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Salon.com July 20, 2001 Frederick Clarkson |
Shooting for life The creator of the Nuremberg Files site and his supporters adopt a new weapon in their war against abortion: Live video broadcasts from clinics around the world... |
Managed Care August 2002 Michael S. Victoroff |
Prying Eyes Push Against Boundary of Medical Privacy It seems some folks have been publishing on the Internet pictures of women visiting abortion clinics. Is this constitutionally protected journalism? Or a violation of privacy? |
Salon.com May 31, 2001 Frederick Clarkson |
Journalists or terrorists? The antiabortion Nuremberg Files, notorious for what critics call its "hit list" of abortion providers, now plans to broadcast abortion providers and patients over the Web and wrap its actions in the First Amendment... |
Salon.com June 27, 2001 Frederick Clarkson |
On the lam, but online Self-avowed antiabortion terrorist Clayton Waagner is a fugitive, but by posting a pledge to kill abortion providers, he may have given the feds just what they need to catch him... |
Salon.com July 25, 2002 Fran Smith |
Ignorance is no excuse Few doctors learn how to perform abortions, and women pay for their lack of training. New York City is taking steps to reverse the trend. |
Mother Jones Sep/Oct 2001 Barry Yeoman |
The Quiet War on Abortion After decades of noisy protests and violence, anti-abortion activists are relying on a new 'stealth strategy' to shut down clinics... |
ifeminists October 8, 2002 Wendy McElroy |
State Legislation Protects Abortion Rights California has been passing a series of bills that the media has been calling "landmarks" in the protection of "women's rights." The measures constitute the most aggressive attempt in recent memory to entrench "reproductive rights" -- that is, abortion -- into society by force of law. |
InternetNews December 2, 2009 |
Privacy Group Warns of Digital Health Records Patient Privacy Rights issues report card showing wide variations in privacy safeguards in electronic health offerings. |
CIO August 31, 2010 Cindy Waxer |
How Kiosks Cut Patient Wait Times at Walk-in Clinics When The Little Clinic switched from paper-based check-ins to a new kiosk system that populates its EMRs, it gained an hour of patient time and saved $12,000 a month. |
InternetNews March 6, 2008 Susan Kuchinskas |
See My Profile on MyDisease Do privacy concerns about putting personal health information online outweigh the benefits? |
InternetNews June 3, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Privacy a Stumbling Block in Healthcare IT Government's push for universal electronic health records brings tech firms into thorny privacy debate. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2006 Robert N. Charette |
Dying for Data A comprehensive system of electronic medical records promises to save lives and cut health care costs -- but how do you build one? The many technical, social, and political issues are also formidable. |
Salon.com October 31, 2000 Carole Joffe |
There's more at stake than Roe vs. Wade From clinic access to anti-abortion terrorism, the next president -- whoever he is -- will have a profound effect on a woman's right to choose... |
InternetNews November 11, 2010 |
Data Breaches Cost Hospitals $6B A Year: Study Ponemon Institute report finds that healthcare organizations suffer an average of 2.4 data breaches a year, costing in excess of $2 million per incident. |
InternetNews October 20, 2009 |
Privacy Still Dogs Electronic Health Records New study highlights security shortcomings with the ways medical facilities are digitizing patients' records. |
InternetNews July 24, 2009 |
Facebook's Photo Flap Facebook has made a small change in its developer API code designed to limit the unwanted spread of personal photos posted by its members. But some developers of popular Facebook applications are voicing their displeasure with the move. |
The Motley Fool July 10, 2011 Kurt Bakke |
Google+: And You Thought Facebook Is a Privacy Nightmare Google could be setting itself up for massive lawsuits. |
The Motley Fool February 22, 2008 Brian Orelli |
Google in Your Medicine Cabinet Does Google have what the others don't as it moves one step closer to launching its health-care website? |
Managed Care March 2008 Kathryn J. Alexander |
Health Plans Embrace Retail Clinics Convenient care clinics, as they like to be called, are spreading quickly because members and plans like them |
AskMen.com |
Your Past Isn't Done With You Americans who grew up long before the Internet opened private lives to the world are finding out that Facebook and other sites are bringing up things better left alone. |
ifeminists June 8, 2005 Wendy McElroy |
Privacy: Throwing Babies Out with Bath Water Privacy rights are under attack and cases are so legally tangled that analysis becomes blurred and bad law based on judicial activism becomes more possible. |
Managed Care July 2006 |
