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 Pamela Harris |
| A Letter from the Publisher Greetings Memphis Medical Community! As your new Market Publisher, I am excited to be on the threshold of a new beginning for Memphis Medical News! We’ve recently taken a fresh look at our paper, and based on your input, we’re implementing three new, regular columns which are making their debut in this issue! Look inside and check out Memphis on the Mend, this month featuring local clinics that cover uninsured Memphians. Pamela Harris |

 Dr. Arthur Townsend conducts the “Hello Me” workshop with local teens. |
| Outreach Program Aimed at Teen Girls a Worthwhile Effort On a pleasant Saturday morning in April, 10 teenage girls met at the offices of Associates: Obstetrics and Gynecology to learn more about themselves and their bodies. With information packets, diagrams and demonstration tools, a doctor and nurse spent the next few hours discussing feminine health and hygiene. After the teens took a tour of the exam rooms and learned about a gynecological office visit, the clinicians spent time answering important questions. HOLLI W. HAYNIE |
Recruiting Doctors To Tennessee No Easy Task What do the issues of crime, physician reimbursement, student debt, and medical malpractice have in common? They represent the challenges practice administrators face when recruiting doctors to the Mid-South.
“It’s more challenging today than ever before to recruit cardiologists,” said administrator Charles Locke, who hires one to two doctors every two years for the Sutherland Cardiology Clinic. “Because of the aging baby boomers, many groups are searching for cardiologists and there’s a finite number coming out of med school. We’re all competing for great doctors. Here in Memphis, our expectations are high,” he said. JANE SCHNEIDER |
Methodist North Goes Fully Live with EMR A patient enters the Methodist North emergency room via ambulance with acute symptoms. By the time he reaches the nurses station, and often before, his information is already entered and being tracked. Whether seen in triage or admitted, the patient will notice computer carts being used by nurses throughout the floor, as well as computer stations in patient rooms. HOLLI W. HAYNIE |
Permanent Birth Control a Real Option for Women For women who have conscientiously made the decision to permanently prevent future pregnancies, a novel procedure being offered in clinics across Memphis will allow them to eliminate the uncertainty of birth control or traditional tubal litigation. The Essure™ System is a sterilization procedure that can be performed in the office, non-invasively, in about 10 to 12 minutes with or without local anesthesia, and typically with minimal discomfort. Essure, a procedure of bilateral occlusion of the fallopian tubes, is the first and only FDA approved female sterilization procedure to have zero pregnancies in clinical trials.
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Life After the Women’s Health Initiative Confusion over HT Remains When the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) trial of estrogen plus progestin was halted based on findings that the combination carried significant health risks that outweighed its benefits, women and healthcare providers around the country were left to navigate menopausal symptom management in a strange new world. CINDY SANDERS |
State Legislature Approves Long Awaited Medical Liability Reform Bill For years, legislators and the Tennessee Medical Association (TMA) have fought for medical liability reform (MLR), and last month the long-debated amendment passed both the state Senate and House of Representatives. The bill is on its way to Gov. Phil Bredesen for his expected signature.
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Covering the Uninsured Caring for the uninsured is not a profitable business. If it was, more clinics would do it. But if this underserved patient base is ignored, beyond even the moral implications, it can cripple the medical economy. In Shelby County alone, 10 percent of the population is uninsured, as data reported in 2005. Equate that to the 2006 population of more than 900,000 and that’s 90,000 or more people without any form of healthcare coverage. Where do these people go for primary care? HOLLI W. HAYNIE |
Physician Recruiters Offer Tips to Docs on the Market If you’re a physician looking for a job and a recruiting firm asks for money to help you secure employment, walk the other way. That’s the first word of advice to doctors from two physician recruiters who collectively boast more than five decades of experience in the profession. SHARON H. FITZGERALD |
Using a Commercial Real Estate Professional Saves Time and Money Most people are smart enough to seek their doctor’s expertise when they are not feeling well. However, not all doctors or medical groups will utilize the skills of a commercial realtor when they need to find suitable space for a new clinic or relocation of an existing physician practice. This decision can prove to be expensive. BILL APPLING |
Community Research Opens Doors for Patients at West Clinic Dedication to patient care is the cornerstone of any oncology practice with research a vital factor in the planning of treatment and prevention. In keeping with their mission to improve cancer research in the community setting, the West Clinic’s research company, the Accelerated Community Oncology Research Network (ACORN), which facilitates initiatives at the local and national level, is actively working toward... HOLLI W. HAYNIE |

