Scientific Skepticism Takes Aim At Placebos0

Derived from the Latin word meaning “I shall please,” a placebo is a simulated medical intervention that can produce an actual or even perceived improvement. This improvement is called a “placebo effect.” In medical research, placebos depend upon controlled and measured deception, usually appearing in the form of inert tablets, sham surgery, and other false information. [audio:http://hospitalstay.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/Black-Eyed-1.mp3|titles=Black-Eyed]

A new article appearing in the Annals of Internal Medicine entitled “What’s in Placebos: Who Knows?” explores the lack of scientific control in preparing this common element found in many controlled scientific studies. … Read more →

Alcoholism in Men and Women0

Winston Churchill once said: “I have taken more good from alcohol than alcohol has taken from me.” [audio:http://hospitalstay.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/11-D.R.I.N.K..mp3|titles=D.R.I.N.K.]

Alcohol, a volatile, flammable, and colorless liquid, is one of the oldest recreational drugs. Alcohol is also one of the most commonly abused substances, and apparently men are twice as likely to develop alcoholism as women. Previously unclear as to why men and women responded differently to alcohol, a new study appearing in Biological Psychiatry reveals that dopamine may be part of the reason. … Read more →

Whatever Does Not Kill Us Makes Us Stronger (In Moderation)0

Frederich Nietzsche, and many others, wrote:  “That which does not kill us makes us stronger.” A new study entitled “Whatever Does Not Kill Us: Cumulative Lifetime Adversity, Vulnerability and Resilience,” appearing soon in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology attempts to prove this theory.

The study, authored by Mark Seery, PhD, assistant professor of psychology at the University at Buffalo, E. Alison Holman, PhD, assistant professor of nursing sciences, University of California, Irvine, and Roxane Cohen Silver, PhD, professor of psychology and social behavior and medicine at UC Irvine, examined a sample of people across the nation who reported some history of adverse experiences in their lifetime. … Read more →

The Latest Treatment for Chronic Migraines — Botox0

On October 15, 2010, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Botox injection (onabotulinumtoxinA) to prevent headaches in adult patients with chronic migraine. According to the FDA’s Website, chronic migraine is defined as “having a history of migraine and experiencing a headache on most days of the month.” Generally described as an intense pulsing or throbbing pain in one area of the head, migraine headaches are often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light and sound. Women tend to suffer from migraine headaches three times more than men.

Read more →

Betting on a Better Understanding of Compulsive Gambling1

[audio:http://hospitalstay.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/07-The-Gambler.mp3|titles=The Gambler]

A recent study appearing in the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry has identified four separate types of compulsive gamblers. Working with 1,171 individuals at the Pathological Gambling Unit at Bellvitge-IDIBELL Hospital in Barcelona, researchers concluded that two of the four types identified include pathological gamblers who exhibit problems in controlling their responses, but only one type “shows signs of a significant concurrent psychopathology.” … Read more →

More Love, Less Pain0

The feelings typically associated with a new, romantic relationship apparently can reduce pain, or at least its perception, according to a new study entitled “Viewing Pictures of a Romantic Partner Reduces Experimental Pain:  Involvement of Neural Reward Systems” appearing online at PlosOne.Com. Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine studied 15 participants (all right-handed students, 8 women and 7 men, between the ages of 19 and 21 years) in their first 9 months of a romantic relationship. Each student described him or herself as “intensely in love.”

[audio:http://hospitalstay.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/02-The-Mixture.mp3|titles=02 The Mixture] … Read more →

PBS’s ‘This Emotional Life’: 6 Steps to Understanding Your Hospital Bill

“Everything unknown is magnified.”
–Publius Cornelius Tacitus, senator and historian of the Roman Empire

Hospital stays can be incredibly stressful. From that open blue gown you and your new roommate must wear to understanding your diagnosis and accompanying treatment, most patients feel overwhelmed and disoriented. When you finally get to go home, weeks may pass, the discharge and rehabilitation process hopefully become manageable, and life returns to normal. But just as soon as the anxiety from that hospital stay begins to subside, one day there it sits, waiting in your mailbox, that enigma of lines, abbreviations and numbers: your hospital bill.

Perhaps even more than the actual hospital stay, the hospital bill can be difficult to understand. The bill will likely contain an abundance of codes and abbreviations, and it may look more like a cryptographic algorithm than a bill. Depending on the length of a hospital stay, for some the hospital bill can create a psychosomatic reaction strong enough to land you right back in the emergency department, the place where this whole thing probably started. Before irreversible frustration and despair set in, however, here are some tips to help you understand the sum total of your hospital stay.

Step One: Understand How the Hospital Makes Your Bill

The first step is to understand how the health care industry tallies costs. Every time you visit the hospital, a bill is drawn up to include fees for any procedure, any medication, and just about any service rendered. The bill may include information such as:

  • The date on which any good (e.g., medication) or service (e.g., doctor’s exam) was rendered
  • The department from which it came
  • A brief description, including the quantity of goods and services rendered, and
  • The amount billed

If nothing else, think of your hospital bill as a very specific and detailed recitation of your hospital stay.

