the vaccine, according to studies. However, there have been side effects reported that include fainting and blood clotting. Research published last month found that for every 100,000 doses of HPV vaccine distributed, there were 8.2 episodes of fainting and 0.2 episodes involving blood clotting.

Studies have also found that Gardasil is much more effective when given to girls or young women before they become sexually active.

“The reason you give this is to prevent disease, and that’s why we start at 11 or 12, before girls are sexually active,” said Dr. Lolita McDavid, medical director of Child Advocacy and Protection at University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland. “About 10,000 American women will get cervical cancer in a year; about 3,700 are going to die from it.”

“About 250,000 new case of genital warts appear in males every year,” she added. “There certainly seems to be a benefit for males.”

Experts hope that making the vaccine available for boys will have additional, non-medical benefits.

“Countless studies show that a lot of shame and stigma almost universally comes with any HPV diagnosis,” Wyand said. “That’s another factor that weighs into it. Hopefully, approving the vaccine for males would reduce any stigma.”

Aaachoo? Stay home and don’t go to the ER

Link:  http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6611126.html

Houston Chronicle, 9/10/09

Even the experts don’t have all the answers about swine flu, but Houston health leaders do have a new directive for parents of children with mild symptoms: Don’t come to emergency rooms.

For the “walking well,” as they’re known, it’s better to call a nurse or physician first, then seek treatment at a clinic or doctor’s office.

“We want people to be educated, we want them to get care, but the vast majority don’t need to be coming in,” said pediatrician Dr. Jeffrey Starke, an infection control officer at Texas Children’s Hospital.

“We’d really prefer that they not so we can concentrate our resources on the people who really need us.”

Children At Risk, a nonprofit child advocacy group, convened Starke and other experts Wednesday for a city summit to update the community on current preparations for dealing with swine flu, also known as H1N1 virus.

“The important thing is that everyone got the right information,” said Bob Sanborn, Children at Risk’s president and CEO.

Pushing options other than the ER keeps the sick isolated and prevents the spread of H1N1 to those who could become infected in the close quarters of an emergency room lobby.

Virus arrived in April

Texas Children’s is prepared to handle another onslaught of thousands of children, officials said, and has been resisting reopening an outdoor triage like the one used in May after news broke that the facility treated the country’s first fatal swine flu case.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as many as half of U.S. residents will get swine flu.

The virus has circulated in the United States since the Mexico outbreak in April. Seasonal flu is on the way.

Because the flu in all its forms could overwhelm hospitals this fall, health officials are stocking supplies and arranging shifts to treat potentially thousands of area children who could become ill.

In some cases, going to the ER is appropriate.

Morenike Giwa’s 7-year-old daughter came down with what seemed like a cold in June, but the severity of its symptoms quickly escalated.

The child, who belongs to a vulnerable population whose lives could be endangered by the H1N1 virus, was diagnosed with swine flu.

“It’s a strange virus,” said Giwa, 32, a March of Dimes employee who attended the summit. “We had a scary bout of it over a period of days.”

Importance of flu shots

Every speaker stressed prevention.

They advised getting the seasonal flu shot now and the H1N1 vaccine when it becomes available.

And, they repeated the well-worn messages of keeping clean hands, sneezing into sleeves or tissues and avoiding crowds (or at least sick people).

All of those actions will help “cocoon” those who are vulnerable or too young to be fully immunized, Anna Dragsbaek said.

“This is a community effort. We are all responsible to each other for keeping our schools safe, our hospitals safe and our community safe,” said Dragsbaek, executive director of the Houston Area Immunization Partnership.

 

“Tase me, bro!”

1: Emerg Med J. 2009 Aug;26(8):567-70.

Link:  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19625551?dopt=Abstract
Immediate cardiovascular effects of the Taser X26 conducted electrical weapon.

Bozeman WP, Barnes DG Jr, Winslow JE 3rd, Johnson JC 3rd, Phillips CH, Alson R.

WFU Department of Emergency Medicine, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston Salem, NC 27106-1089, USA. wbozeman@wfubmc.edu

STUDY OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the immediate cardiac and cardiovascular effects of Taser X26 conducted electrical weapon (CEW) exposure in human volunteers, including heart rhythm, rate and blood pressure.

