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American Association of Neurological Surgeons—CONFERENCE: Beth Haynes, MD: “Health policy education on US medical school campuses: inadequate and unbalanced”

Dr. Beth Haynes was one featured speakers at the AANS conference in Los Angeles. The Socioeconomic Section session of the AANS meeting had a variety of speakers. Dr. Jim Hinsdale gave a brief overview of recent US health policy initiatives and changes. Dr. Haynes spoke on the inadequate and imbalanced health policy instruction on US medical school campuses. A neurosurgeon from Bolivia presented on his very low cost neurosurgery procedures (craniotomy for less than $320). A variety of other speakers presented original research on patient satisfaction and tools for predicting surgical outcomes. The final speaker discussed the lack of women pursuing neurosurgical careers and the paucity of female neurosurgeons in academia and leadership positions.

University of Delaware: Panel—Direct Primary Care physicians answer your questions about DPC

University of Delaware, Trabant Student Center, Rm 218 17 W Main St, Newark, DE, United States

BRI UDel Direct Primary Care Doc Panel

 

Please join the Benjamin Rush Institute-UDelaware chapter and Young Americans for Liberty for this panel discussion of Direct Primary Care. Three DPC doctors who operate in Delaware will be coming to the University of Delaware to describe how their practices work and to answer questions from the audience.

Ohio University College of Medicine-Dublin—PRESENTATION: House Calls and the Pre-Penicillin Era to Targeted Chemotherapy: A 75-Year Walk Through Medical History

Ohio University College of Medicine-Dublin, Medical Education Building One 6775 Bobcat Way, Dublin, OH, United States

Harold Chevlen, MDDr. Harold Chevlen, MD, a 95-year old retired physician who practiced independent family medicine for 50 years in Youngstown, Ohio, will be discussing the changes that occurred throughout his career. In particular he'll describe how things most medical students take for granted, such as antibiotics revolutionized his practice of medicine. He will also talk about the joys of family medicine.

Free

A.T. Still University—LECTURE @ Mercer College of Medicine: Netflix vs Blockbuster: A Case Study in Practice Innovation (DPC)

Mercer College of Medicine (Macon Campus), DLR 1300 Edgewood Ave, Macon, GA, United States

Practice InnovationAll are invited to attend a lunch lecture by Drs. Pete and Christi Ghaleb. Direct Primary Care is an increasingly popular practice model which focuses on value-based care by offering patients more comprehensive services for a low monthly fee instead of billing insurance. Like a Netflix subscription for medicine, DPC offers "all you can treat" primary care that is patient-centered, and eliminates traditional Fee-For-Service billing (Blockbuster).

Free

Stony Brook—LECTURE: What Is and Isn’t Insurance, and Why It Matters to Controlling Healthcare Costs

Stony Brook School of Medicine, Health Sciences Tower, Lecture Hall 5 100 Nicolls Rd, Stony Brook, NY, United States

All are welcome to attend this lunch lecture. Food will be provided to those who RSVP within 48 hours of the event.

Think you know what insurance is? Do you know how it relates to healthcare costs? Come find out what you may not know!

BRI Haynes Beth Executive DirectorDr. Beth Haynes, executive director of the Benjamin Rush Institute, will be meeting with students of the Stony Brook Medical School campus during lunch to discuss the topic: "What Is and Isn't Insurance, and Why It Matters to Controlling Healthcare Costs."

POST-EVENT SUMMARY: Forty-nine students and faculty attended this lunch lecture. Dr. Beth Haynes, Executive Director of BRI, gave an hour long presentation over lunch to first year students of the Stony Brook School of Medicine. As our chapter feels not many medical students receive any formal education on the topics of health policy (unless they are in a dual degree program), we asked Dr. Haynes to speak about "What is and isn't health insurance."

"Dr. Haynes's presentation provided a great foundation to understanding the language involved in debating healthcare policy, and the importance of understanding terms which are used inappropriately (specifically, "insurance"). By clarifying the nature of insurance as just one mechanism by which healthcare can be financed, it sowed the seeds of more productive conversation amongst the student body (overheard in the halls and facebook, long after the presentation had ended)." ~Sean Randazzo, event coordinator

Free

Icahn School of Medicine @ Mt. Sinai—LECTURE: Physician Burnout and the Physician-Patient Relationship, Beth Haynes, MD

Icahn School of Medicine, Annenberg Bldg. 12th floor 1468 Madison Ave, New York, NY, United States

All are welcome to attend this lunch lecture. Food will be provided to those who RSVP within 48 hours of the event.

Physician burnout and physician suicide are epidemic. In this lecture we will look at various contributing factors and what can be done.

BRI Haynes Beth Executive DirectorDr. Beth Haynes, medical director of the Benjamin Rush Institute, will be meeting with students of the Stony Brook Medical School campus during lunch to discuss the topic of physician burnout and how it affects the patient-doctor relationship.

POST-EVENT SUMMARY: Dr. Haynes provided a very nice overview of physician burnout, recent trends in physician burnout epidemiology, and some of the root causes of burnout. The continued intrusion of government, insurance companies, EMRs and other third parties have eroded the physician-patient relationship. Not only does this negatively impact our patients, but it also exacts a toll on physicians.

Beth then transitioned to summarizing some of the research into the neurobiology of human relationships, and how these insights help us understand burnout. To activate neurohormonal axes in the brain, humans need meaningful social contact, including eye contact, emotional connection, and physical contact. These basic elements that underly the neurobiology of the physician-patient relationship are lacking in today's overburdened and regulated practice settings.

Notably, direct primary care doctors claim that their practices are more fulfilling and inspire them because these physicians can practice medicine the way it should be, and form meaningful bonds with their patients.

Free

Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine|Dublin—VOLUNTEERING EVENT: Volunteering for LifeTown

Chabad of Columbus, Synagogue/Community Center 6220 E Dublin Granville Rd, New Albany, OH, United States

LifeTown is an educational facility that simulates real-life encounters such as banking, shopping, crossing the street, etc, for people with mental disabilities. BRI, in conjunction with students at OUHCOM, will be volunteering in the various booths to help teach these people how to succeed at life tasks.

Information from RSVP form: You need to do a background check via https://chabadcolumbus.volunteerhub.com, but this can be filled out later once we get more information on this part! Casual dress and no ripped jeans. Each volunteer will be role playing. Look at www.lifetowncolumbus.org to get a small taste of what LifeTown is!

Free

2017 Docs 4 Patient Care Foundation (D4PCF) Certificate of Need (CON) Conference

The Heritage Foundation, Lehrman Auditorium 214 Massachusetts Avenue Northeast, Washington, DC, United States

The Docs 4 Patient Care Foundation has been leading the fight along with other free market organizations like BRI and The Heritage Foundation to bring attention to Certificate of Need […]