
Menstrual Health in Medicine: Addressing the Gender Gap in Care
The article highlights a persistent gender gap in medical care for menstrual health, noting that up to 75% of menstruating individuals experience PMS and 3‑8% suffer from PMDD, yet these conditions remain underdiagnosed and underfunded. A survey of 3,000 Japanese workers shows only 4.9% seek help despite productivity losses. Historical exclusion of women from research has left menstrual physiology a "black box," limiting effective treatments beyond off‑label SSRIs and contraceptives. The author urges clinicians, educators, and policymakers to validate symptoms, integrate training, and enact supportive legislation like Spain's 2023 menstrual‑leave law.

Mobile Wound Care in 2026: Navigating Regulatory Pressures
Mobile wound‑care providers face tighter Local Coverage Determinations, heightened CMS surveillance, and expanded documentation mandates in 2026. These regulatory shifts narrow reimbursement, limit visit frequency, and force clinicians into defensive practices. The burden disproportionately impacts high‑acuity, home‑bound patients who rely...

Why Smaller Hospitals May Be Faster for Cancer Diagnosis
A rural Taiwanese patient faced a 20‑day wait for a diagnostic mammogram at a large tertiary hospital, while a community hospital in Taipei provided immediate evaluation and treatment. The article attributes the delay to fragmented administrative structures, global‑budget constraints, and...

Missed Diagnosis Visceral Leishmaniasis: A Tragedy of Note Bloat
Louis‑Hunter Kean, a 34‑year‑old, died in November 2023 after a year of high fevers, organomegaly, and multiple hospitalizations. Although clinicians repeatedly noted “visceral leish” and ordered a PCR, the test was never completed and his travel to Tuscany was buried in...

Mifepristone Restrictions: How Bans Force Patients Into Riskier Care
Mifepristone is banned in 14 states and restricted in another 10, forcing patients to rely on misoprostol‑only regimens. The dual‑drug protocol achieves 95‑98% success with less than 0.5% serious complications, while misoprostol monotherapy raises emergency department visits to 7.9% and...

Pediatric Care in Ghana: Addressing Malnutrition and Sickle Cell Disease
In Ghana, child mortality has fallen but remains high, with 37 per 1,000 children not reaching age five and neonatal deaths at 21 per 1,000. Malnutrition still affects roughly 17‑18% of under‑five children, while 15,000‑20,000 newborns are born with sickle...
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Sabbaticals Provide a Critical Lifeline for Sustainable Medical Careers [PODCAST]
Physicians rarely receive formal sabbaticals, yet burnout data shows they need extended breaks. A 2021 American Journal of Medicine survey found only 51% of medical schools reported any faculty sabbaticals, typically senior white‑male researchers rather than clinicians. Christie Mulholland’s experience...

Curing versus Caring in Medicine: Bridging the Gap in Patient Trust
The article argues that modern medicine’s obsession with cures has sidelined genuine caring, eroding patient trust. It highlights how women experience chronic pain yet often have their symptoms dismissed, and how minority groups remain invisible in clinical research. Evidence shows...

From Williams-Sonoma to Medicine: What Retail Taught Me About Difficult Patients
Jason Wilt, an emergency and sports‑medicine physician, recounts his stint at Williams‑Sonoma and how the harsh retail environment taught him to handle difficult patients. He draws parallels between customer aggression and patient hostility, noting that many patients’ frustration stems from...

The Medical Referral Process: Why It Fails and How to Fix It
The medical referral process is plagued by delays, miscommunication, and inappropriate specialist assignments, causing many patients to fall through the cracks. Studies show up to half of specialty referrals are never completed and over a third do not match the...

Physician Wellness Theater: Why Pizza Parties Do Not Fix Burnout
Physician wellness initiatives—pizza parties, mindfulness apps, and burnout surveys—are increasingly seen as superficial "wellness theater" that fail to address the structural drivers of physician distress. The article argues that burnout is better understood as moral injury arising from time pressure,...

Antimicrobial Resistance Causes: Why Social Factors Matter More than Drugs
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is now a global health emergency, with the WHO noting up to one‑in‑five infections in parts of Africa are drug‑resistant. While antibiotic misuse is visible, the deeper drivers are social: poverty, overcrowding, and limited clean water fuel...

Immigrant Caregiver Burden: The Hidden Cost of the Five-Year Medicaid Wait
Immigrant families like the Sureshes are caring for elderly relatives while awaiting Medicaid eligibility, which requires a five‑year waiting period for lawful non‑citizen permanent residents. The father, a remote‑work tech professional, provides full‑time care for his 95‑year‑old mother, incurring high...
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Business Literacy Empowers Physicians to Lead Sustainable Health Systems [PODCAST]
In a recent KevinMD podcast, family physician Kelly Bain discusses how business literacy is essential for physicians navigating today’s increasingly employed and value‑based health‑care environment. Drawing from her three‑phase career—from rural solo practice to a large multi‑specialty group and finally...