Tuesday, January 24, 2023

CLINICAL TRIALS

 The number and scope of clinical trials is daunting. 

NEW! NATIONWIDE LISTINGS!


There are currently multiple studies recruiting for the following conditions.

Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trials

Arthritis Clinical Trials

Asthma Clinical Trials

Back Pain Clinical Trials

Cancer Clinical Trials

COVID-19 Clinical Trials

Chronic Cough Clinical Trials

Cluster Headaches Clinical Trials

Constipation Clinical Trials

Crohn's Disease Clinical Trials

Cytomegalovirus Clinical Trials

Depression Clinical Trials

Diabetes Type 1 Clinical Trials

Diabetes Type 2 Clinical Trials

Eczema Clinical Trials

Endometriosis Clinical Trials

Fatty Liver Disease Clinical Trials

Fibromyalgia Clinical Trials

Healthy Volunteer Clinical Trials

Heart Attack Clinical Trials

Heart Disease Clinical Trials

High Blood Pressure Clinical Trials

High Cholesterol Clinical Trials

Hodgkin's Lymphoma Clinical Trials

Irritable Bowel Syndrome Clinical Trials

Kidney Disease Clinical Trials

Knee Pain Clinical Trials

Lupus Clinical Trials

Lymphoma Clinical Trials

Migraine Clinical Trials

Melanoma Clinical Trials

Myelofibrosis Clinical Trials

Narcolepsy Clinical Trials

Obesity/Weight Loss Clinical Trials

Osteoarthritis Clinical Trials

Parkinson's Disease Clinical Trials

Pediatric Healthy Volunteers Clinical Trials

All Pediatric Clinical Trials

Psoriasis Clinical Trials

Prurigo Nodularis Clinical Trials

Remote Clinical Trials

Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Smoking Clinical Trials

Stress Urinary Incontinence Clinical Trials

Stroke Clinical Trials

Traumatic Brain Injury Clinical Trials

Ulcerative Colitis Clinical Trials

Vaccine Clinical Trials


If you have found a clinical trial that you are interested in, simply follow the instructions listed below the clinical trial posting. Some clinical trial postings allow you to complete an interest form which is located at the bottom of the study posting. Other clinical trials will require you to complete an online questionnaire, which is also at the bottom of the posting. If you are interested in contacting the clinic directly you must fill out the contact form to receive an email containing the phone number if the investigator opted to include one.

Also, remember that you may always refer your friends and family members to clinical trials that they may be interested in.

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Monday, January 23, 2023

How to fix health care according to ChatGPT

Fixing healthcare is a complex issue that involves addressing various factors such as access, cost, and quality of care. Some potential solutions include:

  • Expanding access to healthcare through measures such as Medicaid expansion and implementing a universal healthcare system.

  • Lowering healthcare costs through initiatives such as price transparency, negotiating lower drug prices, and reducing administrative costs.

  • Improving the quality of care by investing in preventative care, promoting healthy lifestyle choices, and implementing programs to detect and manage chronic diseases.

It's also important to consider the role of the private sector and government in healthcare, as well as the need for ongoing research and evaluation to determine the most effective solutions.



What is wrong with Health care, According to ChatGPT (An Artificial Intelligence)

There are many issues with healthcare, but some of the main problems include:

  1. Lack of access to healthcare for certain populations, such as the uninsured or those living in rural areas.


  2. High costs for both patients and insurance companies, which can make healthcare unaffordable for many people.


  3. Limited availability of certain types of specialists, especially in certain areas.


  4. Inefficiency in the healthcare system, which can lead to long wait times for appointments and procedures.


  5. Lack of transparency in pricing, which can make it difficult for patients to understand the cost of their care.


  6. Inadequate technology infrastructure in some areas, which can make it difficult for healthcare providers to communicate and share patient information.


  7. Social determinants of health (SDOH)


Even a stupid computer algorithm can figure it out.

Next question will be "How do we fix health care?"

Sunday, January 22, 2023

Medical Command Centers Take Flight

Hospitals have always been challenged with improving patient flow from emergency rooms, elective admissions to final discharge.  Inefficient utilization increases cost by decreasing reimbursements. 

