April 3, 2026 | Volume XVII | Issue 14

Leaving hospital medicine for private practice

Shiv K. Goel, MD writes for KevinMD:


The day I handed in my credentials as medical director, I sat in my car in the parking lot for a long time. I had held that role at Methodist Specialty and Transplant Hospital in San Antonio for years. I had built protocols, chaired committees, mentored residents, and managed crises at hours when the rest of the city slept. I was, by every conventional metric, succeeding. And yet there was something accumulating in me that I did not yet have a name for, a slow, quiet erosion of the sense that what I was doing was connected to why I had become a physician in the first place. I drove home that evening, and I did not feel free. I felt terrified.


The decision to leave hospital medicine and open a functional, integrative, and...

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Vagus nerve stimulation shows promise as a way to counter Alzheimer’s disease‑ and age‑related memory loss

Elizabeth Riley


Most people think of Alzheimer’s disease as an illness of aging. But in fact, the brain changes that characterize it begin much earlier – sometime around the third decade of life.


In the earliest of these changes, a tangled version of a protein called tau starts building up in a tiny region deep in the brain involved in sleep, attention and alertness, called the locus coeruleus. Tau later spreads to the rest of the brain.


Developing tau tangles doesn’t mean a person has Alzheimer’s disease – in fact, it happens to nearly everyone to varying degrees. But because these changes start in the locus coeruleus, some brain researchers – myself included – see this area as a canary in the coal mine for developing Alzheimer’s disease.


We are exploring whether stopping or slowing down tau tangles in this brain region, or otherwise maintaining its health, may be a way to interrupt how the disease ultimately unfolds and to prevent other aspects of cognitive aging.


Emerging research from my lab and others is investigating the idea that a therapy called vagus nerve stimulation, which is already widely used for other health conditions, could be one way of keeping the locus coeruleus functioning properly.

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CMS locks in MA star ratings overhaul

Fierce Healthcare reports:



The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) finalized a Medicare Advantage (MA) rule with substantial adjustments to the metrics used for calculating Medicare Advantage star ratings, but did not lock in a proposal to establish a special enrollment period when providers leave the plan’s network. 


In line with its proposal back in November, the Contract Year 2027 MA and Part D final rule...

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Medical analyst explains discrepancies between dietary guidelines

KING 5 Seattle


The American Heart Association urges more plant-based protein and healthy fats, clashing with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s updated food pyramid.

Watch the video HERE.


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