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Tag: penn medicine

  • Water main break shuts down road, causing traffic around Penn Hospital: UPenn

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    A water main break has forced the closure of Spruce Street between 34th and 38th streets until further notice, Penn Medicine said on their website and in a message to patients.

    The street closure will impact traffic near the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine and the Clifton Center for Medical Breakthroughs, according to the memo.

    “Crews are working to complete repairs as soon as possible, but the road closure may last for several weeks,” Penn Medicine’s memo said.

    People traveling to the area are urged to add in extra travel time due to traffic and are encouraged to consider taking public transportation, according to Penn Medicine.

    NBC10 was on the scene to see the road shut down on Sunday night.

    No word yet on if any damage to buildings was done due to the water main break, but NBC10 is working to learn more.

    Anyone with questions about the situation can call Penn Medicine at 800-789-7366 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. on Monday through Friday, according to the memo.

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    Brendan Brightman

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  • Playing ‘pink noise’ sounds, like rainfall, to fall asleep may harm REM sleep

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    It’s common for people to play continuous wave sounds and other gentle nature noises on their phones to lull themselves to sleep. But this type of “pink noise” may actually be backfiring, a new Penn Medicine study suggests.

    The Sleep Foundation‘s definition of pink noise is a bit technical: “noise frequencies that decrease in power with each higher octave to create a lower pitch.” But it’s often compared to nature sounds like steady rainfall, wind or waves.


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    Health experts sometimes prescribe pink noise for people who have trouble sleeping or to promote relaxation, because it has been found to be more gentle than white noise, which has a higher pitch and sounds similar to static from an untuned radio or TV.

    But researchers from the University of Pennsylvania found pink noise interferes with restorative rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and sleep recovery. Wearing earplugs is a more effective way to block out traffic noise, the study found. 

    “REM sleep is important for memory consolidation, emotional regulation and brain development, so our findings suggest that playing pink noise and other types of broadband noise during sleep could be harmful — especially for children whose brains are still developing and who spend much more time in REM sleep than adults,” said Dr. Mathias Basner, the study’s lead author.

    For the study, published Monday in the journal Sleep, researchers had 25 adults spend their nights for an entire week in a sleep lab. The participants were not in the habit of using noise to help them sleep and had no sleep disorders.

    The researchers exposed the participants to aircraft noise, pink noise, aircraft noise with pink noise and aircraft noise with earplugs. Researchers then used different methods each morning to test the participants’ sleep quality, alertness and other health effects.

    They found exposure to aircraft noise overnight led to a 23-minute drop in the deepest stage of REM sleep, but wearing earplugs essentially blocked out the air traffic sounds.

    Pink noise by itself, equivalent to “moderate rainfall,” was linked to a loss of 19 minutes of REM sleep. And pink noise combined with aircraft noise led to “significantly shorter” time spent in deep sleep and REM sleep compared to nights without any type of noise.

    Participants also reported that their sleep felt lighter, that they woke up more frequently throughout the night and that their overall quality of sleep was worse when they were exposed to aircraft or pink noise. But using earplugs against pink noise and aircraft noise improved their overall quality of sleep.

    The effects of pink noise, white noise and other types of broadband noise — used by 16% of Americans at night — need further study, the researchers concluded.

    “Overall, our results caution against the use of broadband noise, especially for newborns and toddlers, and indicate that we need more research in vulnerable populations, on long-term use, on the different colors of broadband noise, and on safe broadband noise levels in relation to sleep,” Basner said. 

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    Courtenay Harris Bond

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  • Doctors increasingly see AI scribes in a positive light. But hiccups persist

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    When Jeannine Urban went in for a checkup in November, she had her doctor’s full attention.

    Instead of typing on her computer keyboard during the exam, Urban’s primary care physician at the Penn Internal Medicine practice in Media, Pennsylvania, had an ambient artificial intelligence scribe take notes. At the end of the 30-minute visit, Urban’s doctor showed her the AI summary of the appointment, neatly organized into sections for her medical history, the physical exam findings, and an assessment and treatment plan for her rheumatoid arthritis and hot flashes, among other details.


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    The clinical note, which Urban could also review on the patient portal at home, was incredibly thorough, she said. It summarized all of her questions and concerns and the doctor’s responses. The scribe “made sure we didn’t miss anything,” Urban said.

    Ambient AI scribes are being hailed by physicians as a game changer that helps free them to focus on their patients rather than their computer keyboard. By releasing doctors from the onerous and time-consuming task of documenting what happens during every patient encounter, early studies show, AI scribes may help reduce physician burnout and after-hours “pajama time” catching up on work in the evening.

    The potential of AI to transform every aspect of the health care system — from patient care to clinical efficiency to medical innovation — is an area of intense focus, including by the Trump administration.

    Last January, President Donald Trump issued an executive order to remove barriers to American leadership in AI. Later in the year, a press release from the federal Department of Health and Human Services invited stakeholders to weigh in on how the department can accelerate the adoption of AI in health care.

    Several startup vendors in recent years have introduced ambient AI scribe products that can be integrated into electronic health records. EHR market leader Epic is piloting its own AI scribe technology, which it expects to release widely early this year, according to Jackie Gerhart, a family medicine physician who is chief medical officer and vice president of clinical informatics at Epic.

