Los Angeles County Hospital

Los Angeles County Hospital

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By following the link below, you will be redirected to my Bloglines website. I set up a page with FEEDS from the main Rheumatology Journals, Internal Medicine Journals and Immunology Basic Science Journals: http://www.bloglines.com/public/brunostoliver In addition, I made available some FEEDS from Rheumatology Journals below, but be aware that this is not a complete list of each Journal issue. To get the complete list, click in the link above and you will be redirected to bloglines.com

Medscape Rheumatology Headlines

Physician's First Watch: Current Issue

Arthritis & Rheumatism

Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases current issue

Rheumatology - current issue

Current Opinion in Rheumatology - Current Table Of Contents

CER - Recent Issue

Arthritis Research & Therapy - Latest articles

JCR: Journal of Clinical Rheumatology - Current Table Of Contents

Nature Clinical Practice Rheumatology

Lupus current issue

Journal Links (Blogroll from Bloglines)

Rheumatology Journals Schedule

  • Arthritis and Rheumatism: Monthly
  • Annals of Rheumatic Disease (The EULAR Journal): Monthly
  • Journal of Rheumatology: bi-weekly (only e-mail TOC/no RSS)
  • Rheumatology (Oxford): Monthly
  • Current Opinion in Rheumatology (COR): 6 issues/year (bi-monthly)
  • Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology (CER): 6 issues/year (bi-monthly)
  • Arthritis Research and Therapy: 6 issues/year (bi-monthly)
  • Journal of Clinical Rheumatology: 6 issues/year (bi-monthly)
  • Scandinavian Journal of Rheumatology: 6 issues/year (bi-monthly) !No issues since July 2006
  • Rheumatic Disease Clinics of North America: (4-5 reviews/year): Receive e-mail TOC. No RSS.
  • Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism: 6 issues/year (bi-monthly)+ 2 Supplements: Receive e-mail TOC. No RSS.
  • Nature Clinical Practice Rheumatology: Monthly
  • Lupus Journal: Monthly

Internal Medicine Journals Schedule

  • Archives of Internal Medicine: Bi-weelky (Monday)
  • Annals of Internal Medicine: No RSS available: Bi-weekly (Tuesday) (only e-mail TOC)
  • JAMA: Weekly (Wednesday)
  • NEJM: Weekly (Thursday)
  • Lancet: Weekly (Friday)
  • British Medical Journal: Weekly (Saturday)

Friday, March 23, 2007

Arthritis and Rheumatism - March 2007

The United States rheumatology workforce: Supply and demand, 2005-2025
Abstract
ObjectiveTo develop and apply a model that allows prediction of current and future supply and demand for rheumatology services in the US.
MethodsA supply model was developed using the age and sex distribution of current physicians, retirement and mortality rates, the number of fellowship slots and fill rates, and practice patterns of rheumatologists. A Markov projection model was used to project needs in 5-year increments from 2005 to 2025.
ResultsThe number of rheumatologists for adult patients in the US in 2005 is 4,946. Male and female rheumatologists are equally distributed up to age 44; above age 44, men predominate. The percent of women in adult rheumatology is projected to increase from 30.2% in 2005 to 43.6% in 2025. The mean number of visits per rheumatologist per year is 3,758 for male rheumatologists and 2,800 for female rheumatologists. Assuming rheumatology supply and demand are in equilibrium in 2005, the demand for rheumatologists in 2025 is projected to exceed supply by 2,576 adult and 33 pediatric rheumatologists. The primary factors in the excess demand are an aging population which will increase the number of people with rheumatic disorders, growth in the Gross Domestic Product, and flat rheumatology supply due to fixed numbers entering the workforce and to retirements. The productivity of younger rheumatologists and women, who will make up a greater percentage of the future workforce, may also have important effects on supply. Unknown effects that could influence these projections include technology advances, more efficient practice methods, changes in insurance reimbursements, and shifting lifestyles. Current data suggest that the pediatric rheumatology workforce is experiencing a substantial excess of demand versus supply.
ConclusionBased on assessment of supply and demand under current scenarios, the demand for rheumatologists is expected to exceed supply in the coming decades. Strategies for the profession to adapt to this changing health care landscape include increasing the number of fellows each year, utilizing physician assistants and nurse practitioners in greater numbers, and improving practice efficiency.

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