METHODS: Volunteer police officers participating in CEW training and testing each underwent a 5, 3 and 1 s exposure to the Taser X26 CEW. Continuous electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring was performed before, during and after each exposure. Blood pressures were measured at rest before and within 1 minute after each exposure. Paired sample t-test analysis and confidence interval calculations were performed.
RESULTS: 84 Taser exposures were monitored among 28 subjects (24 men, four women) with an average age of 34 years (range 24-46, SD 5.6). No cardiac dysrhythmias or aberrantly conducted beats were seen. Mean heart rate increased by 10.9 beats per minute (bpm) (95% CI 8.2 to 13.7) from 121.7 to 132.6 (p<0.001). The QRS and QTc cardiac intervals did not change significantly. Mean blood pressure increased from 138.6/82.8 mm Hg at rest to 145.8/85.6 mm Hg after the standard 5-s CEW discharge.
CONCLUSION: CEW exposure produced no detectable dysrhythmias and a statistically significant increase in heart rate. Overall, Taser CEW exposure appears to be safe and well tolerated from a cardiovascular standpoint in this population. This study increases the cumulative human subject experience of CEW exposure with continuous ECG monitoring and includes 28 full 5-s exposures.

AMA: On Obama’s Speech

Special Alert
Sept. 9, 2009

AMA reaction to President Obama’s address on health system reform

Physicians agree that medical liability reform is needed

From AMA President J. James Rohack, MD:

“It is clear that the status quo is unacceptable. The AMA will continue to work for reform that makes the system work better for patients and physicians. We must seize this opportunity this year to achieve meaningful health reform for America’s patients and physicians.

“The President outlined three essential goals that are vital to reform efforts in this country, including: ensuring the current system remains secure and stable for those who already have insurance coverage and are happy with it; making insurance coverage affordable and accessible to those who need it; and reducing unnecessary costs and waste in the current system.

“The AMA believes these core goals are ones that the majority of the American people can and do support, and we urge Congress to find common ground in achieving them.

“President Obama recognized what physicians have long known—that medical liability reform is needed to bring down the cost of health care, and he is directing the Department of Health and Human Services to take action now. Recognizing the critical need for medical liability reform is an important step toward reducing unnecessary costs. Everyday physicians across the country are forced to consider the broken medical liability system when making decisions, resulting in defensive medicine that adds to unnecessary health costs. We cannot ignore this problem if health system reform is going to address the growing cost of care.

“Just yesterday, the AMA sent a letter (PDF) to President Obama and Congress urging them to reach agreement on health reform that includes seven critical elements. Health coverage for all Americans, insurance market reforms that expand choice and eliminate denials for pre-existing conditions, assurance that medical decisions will remain between the patient and physician, medical liability reforms to reduce the cost of defensive medicine, and repeal of the broken Medicare physicians payment formula that threatens seniors’ access to care are among them.

“We have a historic opportunity to implement needed reforms to address shortcomings in the current system, while keeping in tact all that is working well. We will stay constructively engaged in the legislative process to ensure the final bill improves the health system for patients and the dedicated physicians who care for them.”

MIs & Very Long Transfer Distances

Efficacy and Safety of Immediate Angioplasty Versus Ischemia-Guided Management After Thrombolysis in Acute Myocardial Infarction in Areas With Very Long Transfer Distances: Results of the NORDISTEMI (NORwegian study on DIstrict treatment of ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction)

Ellen Bøhmer, Pavel Hoffmann, Michael Abdelnoor, Harald Arnesen, and Sigrun Halvorsen
J Am Coll Cardiol published 9 September 2009, 10.1016/j.jacc.2009.08.007

Link:  http://content.onlinejacc.org/cgi/content/abstract/j.jacc.2009.08.007v1?papetoc

Objectives: The goal of this study was to compare a strategy of immediate transfer for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with an ischemia-guided approach after thrombolysis in patients with very long transfer distances to PCI.

Background: Thrombolysis remains the treatment of choice in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) when primary PCI cannot be performed within 90 to 120 min. The optimal treatment after thrombolysis is still unclear.

