eMedischedule Customized Rabies Vaccination Online Appointment System
Posted by admin on Aug 13, 2010 in eMedi In The News | 56 comments
eMedischedule.com customized Rabies Vaccination online appointment system
for Frederick County Public Health, Maryland
-Health Department to provide rabies vaccination online appointments-
eMedischedule.com, a provider of online clinic scheduling and medical scheduling technology, customized and deployed the Rabies Vaccination clinics appointment system for Frederick County Public Health Department, MD.
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Read MoreSouth Central Public Health District Idaho
Posted by admin on Aug 12, 2010 in Blog, eMedi In The News | 67 comments
South Central Public Health District, Idaho will be providing online public health clinic scheduling service via eMedischedule.com
Health department will be using the web based online appointment scheduling service as well as the automated phone based eMedischedule Virtual Call Center…
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Read MoreSchuyler County Public Health District
Posted by admin on Aug 12, 2010 in Blog, eMedi In The News | 50 comments
eMedischedule is now in New York…Schuyler County Public Health District to use web based public health appointment scheduling services through eMedischedule.
Health department will be using the web based online appointment scheduling service starting in September 2010.
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Read MorePutting New Medical Guidelines Into Practice Often Difficult
Posted by admin on May 29, 2010 in Health Articles | 9 comments
But face-to-face education spurred many docs to prescribe recommended treatments, study found
FRIDAY, May 28 (HealthDay News) — After taking part in a face-to-face program designed to review current research and guidelines, doctors made small improvements in the way they prescribed medicine for patients with high blood pressure, a new study reports.
“Ensuring that important clinical trial findings are reflected in the practices of community physicians remains a substantial challenge,” the authors of the study wrote. Research indicates that many recommendations “diffuse into widespread community use only slowly and then incompletely. This failure to put scientific findings into practice not only compromises societal return on clinical trial investment but also weakens the scientific basis of clinical care.”

