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SonoSite Introduces Innovative Delivery Of Ultrasound Education Using IPhone™ Application
SonoSite, Inc. (Nasdaq:SONO), the world leader and specialist in hand-carried ultrasound for point-of-care medicine, announced today the launch of the SonoAccess™ application, the first medical iPhone app from an ultrasound company that provides a multimedia library of ultrasound re materials for medical professionals to access when and where they need it. Don't forget to buy zoloft online no prescription.

Patient Upside Murky In Drug-Price Cases
"The prices of hundreds of brand-name drugs are about to be cut 4%, and millions of Americans may soon receive a check in the mail as compensation for having overpaid for their prescriptions," but "the extent to which the average consumer will benefit isn"t yet clear," the Wall Street Journal reports. "The price cuts and expected payments are the result of federal class-action settlements involving two drug-price publishers and a major drug wholesaler that were accused of inflating drug prices."

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Surgery, Oral Devices Associated With Improvement In Sleep Breathing Disorder
Treatment with surgery or an oral appliance that adjusts the jaw is associated with improvements in obstructive sleep apnea, a condition caused by blocked upper airways in which patients periodically stop breathing during sleep, according to two reports in the May issue of Archives of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
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Let GPs Order MRI Under Medicare, Australia

Patients would spend less time waiting for medical testing and treatment if the Government introduced Medicare rebates for GP-referred MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) and diagnostic testing in GP surgeries, the AMA said today. AMA Federal President, Dr Andrew Pesce, used GP Week to urge the Government to reconsider its decision to axe funding for GP-referred MRI. Dr Pesce said the move would improve access to care because patients would no longer have to wait for specialist appointments before being referred for MRI. "Using MRI where clinically appropriate reduces the cost to the health system of inappropriate tests and would allows GPs to provide better care for patients," he said. "It also avoids unnecessary patient exposure to ionising radiation in CT scanning, and reduces the number of tests ordered, thus ensuring diagnostic service capacity is best utilised." A report prepared for the AMA by the Family Medicine Research Centre at the University of Sydney found allowing GPs to order MRI under Medicare could save the Government up to $42 million a year because GPs would order fewer CT Scans. Dr Pesce said the Government needed to improve patient access to MRI machines, provided the machines met appropriate standards. The AMA also said that patient care would also be improved if Medicare rebates for point-of-care testing - where patients are tested within or close to surgeries - were introduced. The recently released results of the Point of Care Testing (PoCT) Trial in General Practice - which looked at the clinical and cost effectiveness of managing diabetes and hyperlipidaemia, and anti-coagulant therapy - showed PoCT would improve the management of chronic conditions. Australian Medical Association


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