AMA Lays Down Guidelines For Retail Clinics The American Medical Association came out with nine guidelines that the organization suggests store-based clinics follow. Not surprisingly, the rules stipulate a doctor's role in such a clinic. Here are some of those guidelines. |
CRM October 2010 Lauren McKay |
Market Focus: Healthcare--A Healthy Dose of Social Media One provider shows how to join consumers in social networks without compromising a secure relationship. |
ifeminists October 30, 2009 Wendy McElroy |
An overview of the abortion issue The debate over abortion is polarized, with the most vocal advocates for and against tending to assume extreme positions in the belief that they are enunciating a principle that allows for no compromise. |
Fast Company April 2013 Margaret Rhodes |
Foap Helps Sell Photos to Companies -- But Members Get Control And A Cut Two Swedes started an online marketplace for everyday iPhone shooters. Members sell their photos to companies for $10, and Foap takes a 50% cut. |
Reason February 2002 Sara Rimensnyder |
Weak Choice In a national survey sample, only 6 percent of gynecologists and a mere 1 percent of general practice physicians offer Mifeprix abortions... |
CIO October 27, 2010 Cindy Waxer |
How Mayo Clinic Doctors Use Smartphones to Diagnose Patients Neurologists diagnose patients remotely using images delivered to smartphones. |
ifeminists September 30, 2003 Jennifer Roback Morse |
Aborting Child Protection Health-care personnel are ordinarily mandatory reporters of child abuse. But a recent survey has prompted the question of whether abortion clinics take this responsibility seriously. |
Salon.com October 19, 2000 Cathy Young |
A man's right to choose Is it fair that women have reproductive rights while men have reproductive responsibilities? |
ifeminists August 7, 2007 Carey Roberts |
Fathers, The Third Victim of the Abortion Industry Many argue that women are the second victim of the grisly abortion industry, but research clearly shows that men can be victims as well. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2007 Radley Balko |
Getting Beyond Roe Why returning abortion to the states is a good idea -- Book Review: The Politics of Abortion by Anne Hendershott. |
Fast Company September 14, 2011 Emma Haak |
Global E-Health Forum Protecting patients' medical information in the digital age is no easy feat. |
PC Magazine April 19, 2006 M. David Stone |
Buying Guide: Dedicated Photo Printers If you have a digital camera and you want the freedom to print your own photos, even if it's moments after you take them, a dedicated photo printer is the way to go. |
Salon.com June 20, 2001 Janelle Brown |
High noon for the morning-after pill With the medical establishment pushing to make it available over the counter, and anti-abortion groups fighting to stop it, little-known emergency contraception could be the next battle in the reproductive wars... |
InternetNews March 5, 2008 Susan Kuchinskas |
Eyeing the Personal Health Portal Can Google and Microsoft transform health care the way they changed business? |
PC Magazine February 14, 2007 M. David Stone |
Printing Your Own Doesn't Cost More To print your own photos or not, that is the question. |
InternetNews January 27, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Privacy 'Achilles Heel' in Health IT Debate Senate hearing considers privacy concerns as Congress prepares to spend billions on digitizing healthcare industry. |
Managed Care September 2002 |
New Privacy Regulations Almost Certain To Be Tested The Bush administration is moving to loosen health-privacy protections by requiring that providers tell patients about their privacy rights and make only a "good-faith effort" to get a written acknowledgement of that notice. |
Managed Care November 2001 Darren T. Binder |
Determining Who Is Covered By HIPAA Privacy Regulation Because there are significant penalties associated with noncompliance with the new HIPAA, business leaders must determine whether their operations put them at risk of violating the regulations... |
ifeminists March 29, 2009 Wendy McElroy |
Cooling down the abortion debate The basic dilemma of abortion cannot be blamed on government. |
PC Magazine October 5, 2004 M. David Stone |
Photo Printer Alternatives If you're not enthusiastic about buying a photo printer, consider an alternative. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2011 Siva Vaidhyanathan |
Protecting Online Privacy We do care about our privacy online, and we can protect it from surveillance |
Insurance & Technology April 20, 2005 Anthony O'Donnell |
Gray Shares Perspective Kimberly Gray, chief privacy officer of Highmark, brings a special perspective of the health insurance industry to the International Association of Privacy Professionals. |
Salon.com September 18, 2000 S. Boyd |
Give us liberty The approval of RU-486 isn't about morals, it's about options. |
Salon.com September 22, 2000 Hal Millard |
Geriatrics to the rescue A South Carolina clinic is offering good healthcare to the uninsured and a meaningful life to retired doctors. Can the idea spread to the rest of the country? |