"Doctor's Digest" from Brandofino Communications.A new company, Brandofino Communications (Syosset, NY), has begun the publication of "Doctor's Digest," a bi-monthly practice management resource for physicians and related health professionals. Produced in digest size, it has a controlled circulation of 101,000 office-based primary care and cardiology cardiology Medical specialty dealing with heart diseases and disorders. It began with the 1749 publication by Jean Baptiste de Sénac of contemporary knowledge of the heart. Diagnostic methods improved in the 19th century, and in 1905 the electrocardiograph was invented. "high prescribers." The new title's mission is to provide its target audience with "practical, how-solutions to make readers' clinical practices and professional careers more successful and satisfying," the company said. Content is designed to help doctors "run their practices and personal lives more efficiently." Editorial includes feature stories on: minimizing medical errors and consequent legal problems, maximizing practice profits, billing and coding, contracting, Medicare and Medicaid Medicare and Medicaid U.S. government programs in effect since 1966. Medicare covers most people 65 or older and those with long-term disabilities. Part A, a hospital insurance plan, also pays for home health visits and hospice care. , retirement planning Retirement financial planning refers to a collection of systems, methods, and processes which, in their aggregate, support a family unit's (client's) desire to achieve a state of financial independence, such that the need to be gainfully employed is optional. , resolving patient, staff and ethical dilemmas, insurance issues, tort reform, litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute. When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation. , business liability, employment law, taxes, and lifestyle and work-life balance The expression work-life balance was first used in 1986 in the US (although had been used in the UK from the late 1970s by organisations such as New Ways to Work and the Working Mother's Association) to help explain the unhealthy life choices that many people were making; they were . |
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