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My practice has been concerned that we physicians were not maximizing our “coding potential”; that is, we were not receiving as much remuneration for each cancer patient visit as Medicare permits under its guidelines. Therefore, the practice hired a company that specializes in teaching physicians how to get more. This company is part of a newly minted industry that does nothing else.

Job Description This is a new position, created as the result of the organization’s strategy to become the regional market leader in cancer services in central Pennsylvania. The Medical Director will be responsible for directing physician clinical services as well as developing services and recruiting clinical professionals. This position will also maintain a clinical practice to complement their leadership duties.

We are recruiting board-certified oncologists for full and part time positions. Responsibilities include leading teams of health professionals, peer-to-peer discussions with physicians, collaborating with clinical content specialists; and opportunity for health services research. This position is for the individual seeking a change in career direction that is both dynamic and challenging.

ONS 2013 Intro

Cancer Network brings exclusive coverage of content and expert perspectives from the 38th annual Oncology Nursing Society Congress, held April 25–28, 2013 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC. Through educational sessions and symposia, podium and poster presentations, workshops, and special interest group (SIG) meetings, ONS Congress provides myriad opportunities to learn about innovations in cancer treatment and supportive care; ways to integrate and promote evidence-based practice to improve patient outcomes and quality of life; strategies for nursing self-care; and approaches to support professional growth.

Most Americans are aware that technical experts from Consumer Reports magazine consistently rank televisions and automobiles manufactured by Japanese companies higher than their US counterparts, but I believe that neither Consumer Reports nor US physicians understand how much better lung cancer treatment results are in Japan.

In this interview we discuss the dissemination of research results, clinical trials, and other oncology news using social media, as well as what type of media oncologists use, and how useful and relevant this type of information is for most oncologists.

MBCC 2013 Intro

Cancer Network presents exclusive coverage of the 30th Annual Miami Breast Cancer Conference. We speak with nationally recognized breast cancer specialists and bring you their insights into the optimal multidisciplinary management of patients with breast cancer and the application of innovative approaches to practice. As always, we encourage feedback and suggestions on how we can better serve your clinical cancer information needs. Please check your inbox for reports from the 30th Annual Miami Breast Cancer Conference, and watch here for our editorial staff’s coverage during the meeting.

Elderly patients may have several such comorbidities, but their impact on normal life is minimal-and so most of these patients may receive a curative treatment such as R-CHOP. Very elderly patients have more comorbidities with greater impact, with the result that some of their vital organs exhibit functional deficiency.

In this review, we critically analyze clinical trials that were specifically designed for the very elderly, and we discuss the challenges encountered by investigators who are conducting studies in this patient population. We conclude by proposing an algorithm to help clinicians determine the optimal therapeutic strategy for treatment of DLBCL in very elderly patients.

It is hard to realize that an elderly patient's visit to you is likely the only trip outside his or her apartment for the week and the only contact with someone other than family or an aide. Doctor visits sometimes become the elderly's primary contact with the larger world.

Cancer Network presents exclusive coverage from the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium. Check out the stories below for write-ups of the most important information to come out of this year's event.

As often as not, the decision whether to treat or deny treatment to any elderly patient with cancer is a result of an oncologist’s impression of the individual person’s ability to benefit from and withstand the side effects of therapy. And that decision is usually based on a clinical assessment that is far more intuitive than it is scientific.

My suggestion, as unrealistic as it is, would be to encourage the creation and maintenance of parallel groups of quality measures: one set to satisfy the reportable measures of quality that affect reimbursements and pay for performance, and a second set that would be developed by and adapted to each institution to measure and drive improvements in those things we felt were true measures of high quality care.

The same week that bevacizumab (Avastin) received a new indication for the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer, results from two phase III trials involving the drug were presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology 2013 Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium (ASCO GI) held January 24–26 in San Francisco.

By Cary A. Presant, MD, FACP1, Linda Bosserman, MD, FACP1, Wendy McNatt1, Brandon Emilio11Wilshire Oncology Medical Group, La Verne, California

ASCO 2013 Gu Intro

Cancer Network presents exclusive coverage from the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) 2013 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium. Check out the stories below for write-ups of the most important information to come out of this year's event.