Methods: A total of 266 patients with acute STEMI living in rural areas with more than 90-min transfer delays to PCI were treated with tenecteplase, aspirin, enoxaparin, and clopidogrel and randomized to immediate transfer for PCI or to standard management in the local hospitals with early transfer, only if indicated for rescue or clinical deterioration. The primary outcome was a composite of death, reinfarction, stroke, or new ischemia at 12 months, and analysis was by intention to treat.

Results: The primary end point was reached in 28 patients (21%) in the early invasive group compared with 36 (27%) in the conservative group (hazard ratio: 0.72, 95% confidence interval: 0.44 to 1.18, p = 0.19). The composite of death, reinfarction, or stroke at 12 months was significantly reduced in the early invasive compared with the conservative group (6% vs. 16%, hazard ratio: 0.36, 95% confidence interval: 0.16 to 0.81, p = 0.01). No significant differences in bleeding or infarct size were observed.

Conclusions: Immediate transfer for PCI did not improve the primary outcome significantly, but reduced the rate of death, reinfarction, or stroke at 12 months in patients with STEMI, treated with thrombolysis and clopidogrel in areas with long transfer distances. (Norwegian Study on District Treatment of ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction; NCT00161005

The Paucity of PCPs

Link:  http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-09-08-emergency-room-chronic_N.htm

USA Today, 9/9/09

Raymond Harris is only 54, but he already has gone through three kidneys. Like most people, Harris was born with two working kidneys. He lost one at age 8 because of a fall. He lost the second to high blood pressure at 42. He lost the third — donated by his wife — at age 48, because of a rare reaction to a dye that doctors used to view the blockages in his arteries.

 

And while Harris gets a lot of health care, he isn’t exactly healthy.

 

He has had three back surgeries and six heart attacks and depends on dialysis to survive. If medications fail to clear his arteries, he may need open-heart surgery. And less than one month after his latest heart attack, Harris is back in the emergency room at the University of Virginia Medical Center with chest pain.

 

READMISSIONS: More discharged patients return via ER24 HOURS IN THE ER: Challenges of health system revealedIN THEIR OWN WORDS: Dental problems common cause of ER visits

 

While Harris’ health problems may seem extraordinary, doctors say that many Americans today appear destined to share his fate.

 

Nearly half of Americans have a chronic condition, and 75% of the $2.6 trillion spent annually on health care goes to treat patients with long-term health problems, says Kenneth Thorpe, a professor at Atlanta’s Emory University and head of the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease. In the Medicare program, which pays for Harris’ care because of his kidney failure, 95% of spending is linked to a chronic disease.

 

“All of these diseases are accumulations of what’s happened before in a person’s life,” says Barbara Starfield, professor of public policy at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. “We have to think about keeping people as healthy as possible so they don’t get these diseases.”

 

Doctors say Harris’ story is filled with missed opportunities to avoid disease, but also illustrates possibilities for change — both through healthier lifestyles and more coordinated primary care — that could reduce suffering and unnecessary costs.

 

“It would have been nice to catch him in his 20s and get him to stop smoking,” says Robert O’Connor, professor and chair of emergency medicine at the University of Virginia, who treated Harris in the ER. “I suspect he had high blood pressure back then. … I can’t help but wonder if that would have provided a better outcome for him.”

 

Although health officials have exhorted Americans for years to get in shape, two-thirds of adults today are overweight. But insurance plans could help in other ways, such as by covering smoking-cessation classes and other services with well-documented health benefits, says Ted Epperly, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians.

 

Harris gave up tobacco on his own last month after his last heart attack, after smoking a pack a day for decades. Now, he puts $5 a day in a jar — the amount he used to spend on cigarettes — and will use the savings to help pay his mortgage.

 

“It would save a lot of money,” he says. “These health problems are going to cost them way more than the classes.”

 

Primary-care shortage

 

Harris has lots of company in the ER this day. Doctors will have seen nearly 200 patients before it’s over. When the ER runs out of rooms, doctors will treat patients on gurneys in the hallway.

 

“We don’t have a robust primary-care system, so that we can’t get all of these people taken care of in the right place at the right time by the right type of doctor,” Epperly says.

 

Uninsured patients aren’t the only ones using the ER for non-urgent care. With too few primary-care doctors to go around, many patients turn to the ER when they can’t get an appointment with their regular physician, says Sandra Schneider, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians.