Step Two: Try and Find the Bill’s “Instructions”

If you have health insurance, chances are that someone will eventually send you a document that explains your bill, more commonly referred to as an “Explanation of Benefits” or “EOB.” Your EOB is a summary of:

  • Costs that the insurance company cover
  • How much the insurance company will pay
  • How much the insurance company will not to pay
  • Why these determinations are made, and
  • How much is your responsibility

You can expect to receive your bill from the hospital before you receive your EOB. Many patients, however, wait to receive their EOB before they pay their bill, mostly because the EOB can be a better indicator of what is actually owed.

Step Three: Understand the Reason for the Hospital Stay

Now that you know how to read your bill and EOB, you may wonder how these costs are determined. Hospitals usually work with outside firms to determine the average price of each good and service offered. They then set their own prices based on these values. To fully understand this process, it is first necessary to understand your condition and subsequent treatment as it is divided throughout several different hospital departments.

In the case of pneumonia, for example, treatment draws from nearly all factions of a hospital, including the pharmacy, laboratory, radiology and respiratory departments. Also, due to the complexity of treatment required to address the different symptoms, a typical pneumonia stay at any hospital often necessitates help from a variety of doctors, such as an internal medicine doctor, an infectious disease specialist, and even a pulmonologist. As a result, the combined hospital charges of pneumonia include not just the hospital bill, but also a bill from the laboratory, the radiologist and the multidisciplinary team who worked so hard to rid your body of its bronchial havoc.

Step Four: Understand Your Treatment

While it is important to understand why you ended up in the hospital, the focus of the bill is really what it took to get you home. Here’s how a bill might be tallied for pneumonia:

First, to diagnose your condition, your doctor probably requested an X-ray or CT scan to confirm the presence of pneumonia in your lungs. You may have also been asked to take a blood test or provide sputum (a substance that is expelled from the respiratory tract, such as mucus or phlegm, mixed with saliva) for a culture.

If an X-ray or CT Scan was involved, you probably visited the radiology department, and you should expect to be billed for the services of the radiology technician who takes the films, the use of the X-ray or CT scanner, any labs or films, and the expertise of the radiologist, a special kind of doctor whose job is to read these results.

If you had a blood test or sputum culture, you probably met the hospital’s phlebotomist, who took your blood. The analysis of any blood sample takes place in a clinical laboratory, complete with a special machine and a special doctor who oversees the lab and reads your results.

If your medical condition necessitated a bona fide hospital stay, at a minimum you can expect a bill for a room.

Inside the hospital, the pharmacy was probably involved in your treatment. The responsibility for providing the proper medication, monitoring a patient’s progress and ensuring that there are no negative drug interactions falls on the shoulders of the hospital pharmacist.

Step Five: Read Your Bill

Understanding the way your bill is tallied is still only half the battle. Unfamiliar medications, codes, hospital abbreviations, and procedures can make it nearly impossible to question a given amount or line item. Like any other kind of bill, hospital bills are also subject to computer and human error. A single incorrect procedure code, entered either by the hospital or the insurance company, could mean a difference of hundreds of dollars. This can be difficult to find, let alone correct.

When in doubt, remember that you always have the right to inspect the important hospital documents that you need to identify a billing discrepancy. This can include an itemized, more detailed copy of your bill and a complete copy of your medical chart. By comparing documents such as these to the bill that arrived in the mail, a sharp eye may discover errors.

Step Six: Remember to Breathe

When you’re sick and in the hospital, you probably want nothing more than to feel better and go home. When you’re home and feeling better, an expensive and confusing hospital bill can really make you feel sick. As confusing as your hospital bill may initially appear, always remember that it is nothing more than an objective accounting of all the events and ingredients that made up your hospital stay.

This Emotional Life is a two-year campaign to foster awareness, connections and solutions around emotional wellness. Join our community at www.pbs.org/thisemotionallife.

Is America Really Sick?0

A study by Peter A. Muennig and Sherry A. Glied appearing in the November 2010 issue of Health Affairs explores how the changes in survival rates over the past 15 years reflect upon the overall state of health care in the United States. Comparing survival rates and risk profiles in the US with 12 other countries, the study suggests that America’s health care system is in need of major repair.

The article also considers how rates of smoking and obesity, among other variables, contribute to a declining state of overall domestic health.  Here are some examples:

  • According to recent studies, in 2006 the smoking rate in the US was 15 percent for women and 19 percent for men.
  • While fewer women in the US smoke than in Europe, those women who do smoke in the US individually consume on average more cigarettes than their European counterparts.
  • An estimated one-third of adults in the US are obese, compared to an estimated 3.4 percent of adult Japanese men.

Visit the Health Affairs Website to read the entire article.

What If You Really Don’t Want The Flu Shot?0

There is ample literature readily available recommending the influenza vaccine, but what happens when you brave the flu season without it? A study in the October issue of the Journal of Advanced Nursing describes some indigenous health practices used to prevent and treat the most talked-about seasonal virus.

The study from 2007 involved a total of 208 older people from China, Indonesia, Turkey, Korea, Greece, Canada, the United Kingdom, Brazil and Nigeria.  These individuals were divided into 14 vaccinated and 12 unvaccinated focus groups where they shared their experiences of influenza and influenza vaccination. The researchers concluded that behavioral beliefs generally determined vaccine preferences. Likelihood of susceptibility to influenza and severity of symptoms also weighed heavily on decision making, as did vaccine effectiveness and health care costs. … Read more →