A Great Career With Medical Coding

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Posted by admin | Posted in General | Posted on 25-07-2010

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Many people work hard in establishing good careers and raising their standards of living: these are the lucky ones who are able to finish their education and land a good occupation. Unfortunately, there are those who have other priorities or who do not have the proper skills training to join the world of traditional work. This creates a situation of unemployment- unless he or she finds a suitable career. An answer for this problem is finding a new option, and on of these possible career choices is Medical Coding.

Medical Coding is essentially the job of translating the medical observations about any procedure into alphanumeric codes. This translation objectively describes the details in a medical situation: from the illness of the patient, the kind of treatment provided, and whatever necessary information is present. This makes information storage and dissemination about highly sensitive and meticulous medical issues easy and possible on a highly impartial basis.

The good news is that medical coding is highly in demand in the present. Hospitals, health centers, physicians, organized health groups, government agencies and insurance companies need people who are adept to this position. Employers accept transcriptionists with minimum requirement and work experience. Remember, the medical field is not a stable science and needs to be regularly updated: hence, the need for many medical encoders to keep it accessible and allow knowledge to spread among the different areas of the study. Furthermore, most entry positions in the said career require only a high school diploma for potential employees. Now, however, employers prefer to hire those with medical billing and coding certification. This can be acquired either online or from an accredited training program. In this case, getting the education and the certification from this career is made easy and fast through technology which allows one to learn the needed skill efficiently and with the least amount of time.

A great advantage of medical coding is that it allows the person to do the work at home if he or she cannot do it in an office. As long as the person is familiar with using computers and can learn the medical billing and coding software needed, then he or she can get the job done. This makes it a good option for people who have many restrictions in their living situation situation. For example, mothers who cannot leave the home to take care of their children or people with physical disabilities can learn and earn without the rigorous demand of ordinary jobs. Also, those who are highly skilled in using computers or who would rather stay at home will still surely earn in this career and even find it profitable.

For more information regarding the possibility of entering this lucrative and accessible career, one can access medical billing and coding online school websites which offer preliminary information.

Is taking propecia to prevent baldness a good idea?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Articles | Posted on 06-05-2010

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Throughout time, whenever people start talking about baldness, they almost always focus on the threat to self-esteem. Most cultures have decided that men who lose their hair early are somehow worthy of mockery. Inevitably, this has put pressure on men to avoid or hide the problem. In reality, the poor quality of many wigs and toupĂ©es signalled the wearer’s embarrassment and aggravated the social difficulties. In turn, this opened up a market to the unscrupulous to sell magic remedies. We still celebrate this time in our history by retaining the idea of “snake oil” and “elixirs” from the Traveling Medicine Shows. But the results in a recent study published in Cancer Epidemiology may be a sign that men who lose their hair early are the lucky ones. Instead of despair as their hair recedes, they should be celebrating the news their risk of prostate cancer is halving.

The study involved some two thousand men in their forties, half of whom had been diagnosed with prostate cancer. In reviewing their medical histories, the researchers noted that men whose hair began thinning in their twenties were the least likely to develop a growth in the prostate (whether cancerous or benign). In publishing these results, a clear distinction must be made between the natural thinning and loss of hair that affects all men as they age, and male pattern baldness which characteristically affects younger men. The reduction in the risk of cancer benefits those who lose their hair prematurely. The researchers speculate this is a consequence of the changing level of testosterone in those who go bald. The higher the level of hormone, the more the body produces dihydrotestosterone (DHT). With more DHT in the bloodstream, the hair follicles shrink. This thins the hair and slows the rate at which hair is replaced as it is shed. But, higher levels of testosterone seem to lower the risk of a growth.

There are two points of interest in this story. The first is the presence of contrary research evidence showing a higher risk of cancer among the prematurely bald. Unfortunately, male pattern baldness and prostate cancer have the same triggering cause and both develop as men age. There needs to be further research to distinguish the cause and effect of both conditions. Put simply, asking men to remember when they began losing their hair is not very reliable scientific evidence. Secondly, propecia, the drug now shown as effective in treating male pattern baldness because it prevents the conversion of testosterone to DHT, was originally developed as a treatment for benign growths in the prostate. It is somewhat ironic to see modern research treading the same path that led to the FDA expanding the use of propecia from prostate growths to a treatment for male pattern baldness. So where does this leave us? As it stands, this latest research is on its own and contradicted by earlier work. It has a doubtful scientific method and a relatively small number of participants. Before we can celebrate early balding, we need a better designed research program with a significantly larger number of men involved. Only if these new findings are confirmed can men with male pattern baldness feel better about their hair loss. Until then, all they have to rely on is the ever reliable propecia – so long as you start early enough, it slows hair loss and can prompt some regrowth.