DOCTOR FOSTER

Jun 08 2026HEALTH

Which shoulder surgery works better for stability?

Doctors often treat shoulder instability with surgery when other methods fail. Two common procedures are Bankart repair with remplissage (BR) and the Latarjet method. Both aim to fix damage where the shoulder joint repeatedly pops out of place. But which one actually works better? Researchers looke

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Jun 08 2026HEALTH

When CPR Seems Hopeless: How Medical Teams Cope

Doctors and nurses often face tough choices during emergencies. One common situation involves restarting a patient’s heart when survival chances are slim. Research shows that only about one in ten people survive after abrupt heart failure outside a hospital if their heart has stopped beating entirel

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Jun 05 2026HEALTH

Small talk with doctors matters more than you think

Doctors have two ways of chatting with patients: the serious medical stuff and the everyday niceties. Most research focuses entirely on the medical side—the tests, the treatments, the prescriptions. But what about the harmless small talk? That light-hearted banter before getting down to business? A

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Jun 04 2026HEALTH

A New Look at Blood Tests for Autoimmune Diseases

Doctors often rely on blood tests to spot autoimmune diseases early. One method checks for specific markers called antinuclear antibodies (ANA). These antibodies sometimes attack the body’s own cells by mistake. A recent study compared two ways to detect ANA in a large group of people. One method us

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Jun 04 2026HEALTH

Checking for leftover cancer after cervical surgery

Doctors often remove a small cone-shaped piece of the cervix to treat early-stage cancer. But sometimes, tiny bits of tumor remain unseen after this procedure. The new study asked whether ultrasound scans could spot these hidden cancer cells more reliably than before. Researchers reviewed past pati

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Jun 03 2026HEALTH

A Tiny Device with Big Potential for Heart Health Checks

Doctors may soon have a new tool to spot heart attack risks faster. A small ECG device, about the size of a credit card, could help predict heart attacks before symptoms get serious. In a study, researchers tested it on 184 patients with chest pain. The device, used with an algorithm, correctly iden

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May 30 2026HEALTH

Seeing Radiation Therapy in a Whole New Light

Doctors now have a clearer way to watch radiation treatment as it happens. A special camera picks up tiny blue flashes called Cherenkov light, which appear when radiation hits the skin. This isn’t just a cool trick—it helps spot mistakes right away. Instead of waiting for scans after treatment, medi

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May 29 2026BUSINESS

Managing Supplies in Small German Doctor Offices

Doctor offices that work alone or with a few partners face unique buying challenges. Because they order far fewer items than hospitals, they miss out on bulk discounts and often deal with many different suppliers. This makes keeping supplies steady, running smooth, and staying on budget harder

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May 29 2026HEALTH

Moving from IV to Under-the-Skin Medicine for Behçet’s Disease

Doctors sometimes swap how patients get medicine for long-term health problems. One option is to switch from infusions in the arm to quick shots under the skin. A study looked at people with Behçet’s disease—an illness that causes swelling and pain—who were already feeling well after getting medicin

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May 28 2026HEALTH

Schizophrenia care in South Africa: what really causes relapses?

Doctors in South Africa say schizophrenia patients often end up back in hospital because of problems that go far beyond just forgetting to take pills. In focus groups with 14 experienced public-sector clinicians, the biggest surprise wasn’t that medicine stops working—it’s that the system itself set

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