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Showing posts from April, 2016

Health Care and Endocrinology

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You may have heard the word Endocrinology used in a sentence by a health care professional, like your family physician or someone that has had to visit an endocrinologist, but not really know what it is or what part of your body is the primary focus for this type of medical need. is a specialty of medicine; some would say a sub-specialty of internal medicine, which deals with the diagnosis and treatment of diseases related to hormones. Endocrinology also focuses on the endocrine glands and tissues that secrete hormones, and it is a branch of biology and medicine dealing with the endocrine system, its diseases, and its specific secretions known as hormones. It is also concerned with the integration of developmental events proliferation, growth, and differentiation, and the psychological or behavioral activities of metabolism, growth and development, tissue function, sleep, digestion, respiration, excretion, mood, stress, lactation, movement, reproduction, and sensory perception caused b

Health Care and Data Breaches

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This blog post is my 500th article!!!  One of the most critical issues in the healthcare field today, for medical providers and facilities and for consumers, is the breach of personal health care information. The theft of personal medical records is big money on the black market, and ID theft due to that crime is rampant. According to Modern Healthcare magazine, 2016 is being deemed the “year of data security” in healthcare—if only because 2015 was a substantial wake-up call for the industry. Nearly 90 percent of healthcare providers have been hit by data breaches in the last two years, according to security research firm Ponemon Institute, with many large-scale and criminally driven attacks publicized in 2015. More details are located at this website: http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20160227/SPONSORED/160229900/2016-the-year-of-data-security HIT Consultant reports that one in three Americans were victims of healthcare data breaches in 2015, attributed to a series of large-scal

Health Care and FMLA

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The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) was passed as a federal law in 1993, requiring covered employers to provide employees job-protected and paid leave for qualified medical and family reasons. Qualified medical and family reasons include: personal or family illness, family military leave, pregnancy, adoption, or the foster care placement of a child. The FMLA was intended "to balance the demands of the workplace with the needs of families." According to the US Department of Labor, t he FMLA entitles eligible employees of covered employers to take unpaid, job-protected leave for specified family and medical reasons with continuation of group health insurance coverage under the same terms and conditions as if the employee had not taken leave. Eligible employees are entitled to the following benefits: --Twelve workweeks of leave in a 12-month period for: ·          the birth of a child and to care for the newborn child within one year of birth; ·          the placement with