By Susan Snyder
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Originally published on April 26, 2012
The University of Pennsylvania placed the vice dean of its Graduate School of Education on administrative leave late Wednesday after The Inquirer began asking questions about his false claim to have a doctoral degree.
Doug E. Lynch has claimed on his resumé that he received the degree from Columbia University. A faculty website repeatedly refers to him as "Dr. Lynch."
Earlier Wednesday, Penn officials said they became aware of the misrepresentation a couple of months ago, taking unspecified "appropriate sanctions" but deciding to leave Lynch in his leadership role.
That changed after The Inquirer placed a call to Penn president Amy Gutmann for comment. The university then issued a one-sentence statement from Stephen J. MacCarthy, vice president for university communications.
"Doug Lynch has been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an ongoing investigation," MacCarthy's statement said.
The entire story is here.
Welcome to the Nexus of Ethics, Psychology, Morality, Philosophy and Health Care
Welcome to the nexus of ethics, psychology, morality, technology, health care, and philosophy
Friday, May 4, 2012
Thursday, May 3, 2012
CDC Social Media Tools, Guidelines & Best Practices
"The use of social media tools is a powerful channel to reach target audiences with strategic, effective and user-centric health interventions. To assist in the planning, development and implementation of social media activities, the following guidelines have been developed to provide critical information on lessons learned, best practices, clearance information and security requirements. Although these guidelines have been developed for the use of these channels at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), they may be useful materials for other federal, state and local agencies as well as private organizations to reference when developing social media tools."
The site can be found here.
The site includes a Social Media Toolkit, a Guide to Writing for Social Media, and Twitter Guidelines and Best Practices, to name a few.
Thanks to Pauline Wallin for this information.
Another link to these resources can be found on our Resources, Guides, and Guidelines page.
The site can be found here.
The site includes a Social Media Toolkit, a Guide to Writing for Social Media, and Twitter Guidelines and Best Practices, to name a few.
Thanks to Pauline Wallin for this information.
Another link to these resources can be found on our Resources, Guides, and Guidelines page.
Does Medicine Discourage Gay Doctors?
By Pauline W. Chen, M.D.
The New York Times - Well
Originally published April 26, 2012
During my surgical training, whenever the conversation turned to relationships, one of my colleagues would always joke about his inability to get a date, then abruptly change the subject. I thought he might be gay but never asked him outright, because it didn’t seem important.
But one morning, while we working at the nurses’ station with several of the other doctors-in-training, I realized it was important, because at the hospital, he really couldn’t be himself.
That morning, one of the senior surgeons stormed over. He had found one of his patients feeling slightly short of breath, no doubt because of an insufficient dose of diuretic overnight.
“Which of you idiots,” he growled at us, “gave my patient a homosexual dose of diuretic?”
The entire story is here.
The New York Times - Well
Originally published April 26, 2012
During my surgical training, whenever the conversation turned to relationships, one of my colleagues would always joke about his inability to get a date, then abruptly change the subject. I thought he might be gay but never asked him outright, because it didn’t seem important.
But one morning, while we working at the nurses’ station with several of the other doctors-in-training, I realized it was important, because at the hospital, he really couldn’t be himself.
That morning, one of the senior surgeons stormed over. He had found one of his patients feeling slightly short of breath, no doubt because of an insufficient dose of diuretic overnight.
“Which of you idiots,” he growled at us, “gave my patient a homosexual dose of diuretic?”
The entire story is here.
Social media: how doctors can contribute
The Lancet
Volume 379, Issue 9826, page 1562
Published on April 28, 2012
Volume 379, Issue 9826, page 1562
Published on April 28, 2012
On April 18, The General Medical Council, which regulates medical practice in the UK, opened up its draft guidance on doctors' use of social media for consultation. Comments can be made until June 13, and the results will be published by the end of the year. The guidance emphasises the need to maintain patient confidentiality, provide accurate information, treat colleagues with respect, avoid anonymity online if writing in a professional capacity, be aware of how content is shared, review privacy settings and online presence, declare conflicts of interest, and maintain separate personal and professional profiles.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
What Can Plato Teach Us About the Health Insurance Mandate?
