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Olga Deshchenko and Heather Mayer brief viewers on this year's AORN conference, which just wrapped up on Thursday.
The DOTmed 100 company has a long tradition in medical technology.
RAND study confirms patients getting inaccurate information on physicians.
Joint venture agreement with Japan's M-Cast, Inc., a subsidiary of leasing giant Mitsubishi UFJ Leasing and Finance.
A new website, www.skinofmine.com empowers patients to become more active in their own healthcare.

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Text of Reconciliation Act Released Act has amendments to Senate health care bill. Read the important highlights.

ECR 2010 Video Profile: Agfa's New Mammography Applications DOTmed News met up with Agfa at ECR 2010 in Vienna to look at two new mammography-focused applications. Watch our video double feature.

Health Care Agency Owner Sentenced to Prison in Medicare Kickback Case Sentence and restitution required.

CBO Releases Reconciliation Act Numbers Coverage in Senate bill, Reconciliation, costs $940 billion, reduces deficit by $138 billion.

Health Care Vote May Come This Weekend Weekend vote is a possibility according to House Majority Leader.

ECR Video Profile: Dunlee, Philips Healthcare David Kuehn of Dunlee presents the company's two new products.

Imaging 100 Preview: The Importance of Banding Together During Health Care Reform Imaging 100 speakers will focus on important health care reform issues.

Congressmen Introduce Bill for Electronic Health Record Interoperability While reform inches along, other legislation progresses.

ECR 2010 Video Profile: Barco DOTmed News stopped by Barco's booth to check out their upcoming medical tablets (developed by FIMI, Barco's recent acquisition) and their latest clinical displays that bring DICOM-compliant viewing outside of the radiologist's office.

CCHIT Comments on ONC's EHR Interim Final Rule The certification organization for electronic health records in the U.S. points out problems in vagueness, complexity of criteria. Also, get a DOTmed exclusive update on CCHIT's testing status.

Research: Third of Study Results Don't Hold Up


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CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- New research highlights a frustrating fact about science: What was good for you yesterday frequently will turn out to be not so great tomorrow.

The sobering conclusion came in a review of major studies published in three influential medical journals between 1990 and 2003, including 45 highly publicized studies that initially claimed a drug or other treatment worked.

Subsequent research contradicted results of seven studies -- 16 percent -- and reported weaker results for seven others, an additional 16 percent.

That means nearly one-third of the original results did not hold up, according to the report in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

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