 

In some ways, insurance payments contribute to the shortage, Epperly says, by discouraging physicians from going into primary care.

 

Medicare, which covers people over 65, pays doctors far more to perform procedures than to monitor a patient’s overall health, Epperly says. In the past decade, only 10% of new doctors — who graduate from medical school with an average of $140,000 in student loans — have gone into primary care, Epperly says.

 

“We have a terribly perverse incentive system,” says Stuart Butler, a health analyst and vice president for domestic research with the Heritage Foundation in Washington.

 

Patients with chronic conditions may see specialists who each treat a different symptom or deteriorating organ. But these doctors may rarely if ever get together to talk about the patient’s overall health, Starfield says. Under Medicare’s current system, no one is paid to coordinate all these services. And no one is accountable for helping the patient get better, she says.

 

Medicaid, which covers poor children and the disabled, also discourages doctors from taking on new patients. The federal program, which is run by the states, pays doctors an average of 28% less than Medicare, says David Tayloe, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics. So many doctors refuse to treat patients on Medicaid.

 

Children on Medicaid who need pediatric specialists may wait months for an appointment, Tayloe says. Yet children on Medicaid are among the most vulnerable to long-term disease. “A lot of the cost of ignoring children,” he says, “comes to play when they become sick adults with chronic preventable problems, like type 2 diabetes.”

 

A program that works

 

Successful regional programs could serve as models for national health care reform, says Tayloe, who practices in rural Goldsboro, N.C. North Carolina, for example, saves $150 million a year through a “visionary” Medicaid program, he says.

 

The plan encourages doctors to accept Medicaid patients by paying extra monthly fees that reflect the level of sickness of their patients, Tayloe says. A community health network gets an extra fee to coordinate patient care and make sure that kids stay healthy.

 

In the Seattle area, Group Health Cooperative experimented with a “patient-centered medical home,” which allows doctors to see fewer patients but spend more time coordinating their care. Patients in the new program had 29% fewer ER visits and 11% fewer hospitalizations, according to a study published in the American Journal of Managed Care last week. The program paid for itself within a year.

 

Butler also has high praise for the way Pennsylvania’s Geisinger Health System cares for the chronically ill. Before patients are discharged from the hospital, a nurse makes a follow-up appointment, then calls patients to remind them to show up. “This is not only good medicine, this is good cost control.” Health systems could greatly improve their care by following Geisinger’s example, he says.

 

Several proposals for health reform could help, too, Tayloe says. A bill in the House of Representatives would improve payment for primary-care doctors who see Medicare and Medicaid patients, raising Medicaid rates even more significantly so that they equal those in Medicare.

 

Other proposals in Congress would establish a pilot program to test more “medical home” models like the one at Group Health and fund a study on ways to balance the supply of specialists and primary-care providers. Doctors on “community health teams” would be paid to oversee patients’ care. The teams would include nurse practitioners and physician assistants — who can handle many primary-care needs more cheaply than doctors — as well as dietitians, mental health counselors and others.

 

Such programs don’t always save money. But transforming primary care could help the country to spend its money more wisely, says Ann O’Malley of the Center for Studying Health System Change in Washington. Right now, she says, Americans spend far more on health care than most other Western countries, but have “much, much worse outcomes.”

 

“The goal,” she says, “is to get better value for the health care dollars we’re already spending.”

Incidental findings on brain MRIs

Link:  http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/339/aug17_1/b3016

Incidental findings on brain magnetic resonance imaging: systematic review and meta-analysis

BMJ 2009;339:b3016BMJ 2009;339:b3016

Objective To quantify the prevalence of incidental findings on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain.

Design Systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies.

Data sources Ovid Medline (1950 to May 2008), Embase (1980 to May 2008), and bibliographies of relevant articles.

Review methods Two reviewers sought and assessed studies of people without neurological symptoms who underwent MRI of the brain with or without intravenous contrast for research purposes or for occupational, clinical, or commercial screening.

Main outcome measures Overall disease specific and age specific prevalence of incidental brain findings, calculated by meta-analysis of pooled proportions using DerSimonian-Laird weights in a random effects model.