By Nicholas J. Diamond
The Hastings Center: Bioethics Forum
Health Policy
Originally published on April 23, 2012
The Hastings Center: Bioethics Forum
Health Policy
Originally published on April 23, 2012
As any philosopher worth his or her salt can tell you, health insurance is not among the array of topics in Plato’s corpus. Even so, a lesson on citizenship from one of his more famous dialogues, “Crito,” can teach why the insurance mandate in the Affordable Care Act ought to make sense to us.
In “Crito,” Socrates, ever Plato’s central figure, explains why he ought to submit to the death sentence imposed on him by Athenian law, despite his friend Crito’s willingness to facilitate his escape. For Socrates, escape would be unjust because of the duty he has implicitly adopted in being an Athenian citizen.
La Trobe 'torture' study anguish
By Tim Elliott
theage.com.au
Originally published April 26, 2012
Thanks to Gary Schoener for this story.
theage.com.au
Originally published April 26, 2012
Diane Blackwell as university student |
IN 1973, arts student Dianne Backwell tortured her roommate to death. Or so she thought.
Ms Backwell, then a 19-year-old student at La Trobe University, believed she was taking part in research into the effect of punishment on learning. But the friend whose screams she heard from another room every time she pushed a button was only pretending to receive electric shocks.
Nonetheless, the experiment, record of which has only now come to light, traumatised Ms Backwell for years. According to a new book, Behind the Shock Machine, by Melbourne psychologist Gina Perry, Ms Backwell was one of about 200 La Trobe students who took part in 1973 and 1974 in controversial experiments conducted by the university's psychology department.
The experiments were modelled on the notorious ''obedience tests'' carried out by US psychologist Stanley Milgram at Yale University in 1961, in which participants were ordered to shock students in another room, even when they believed it would kill them.
The entire story is here.
The entire story is here.
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Health records lost, stolen or revealed online
Health privacy problems persist a decade after law went into effect to protect patients
By Deborah Shelton
Chicago Tribune Reporter
Originally published April 23, 2012
Almost a decade after a new law went into effect to strengthen health privacy protections, the number of breaches of patient records and databases across the U.S. suggests that personal health information is not as private or secure as many consumers might want or expect.
Since fall 2009, more than 400 large health care breaches affecting at least 500 people and more than 50,000 smaller breaches have been reported to the federal government.
By Deborah Shelton
Chicago Tribune Reporter
Originally published April 23, 2012
Almost a decade after a new law went into effect to strengthen health privacy protections, the number of breaches of patient records and databases across the U.S. suggests that personal health information is not as private or secure as many consumers might want or expect.
Since fall 2009, more than 400 large health care breaches affecting at least 500 people and more than 50,000 smaller breaches have been reported to the federal government.
One of the largest unauthorized disclosures in recent history of medical records and other private information happened in September, when computer tapes were stolen that contained data on almost 5 million people enrolled in TRICARE, the nation's health program for military members, their families and retirees.
University Breach Settlement Approved
2 Years of Credit Monitoring Services Required
By Jeffrey RomanData Breach Today
Originally published April 18, 2012
A court has granted final approval of the settlement of a class action lawsuit against University of Hawaii stemming from five data breaches over a three-year period that affected nearly 96,000 individuals.
The settlement will provide those affected with two years of free credit monitoring and credit restoration services, according to a statement from the university. The settlement affects students, faculty, alumni, university employees and others whose data was exposed in the five breaches from 2009 to 2011.
The entire story is here.
UAMS investigating breach of patient information
By David Harten
Arkansas Online
Originally published 4/21/2012
Arkansas Online
Originally published 4/21/2012
The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences is investigating a breach of patient information after a document wasn't properly redacted.
According to a release from UAMS, the investigation began after an unidentified physician sent financial information on a patient to someone outside the UAMS offices in mid-February. The physician failed to remove all identifiers of the patients, such as names, account numbers and dates of service, among others. Bank card, credit card or bank account numbers were not included in the released information.
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