 Attendees pack the War Memorial Auditorium in Nashville for the annual Tennessee Nurses Association Legislative Summit in April. |
| Tennessee Nurses Take Issues to Capitol Hill “Tennessee’s nurses have always had a strong voice — not only for your profession, but for your patients as well. As caregivers and advocates, you are influential forces in the healthcare landscape in Tennessee. You are all here to make those voices heard on issues that affect the nursing profession … today is the day to make your priorities known.” SHARON H. FITZGERALD |

 Gov. Phil Bredesen at a recent Long-Term Healthcare Roundtable. |
| Bredesen Pushes for Long-Term Care Reform for TennCare Recipients In a tight budget year, Gov. Phil Bredesen has declared the need to set priorities. For Tennessee’s chief executive, his 2008 streamlined agenda places heavy emphasis on continuing education initiatives and implementing fundamental change to the state’s long-term care system.
Although the changes outlined in the “Long-Term Care Community Choices Act of 2008” are directly tied to TennCare, the governor has expressed his belief that reworking the system could ultimately benefit a much larger population. CINDY SANDERS |

 Knoxville Professional Driver Medical Depot |
| Knoxville Company Establishes Clinics for Truckers on the Road America’s independent truck drivers usually pull into a travel center for a fill-up, a quick meal, a hot shower and a lot of coffee. Thanks to a company based in Knoxville, Tenn., healthcare is something else truckers can get on the road. SHARON H. FITZGERALD |
Grand Rounds May
Mid-South Maternal Fetal Medicine, PC Welcomes Shelia Thomas, FNP to Medical Staff
UT Announces $1 Billion Campaign; Now 70 Percent to Goal
Drs. Mutter, Reed, Willoughby To Receive TMA Outstanding Physician Awards
General Medicine Conference Celebrates Decade of Growth
Le Bonheur Expands Services to Tupelo
Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare Showcases Robotic Surgery For Prostate Cancer Live On The Internet
McDonald Murrmann Center For Skin, Laser And Healthy Aging Offers Fraxel® Laser
Heme-Onc Hotline Provides Answers – Immediately.
TennCare and Shared Health® Partner to Deliver ePrescribing to Rural Physicians
The West Clinic Participates in Nationwide Study
Mid-South Nursing Chapter Honored
BCBS and UnitedHealth Plan prevailing bidders for TennCare
Celebrate Better Hearing And Speech Month This May With The American Speech-language-hearing Association
Jackson-Madison County General Hospital Earns Quality Respiratory Care National Recognition
PAD Procedure at Regional Hospital of Jackson
Five UT Health Science Center Programs Rank on the U.S. News & World Report List of America’s Best Graduate Schools
Geriatric Psychiatry Specialist Joins Lakeside
Dr. Robert Kirkpatrick to be Installed as TMA’s 154th President
Drs. Arnold, Kimzey Elected to TMA Board of Trustees
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 Muriel Rice teaches clients in the UT Health Works program |
| Nurse Practitioner Spotlight: Muriel Rice, PhD, APRN Helping women overcome barriers and realize their potential is what gets Muriel Rice out of bed in the morning. Director of the University of Tennessee (UT) Health Works program, a job training assistance program for welfare recipients, Rice has been instrumental in bringing healthcare assessment into the curriculum that helps women gain independence from welfare and become self-sufficient. HOLLI W. HAYNIE |
Stark Law’s Ban On Conflicts of Physicians Enters 3rd Phase Within the healthcare industry, no United States Congressman is better known, more frequently vilified and more capable of raising alarm than California Congressman Pete Stark.
Stark, a self-professed atheist, is said to be proud of his reputation of having uttered more outrageous comments on the House floor than any other Congressman.
He is also the person for whom the “Stark Law” - a law intended to prevent conflicts of interest by physicians who treat medicare and medicaid patients - is named. Charles Farmer |
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