Showing posts with label Choosing Wisely. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Choosing Wisely. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2016

For Smarter Healthcare, Ask Your Doctor These 5 Questions


The team here at CR wants to remind you to always ask the 5 questions!




These question can help you avoid unnecessary tests, medications, and procedures.

Before you get any test or treatment, ask your doctor these five questions. Why? Because some medical tests, medications, and procedures may not be right for you. A conversation with your doctor helps you avoid unnecessary, duplicative, or overly risky care.

What to Ask

  1. Do I really need this test or procedure?
  2. What are the risks and side effects?
  3. Are there simpler, safer options?
  4. What happens if I don't do anything?
  5. How much does it cost, and will my insurance pay for it?

One Family's Story About Asking Questions

When Randi O. brought her 79-year-old father to the emergency room, fearing that he had suffered a stroke, it led to an important discovery: Don't be afraid to ask the hard questions

We'll Send You a Copy

To get a free copy of the 5 Questions to Ask Your Doctor wallet card, send an email to healthimpact@cr.consumer.org with your name and address.

More About Choosing Wisely

For details about needed (and unneeded) care in more than 100 situations, here is more information about the Choosing Wisely campaign. 

Join Our Campaign

To support our social media campaign, email a selfie you've taken of yourself with the wallet card. Send it to healthimpact@cr.consumer.org.




Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Sobering look at deaths by pharmaceutical medicine

Pharma Death Clock website launched: 
Find out how many millions of people Big Pharma has killed since January 1, 2000



(NaturalNews) If you've ever wondered just how many people are killed every day with prescription drugs, chemotherapy and medical mistakes, our new website provides shocking numerical data based on cited sources.

PharmaDeathClock.com gives you a real-time count of all these deaths, aggregated from January 1, 2000.

Sources for the numbers are cited at the bottom of the page and include medical fatality facts from the World Health Organization, peer-reviewed medical journals, Consumer Reports, the CDC and other "official" sources.

Guess what? Pharmaceutical medicine kills more people than all acts of war, terrorism, gun violence and murder COMBINED.

See all the numbers, calculated in real time, at PharmaDeathClock.com.


Monday, June 22, 2015

STOP SUPERBUGS NOW


Why you shouldn't ask your doctor for antibiotics
Consumer Reports joins with doctors and hospitals to stop misuse of the drugs

Published: June 18, 2015 12:30 PM




Did you ever ask your doctor for antibiotics to treat a cold? Or the flu? Or what about your child’s painful ear? And did your doctor ever say “Sure! Here you go!” Well, you probably shouldn’t have asked—and your doctor almost certainly should have said no.

Why? Because viruses usually cause those infections, not bacteria—and antibiotics don’t work against viruses. (Have you wondered why you did or didn't receive a prescription for antiobiotics?

And using antibiotics when you don’t need them is not only a waste of money, but can cause side effects including everything from diarrhea to nausea, vomiting, and serious allergic reactions. Even worse, the unnecessary use of antibiotics can breed bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics, making the drugs less effective when you really do need them. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that up to half of all the antibiotics used in this country are prescribed for the wrong reasons.

To help combat this problem, Consumer Reports is partnering with the ABIM Foundation (with funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation) to work with seven health care groups across the country to get doctors to cut their inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics for upper respiratory infections–like the common cold and the flu—by at least 20 percent over the next three years. Each of the seven groups includes representatives from organizations such as hospitals, clinics, employers, community groups, and medical societies, like the California chapter of the American College of Physicians.

See Consumer Reports’ guide to the risks posed by antibiotic-resistant infections and join our fight tostop the spread of superbugs. Follow @ConsumerReports on Twitter, and use #SlamSuperBugs.

One of the groups, based in Wisconsin, plans to launch a public awareness campaign with TV, radio, and newspaper ads to let people know about overuse of antibiotics–and what alternatives there are for people with runny nose and other symptoms from the common cold.

Other groups, based in both the East and West coasts, will work with health care providers so that when a doctor and patient discuss antibiotics, the doctor can print out information from Consumer Reports explaining why antibiotics won’t work for their infection – and what to do instead. Printouts of those brochures are available in English and in Spanish.

The groups will also work on reducing other examples of medical overuse that can lead to harm, including MRIs for new low-back pain with no other major symptoms, and benzodiazepines such as Valium and Xanax, drugs frequently used to combat anxiety and insomnia in older adults. Read more about the campaign, called Choosing Wisely.


—Beccah Rotthschild

Friday, November 1, 2013

Ending Medical Harm--join the free event



Ending medical Harm: 
Tackling the 3rd Leading Cause of Death in the US

Journalists, Patient Safety Advocates, 
Authors, and Experts 

Join us to learn more about Ending Secrecy, Saving Lives

Free Event & Lunch

Date: Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Location: Columbia School of Journalism Lecture Hall 
(2950 Broadway at 116th Street)
Time: 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM

#EndMedHarm


Medical Errors 
& Hospital-­Acquired Infections
kill up to 440,000
Americans each year
That’s more than two jumbo jets
full of passengers crashing every day

SafePatientProject.org
Consumers Union
Policy & Action From Consumer Reports

Thursday, October 31, 2013

3 cheers for CU's Advocacy Division's Annual Halloween Smackdown Contest featuring the Choosing Wisely campaign

Consumer Reports' West Coast Office was inspired by an out-of-the-blue grassroots rap song submission by a gynecologist in Maine who loves Consumer Reports' Choosing Wisely campaign. 

To give context, the presentation begins with a Public Service Announcement about Choosing Wisely, which they did not create. 

Many thanks to Dr. Jay Naliboff of Farmington, Maine for his musical inspiration, and to CU's Meat Without Drugs campaign mascot, Joe the Pig, for making a cameo appearance. 


Enjoy

Happy Halloween 

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Delivering your baby: Why scheduling early is not a good idea

Sometimes there are medical reasons for a woman to deliver her baby before naturally
going into labor. For example, if a week or more passes after the due date and the baby does not come, doctors may need to start, or induce, labor. Or if the woman or her baby is at risk, doctors may need to deliver the baby by Cesarean delivery, or C-section.

These types of deliveries can save lives. But tohurry a baby’s birth—just to make it convenient for you or your doctor—can increase the risk of serious problems for both you and your baby.

In plain terms: Don't schedule a birth for convenience. Here's why:

http://bit.ly/16g8lBV