The Importance Of Quality Education When Doing Your Online ABSN Program In The US

Medical News Bulletin - Daily Medical News, Health News, Clinical Trials And Clinical Research, Medical Technology, Fitness And Nutrition News–In One Place

Education is vital, no matter what field you’re in. The quality of education you receive needs to be your number one concern in any industry. However, in industries where you’re caring for people and responsible for their welfare, it’s even more critical. This is very much the case when it comes to doing your Accelerated […]

The post The Importance Of Quality Education When Doing Your Online ABSN Program In The US appeared first on Medical News Bulletin.

Actionable Steps You Can Take To Best Navigate A Hybrid Master’s Of Social Work

Medical News Bulletin - Daily Medical News, Health News, Clinical Trials And Clinical Research, Medical Technology, Fitness And Nutrition News–In One Place

Doing your master’s in social work is an incredible feat. You are going to learn so much about people, human behaviour and you’ll be given copious amounts of tools and resources that you can practice yourself and share with others. But to really draw as much as you can out of this study, you need […]

The post Actionable Steps You Can Take To Best Navigate A Hybrid Master’s Of Social Work appeared first on Medical News Bulletin.

The Role of Patient Self Scheduling in Improving Access to Specialty Care 

Medical News Bulletin - Daily Medical News, Health News, Clinical Trials And Clinical Research, Medical Technology, Fitness And Nutrition News–In One Place

Introduction  Specialty access is slow. It’s also inefficient. Traditional scheduling causes missed appointments. It leads to lost referrals. And it overloads staff.  A 2025 study in Frontiers in Digital Health found this. No-show rates were 1.8% for online bookings. They hit 5.9% for phone-based scheduling. That is over 3x higher with old workflows.  These gaps […]

The post The Role of Patient Self Scheduling in Improving Access to Specialty Care  appeared first on Medical News Bulletin.

Inner nuclear layer may be thicker in Parkinson’s disease

DENVER — Retina imaging may reveal links to Parkinson’s disease, according to a poster presentation at the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology meeting.
“Some people ... would say that the eye is the window into the soul,” Michael Zhu, a medical student at Duke University School of Medicine, told Healio. “We think the eyes are also the window into the brain.”
Zhu and colleagues conducted a cross-sectional, case-control study that looked at how changes in the retina might be associated with Parkinson’s disease. Zhu said previous research has found links between Parkinson’s and

UDCA fails to improve fetal outcomes in intrahepatic cholestasis

CHICAGO — Ursodeoxycholic acid did not appear to improve maternal or fetal outcomes among patients with intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy, according to a retrospective cohort study presented at Digestive Disease Week.
The therapy also was associated with an increase in preterm and emergency cesarean deliveries.
Among patients with intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy, bile acid concentration is a key risk determinant for maternal and fetal morbidity.
“Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy is a very challenging condition, and its management is driven by fetal risks,” Medora D. Rodrigues, MD,

Hantavirus outbreak suspected of killing three on cruise ship

Hantavirus, a rodent-borne illness that can cause the lungs to fill with fluid, is suspected of killing three passengers and sickening at least three others in an outbreak aboard a cruise ship, according to WHO.
The outbreak occurred aboard the MV Hondius, which sailed from Argentina and is currently anchored off the coast of Cape Verde, an island nation 350 miles off the west coast of Africa.
Cape Verde has refused docking permission for the ship, Netherlands-based operator Oceanwide Expeditions said in a statement. Of the 149 people who remain onboard, 17 are Americans, the operator said.
The

Apply retinal reserve in modern optometric practice

Optometric care has advanced significantly with OCT and high-resolution retinal imaging, yet clinicians still encounter a familiar challenge: patients who report visual symptoms despite “normal” structural findings.
This disconnect highlights a limitation in a structure-dominant model of care: Structural imaging often identifies disease only after physiological decline has already begun.
If functional decline precedes structural loss, waiting for visible change delays intervention. Earlier identification of dysfunction creates an opportunity to intervene when retinal tissue remains

Q&A: Updates on medication safety, shortages and recalls for 2026

SAN FRANCISCO — At the ACP Internal Medicine Meeting, Douglas S. Paauw, MD, MACP, offered a presentation on challenges in prescribing.
Healio spoke with Paauw, the Rathmann Family Foundation Endowed Chair for Patient-Centered Clinical Education and a professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine, about what primary care physicians should know for 2026, including drug shortages, safety concerns and more.
Healio: Why did you decide to present on this topic?
Paauw: For at least the last 20 or 25 years, I’ve done a topic on drug interactions and side effects to try to

2-week elemental diet reduced IBS symptoms by at least 30%

CHICAGO — Patients with irritable bowel syndrome who consumed an elemental diet for 2 weeks reported significant improvement in abdominal pain, discomfort, distention and bloating, according to a presenter at Digestive Disease Week.
Notably, individuals studied met the FDA-aligned threshold of at least 30% improvement, which persisted in the 2 weeks they returned to their previous diets.
“Everybody wants to find a way to reset the gut microbiome, and this is the closest we’ve gotten so far,” Ali Rezaie, MD, MSc, medical director of the GI motility program and associate professor at