Results In 16 studies, 135 of 19 559 people had neoplastic incidental brain findings (prevalence 0.70%, 95% confidence interval 0.47% to 0.98%), and prevalence increased with age ({chi}2 for linear trend, P=0.003). In 15 studies, 375 of 15 559 people had non-neoplastic incidental brain findings (prevalence 2.0%, 1.1% to 3.1%, excluding white matter hyperintensities, silent infarcts, and microbleeds). The number of asymptomatic people needed to scan to detect any incidental brain finding was 37. The prevalence of incidental brain findings was higher in studies using high resolution MRI sequences than in those using standard resolution sequences (4.3% v 1.7%, P<0.001). The prevalence of neoplastic incidental brain findings increased with age.

Conclusions Incidental findings on brain MRI are common, prevalence increases with age, and detection is more likely using high resolution MRI sequences than standard resolution sequences. These findings deserve to be mentioned when obtaining informed consent for brain MRI in research and clinical practice but are not sufficient to justify screening healthy asymptomatic people.

Forced

Link:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/08/AR2009090802453.html?hpid=sec-health

AP, 9/9/09

‘Tens of thousands of health care workers who typically avoid flu shots are under more pressure than ever to get vaccinated as hospitals and clinics prepare for a spike in swine flu cases this fall and winter.

Roughly half of health workers skip the immunizations, raising two concerns: If doctors and nurses get sick, who will treat what could be millions of Americans reeling from seasonal or swine flu? And could infected health workers make things worse by spreading flu to patients?

New York, the first state to be hard-hit by swine flu, is requiring all health workers to get immunized against both types of flu. Other states are weighing whether to follow suit.

But shots for all health workers may not be an easy sell.

Fewer than half of them got flu vaccinations last year, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention survey of about 1,000 workers. That includes physicians in clinics, lab technicians, respiratory therapists and home health aides. Rates are highest among doctors and nurses in hospitals – 70 to 80 percent, but the overall rate shows many still shun the shots.

Why? The reasons vary from safety concerns to skepticism over vaccine effectiveness.

Sandra Morales, a labor and delivery nurse in New York City, had her last flu shot 16 years ago. She says she got the flu anyway.

She objects to New York’s new law, saying it infringes on free-choice rights. “It’s crossing the line, and I’m opposed to that.”

Hospital workers “are at risk for being exposed to many, many diseases,” she said. “Imagine if we had to take a vaccine for everything that comes in the door.”

Morales worries she might lose her job if she refuses – it will be up to individual clinics and health centers to decide how to enforce the law. She has until Nov. 30 to get her shots. Both the seasonal flu vaccine (available this month) and swine flu vaccine (expected in October) are required for workers in hospitals, treatment centers and in home care.

That may mean three separate shots, if the swine flu vaccine requires two doses to be effective. Testing in the U.S. is still under way to determine the dose.

The uncertainty about the new swine flu vaccine has added to the challenge…….’

Air Ambulance Pilot Speaks Out

Link:  http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-09-08-emergency-helicopter_N.htm

USA Today, 9/9/09

Unlike the work of doctors and nurses in the ER, Kim Welliver’s job is to forget about the medical condition of patients so he can instead focus on a safe flight.”Our responsibility as pilots is to … get the crew and the vehicle to the patient and back to the hospital without being concerned about the medical condition,” says Welliver, wearing night-vision goggles around his neck.

“Of course, we hear it. We know what’s going on. (But) we’re not medically trained, and we don’t consider the medical situation in our decision-making process.”

 A former Army pilot, Welliver can fly as many as five times a night. His crew includes a flight nurse and a paramedic who communicate with ER physicians during the flight.

 ”My health care in the military was excellent. Vision, everything. It was free in the military. … Overall, what I would tell you I’ve taken from it is that the health care industry in general… doesn’t appear to be as focused on preventive health care as the Army was.”

 Welliver left the Army in 2003 after 28 years on active duty. He now receives his coverage through TRICARE, the program available to retired members of the military.

 ”Out in the civilian world now, if you don’t have a diagnosis, if you’re not already sick, they’re not interested in preventing you from getting sick. … But the real way you’re going to be able to control costs is to teach people that you need to get these screenings done in order to tip you off that you’re heading down the wrong road with your weight, with your sugar levels, with your bone density.”