Aspirin use in gout patients can be challenging. Indeed, aspirin embodies the yin and yang of medical practice. At low-doses, it can be cardioprotective but it also blocks urate excretion by the kidneys. At higher doses Continue reading
Author Archives: RMoore
Great quality conferences coming up
Partnership HealthPlan has always encouraged and promoted high quality care for our members. We encourage excellence in care through our Quality Improvement Program (QIP), a program which is very familiar to all Continue reading
Cooties, professionalism, and for the sake of fashion
The Society for HealthCare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) recently published their expert guidance for Healthcare Personnel Attire in Non-Operating-Room Settings. Admittedly the role of attire in Continue reading
The e-cigarette prairie fire
Since our last post on the subject of e-cigarettes written by Dr. Jeff Ribordy (https://phcprimarycare.org/?p=546), tobacco consumption through these nefarious little tubes continues spreading like a prairie fire. Their use Continue reading
Red herring or red flag, that is the question in low back pain
Primary care clinicians see lots of low back pain. It is one of the most common symptoms that brings patients to our offices. It is safe to say the spine is one of the more poorly designed organs in the human body. Continue reading
This study seems nutty
Here at Partnership HealthPlan, we are constantly searching for new, better, and easier ways for people to improve their health. Thus, it was with great relish that we read a recent study in the NEJM on the health benefits of eating nuts. Continue reading
The Art of War/Medicine
Recently updated guidelines for treatment of high cholesterol levels have just been released by the American College of Cardiology – American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. They represent a change Continue reading
Follow-up on topical NSAIDs
The following comments are from Bill Hunter, MD, Medical Director of Open Door Community Health Centers, based in Arcata with clinic sites in many Northern California communities:
I was confused by your recent blog post on topical NSAIDs Continue reading
Children coughing in the night
A landmark study from turn-of-the-century England documented that a teaspoon dose of sucrose could improve medication administration and palatability (Poppins M, et.al, 1910, referenced at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Spoonful_of_Sugar). But what if Continue reading
Topical NSAIDs in the treatment of osteoarthritis pain
Osteoarthritis pain is one of the more frustrating problems we primary care clinicians have to manage. It is a ubiquitous problem. It is a bothersome complaint. And treatment options are not great. NSAID’s can provide some relief, but Continue reading