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Candidate Direct Physician Staffing Offers Easy Search of Locum Tenens and Permanent MD Jobs

Author Healthcare Career Blogger | 24.09.2009 | Category Healthcare Career Blog, Locum Tenens, Physicians

Physician job seekers can visit Candidate Direct’s new physician jobs board or browse through the company’s  physician career resources page with its innovative real-time physician job listings.  Job seekers can review position requirements and facility descriptions as well as a brief sketch of the area where the healthcare facility is located. MD’s looking for permanent positions or locum tenens jobs can narrow their search or browse through the whole list. If a job interests them, they can apply online, all the while knowing they’ll be contacted almost immediately by a Candidate Direct representative ready to facilitate a job search

And if physicians don’t see the exact job they’re looking for, they can use the unique “Design a Job” feature to send their ideal job specs straight to Candidate Direct’s physician placement experts.

We work hard to place physicians in their desired locations,” said Robert L. Bok, Candidate Direct’s Chief Executive Officer. “We have access to physician job openings in metropolitan destinations like New York, Chicago, and Miami. Or if a physician is looking for a more small-town feel, we have positions in rural and community hospitals throughout the country.”

Backed by 25 years of medical staffing expertise, Candidate Direct specializes in locum tenens jobs and permanent medical doctor jobs that advance the goals of physicians and their employers. Candidate Direct’s affiliate staffing company, Travel Force, which specializes in placement of rehabilitation therapists, offers a similar therapy jobs search for candidates in that field. Read the latest Travel Force press release about therapy jobs search tool.

MacArthur Genius Grant Goes to Physician/Researcher

Author Healthcare Career Blogger | 22.09.2009 | Category Family Medicine, Healthcare Career Blog, Hospitalist physician, Physician Career Path, Physicians, Surgery jobs, jobs

Every year the MacArthur Foundation awards a five year grant of $500,000 to around  20 very talented people. The money goes to individuals who exhibit extraordinary creativity and potential in their work, and allows them to spend more time working and less time fundraising. The awards are often referred to as “Genius Grants,” although the Foundation itself tries to avoid the term “genius,” preferring to recognize the value of hard work, too.

Winners can be U.S. residents of any age, working in any field. Historically, many of the winners have been in the arts — as well as in science and healthcare research.

One of this year’s winners is Dr. Mary Tinetti, a geriatrician at Yale medical school, who has researched falls among the elderly. Physicians who work with seniors know that the risk of serious disability from a fall can be just as high as that caused by a stroke. Dr Tinetti’s research showed that healthcare professionals often regard the possibility of falling among seniors as an inevitability, rather than as a preventable occurrence.

Dr. Tinetti and her colleagues have demonstrated that there are distinct factors that increase the risk of falls among the elderly — factors like muscle weakness, balance problems and use of multiple medications. They also found that by screening for and addressing these issues, doctors can reduce seniors’ risk of falls by about 30%.

It will be interesting to see if a focus on screening and prevention (coupled with the potential financial impact in critical care due to reduced incidences of falling injuries) will affect the treatment outcomes of seniors overall.

More grant winners in the healthcare field:

  • Lin He - Molecular Biologist, for researching the role of microRNAs in the development of cancer and laying the groundwork for future cancer treatments.
  • Jill Seaman - Infectious Disease Physician, for adapting 21st-century medicine to treat infectious diseases endemic to Southern Sudan and other war-torn regions.

Click here to learn more about the MacArthur foundation’s  2009 winners .

Physician jobs are as varied as the people who hold them. Newer specialties like  hospitalists and locum tenens are changing the way we think about the profession.  And while the general public may think of MD’s as running a family practice or a hospital surgery, grants like these  shine a spotlight on the many physicians who are also working in research.

HHS Regulations Updated to Include Notification of Patient Record Security Breaches

Author Healthcare Career Blogger | 17.09.2009 | Category Healthcare Career Blog, Hospitalist physician, Locum Tenens, Physicians, healthcare reform, jobs

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recently updated the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (commonly known as HIPAA). The new regulation requires healthcare providers and other covered entities to  notify patients if the confidentiality of their health records is breached. The new requirement is designed to increase consumer confidence in the personal security of electronic medical records, as the industry moves more and more data online. One way or another, the nature of  physician jobs is always changing.

Many physicians agree that paper record-keeping can be inefficient and can compromise the accuracy, speed and portability of patient care. However, there are major obstacles to conversion to digital record-keeping —  including cost and privacy issues. With the current administration in Washington pushing for electronic medical records, these concerns have moved front and center.

Not only are more patient records moving online, so too are physician’s professional records — including credentialing and peer review information. You and the various organizations with which you work should be taking measures to ensure the privacy of patient and staff information.  Locum tenens and hospitalists have a particular interest in electronic record keeping, due to the mobile nature of their jobs.

You can learn more about HHS privacy regulations here: http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/