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Health Affairs, 27, no. 6 (2008): 1515-1521
doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.27.6.1515
© 2008 by Project HOPE
 
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Report From The Field

REPORT FROM THE FIELD

The Case Of CT Angiography: How Americans View And Embrace New Technology

Julie Appleby


The first 100 words of the full text of this article appear below.

DURING HIS CAREER as a cardiologist, Jason Cole of Alabama has seen thousands of patients with suspected heart disease. When he first started practicing several years ago, he’d send an average of four or five patients each day to a lab for a cardiac catheterization test—an invasive procedure to see if blockages threatened their hearts. For the test, patients have a thin catheter pushed up though a groin artery and into the heart. Contrast dye is injected, and x-ray pictures show if narrowing or blockages impede the flow of blood. For patients with blockages, various medical and surgical treatments . . . [Full Text of this Article]

   Benefits Versus Costs
 
   Constraints Versus Innovation
 
   CTA And Medicare
 
   Physicians’ Response
 
   Industry’s Response
 
   Congress’s Response
 
   Current Status And Stance
 


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This article has been cited by other articles:


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Induced cardiovascular procedural costs and resource consumption patterns after coronary artery calcium screening: results from the EISNER (Early Identification of Subclinical Atherosclerosis by Noninvasive Imaging Research) study.
J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., September 29, 2009; 54(14): 1258 - 1267.
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J. K. Iglehart
Health Insurers and Medical-Imaging Policy -- A Work in Progress
N. Engl. J. Med., March 5, 2009; 360(10): 1030 - 1037.
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Comments:

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Anecdotal Approach To Promoting CT Use
Dr.Parthasarathy KS
Health Affairs, 4 Dec 2008 [Full text]


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