Articles by: Geisel Communications

Geisel, D-H to Receive Large Grant – Valley News

Read article – Quotes Margaret Karagas, chair and professor of epidemiology, and Paul Palumbo, professor of medicine and pediatrics, about how a research project—that since 2009 has been investigating how various factors such as contaminants in the environment affect the health of pregnant women and their children in New Hampshire and Vermont—will receive up to $40 million in funding over the next seven years to help lead ECHO’s research efforts.

Area VA Leads National Mental Health Efforts – Valley News

Read article – Andrew Pomerantz, associate professor of psychiatry, is quoted about the pioneering effort at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in White River Junction, Vt., to provide same-day care to veterans who come in with mental health issues has spread through the sprawling health system run by the U.S. Veterans Health Administration. “Things that have happened here in White River (Junction) have profoundly affected the entire VA system,” says Pomerantz.

Pharmalot, Pharmalittle: Prisons Struggle to Provide Costly Hepatitis C Drugs – STAT News

Read article – Quotes Adrienne Faerber, research project manager at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, about how various ads from drug and device makers appear designed to alarm consumers into taking action. “If you increase an individual’s feeling that they’re susceptible to a threat, and increase the perceived severity of that threat, people are more likely to take action,” says Faerber.

Economists’ Opinions Differ on Impact of Hospital Competition – Valley News

Read article – Quotes Elliott Fisher, chair and professor of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, and professor of medicine and community and family medicine, in an article about how deciding whether hospital mergers, affiliations and other forms of cooperation are desirable is not an easy proposition—even for experts. “On the one hand, there is concern about consolidation leading to greater market power and higher prices for consumers,” says Fisher. “To the extent that clinical integration is being done to improve care for patients, and thereby lower the actual cost of taking care of them, that’s a great thing.”