Whether it is fee-for-service or managed care, the lack of proper utilization has the same effect. Computer guidance coupled with a command and control center helps hospital administrators to address this challenge.



January 16, 2023



The command center is abuzz as more than a dozen experts monitor the constant flow of real-time information. When alerts emerge on one of the 32 computer screens, team members jump into action to resolve problems that range from minor obstacles to mission-critical challenges.

This sleek, high-tech room looks like the  fabled site NASA uses to keep astronauts safe, but it is located inside Michigan Medicine’s University South Hospital in Ann Arbor.

Seven years in the making, this state-of-the-art facility – officially known as the M2C2: The Michigan Medicine Capacity Operations and Real Time Engagement Center – is improving patient care by leveraging real-time data and predictive analytics to not only identify bottlenecks and other barriers hindering care but also to get ahead of potential problems. Building on the success of similar initiatives at other cutting-edge hospitals, including Johns Hopkins and Yale in the United States and several medical centers outside the US, Michigan’s M2C2 reflects the innovative use of technology to enhance care and reduce costs.

The relationship between doctors, nurses and patients has always been at the heart of medicine and M2C2 is designed to improve outcomes by streamlining the complex behind-the-scenes logistical challenges that have profound impacts on the care they deliver.

In addition to expert caregivers, patients need hospital beds, MRI machines, surgical theaters, and recovery rooms and so much more available as needed so their treatment is a steady flow. The command center is designed to optimize these and other resources so that logistics do not impede care.

Hospitals have, of course, always addressed logistics. But they have typically been handled by separate units that did not have clear and easy channels of communication to seamlessly coordinate their actions. The rise of electronic health records during last decade, which greatly facilitates access to and the sharing of information across a hospital’s sprawling operations,  makes it not only possible but necessary to unify these efforts which impact patient experience and outcomes.

Command centers such as Michigan Medicine’s M2C2 bring together a broad range of trained experts, including patient flow coordinators, admission triage coordinators, admission triage associates, clinical expediters, data analysts, management and support staff who monitor and analyze data entered into the electronic health records system to improve capacity decision making. A few examples:

  • It is not uncommon for patients to remain in the hospital awaiting a test or lab result. Specially designed software alerts the command center to such instances, allowing staff to address the cause of the delay and, whenever possible, expedite care which allows patients to more quickly receive the care they need and be discharged, freeing up rooms and caregivers for others.
  • Traditionally, Mondays and Tuesdays have been slower days for surgeries, with demand building toward the end of the week. The command center deploys advanced analytics that help guide OR schedulers so they can smooth out these scheduling bumps, relieving pressure on surgical teams and facilities.
  • Advanced algorithms built into the command center dashboards enable staff to analyze a wide range of data to determine which patients might be vulnerable to deterioration and to get ahead of the situation.

As real-time information appears on the command centers dashboards, the team identifies issues that require further attention and work with various teams — including nursing, physicians, pharmacy, physical and occupational therapy, and radiology, to name a few – to address them.

Michigan’s M2C2 just began operating on Nov. 29 but similar initiatives at other institutions have shown significant benefits in patient care covering the full spectrum of services from admission to discharge. After opening its command center, Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore reported that its critical care team was dispatched 63 minutes sooner to pick up patients via ambulance from outside hospitals and “a  60 percent improvement in the ability to accept patients with complex medical conditions from other hospitals around the region and country.” Patients were assigned to a bed “30 percent faster after a decision was made to admit him or her from the Emergency Department” and transfer delays from the operating room after a procedure was reduced by 70 percent. Hopkins also reported that “twenty-one percent more patients were discharged before noon.”

These are game-changing results. As my colleague Vikas Parekh, M.D., associate chief medical officer for U-M Health and an executive sponsor of the M2C2 project, put it, “If we get the right information at the right time to the right people, that will drive the right outcome for our patients.”

Marschall S. Runge, MD, PhD, is Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs and Dean of the Medical School for the University of Michigan. He serves on the Board of Directors for Eli Lilly and Company.

This article was originally published by RealClearHealth and made available via RealClearWire.