    Health tech experts estimate that a third of providers have access to ambient AI scribe technology. As adoption looks likely to grow rapidly over the next few years, many expect it to become more of a recruiting tool, a minimum requirement for incoming clinicians, who reports indicate are increasingly prioritizing work-life balance.

    “It’s part of keeping doctors happy,” said Robert Wachter, a professor and the chair of the Department of Medicine at the University of California-San Francisco, whose forthcoming book, A Giant Leap, explores how AI is transforming health care. “Health systems that initially might have done a hard-nosed return-on-investment calculation — many are softening on that and realizing that the cost of recruiting and retaining doctors is pretty high.”

    But many questions remain. Does the use of ambient AI scribes improve patient care and health outcomes? Will doctors use time they gain by employing an AI scribe to improve the quality of the time they spend with their patients or just boost the number of patients they see? To what extent will expanding the amount of detail available from a patient visit lead to bigger bills if the AI scribe is integrated with a coding app that optimizes provider charges?

    For now, these questions remain mostly unanswered.

    Urban said that the AI scribe didn’t change her experience as a patient very much. Typically, after a patient gives verbal permission, the AI scribe records the visit on a phone and organizes the conversation into the structure of a clinical note, filtering out small talk that isn’t pertinent to the medical visit but incorporating relevant details about a family member’s recent cancer diagnosis, for example. The scribe’s note is often then integrated into the provider’s EHR. The doctor later reviews the note and signs off on it.

    Even though the visit may not feel very different to patients, some clinicians report that ambient AI scribes are changing patient encounters in unanticipated ways.

    “Now, when I’m doing a physical exam, I have to say what I’m doing and what I’m finding out loud in order for the AI scribe to document it,” said Dina Capalongo, Urban’s primary care doctor. “People find that very interesting,” she said.

    When Capalongo places her stethoscope over the carotid artery under a patient’s jaw, for example, she might say that she doesn’t hear a “bruit,” or vascular murmur, whose presence could indicate atherosclerosis. Patients have told her, “I never knew why a doctor would listen there,” she said.

    Saying things out loud for the AI scribe that would typically appear only in a clinical note can create its own set of challenges, particularly during sensitive physical exams. Doctors may feel it’s important to adjust their conversation accordingly.

    “Sometimes patients are anxious and scared and my saying things that they don’t understand or they may worry about during an uncomfortable examination does not help the situation and honestly is insensitive to what the patient is going through,” said Genevieve Melton-Meaux, a professor in the Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery at the University of Minnesota, who is also chief health informatics and AI officer at Fairview Health Services in Minneapolis. “I’ll keep that top of mind and make sure I record it” after the visit.

    “How we have conversations with patients about these tools is really important, in particular for maintaining trust and ensuring accurate information,” Melton-Meaux said.

    Studies have found that, across a range of measures such as completeness, timeliness, and coherence, the notes created by ambient AI scribes are generally at least as good as, and sometimes better than, traditional documentation, said Kevin Johnson, a pediatrician who is vice president for applied informatics at the University of Pennsylvania Health System.

    An ongoing concern is around AI “hallucinations,” in which false, sometimes fabricated information appears in an AI output.

    Kaiser Permanente, an early adopter of ambient AI scribe technology, provides it to more than 25,000 doctors, advanced practice providers, and pharmacists systemwide. It has found hallucinations to be “quite rare,” said Daniel Yang, an internist who is vice president of AI and emerging technologies at KP.

    But they happen. An AI-scribe-generated note, for instance, might say that the doctor planned to refer someone to a neurologist or to follow up in two weeks. The problem? The doctor might not have said that.

    “The technology is not perfect, and that’s why physicians are reviewing it,” Yang said. It’s learning from regular physician visits as it goes, he said. That’s why having a person check the work product is critical.

    Still, even such a “human-in-the loop” system is fraught, Wachter said. “Humans stink at maintaining vigilance over time,” he said.

    As the use of ambient AI scribes becomes routine, some clinicians worry that the technology will widen the divide between health care haves and have-nots.

    Large health systems are able to move forward with the technology, Melton-Meaux said. But what about critical access hospitals or small private practices? “There need to be more resources,” she said.

    Physicians’ enthusiasm for ambient AI scribes stands in sharp contrast to their negative reaction to electronic health record systems that have become widely adopted in recent years to replace paper charts.

    “During the last 10 years, when EHRs became a thing, we all became very grumpy, overworked data scribes,” Wachter said.

    The introduction of AI scribes makes physicians feel like technology is working for them rather than the other way around, health care AI experts said.

    And AI scribes are “training wheels” for more consequential adoption of AI in health care, Wachter said.

    To improve health care value and save costs, Wachter said, we need a system that makes it more likely that physicians will practice evidence-based medicine to order the right tests and prescribe the right medications.

    “It’s a few years away, but it’s all AI-dependent,” he said.

    Epic has introduced roughly 60 AI use cases for patients, clinicians, and administration, with over 100 more in the works.

    “It’s so much bigger than a scribe,” said Epic’s Gerhart. “It’s literally listening and acting in a way that tees things up for me so that I can take action.”


    KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

    This article first appeared on KFF Health News and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

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    Michelle Andrews, KFF Health News

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  • Penn Medicine to open new proton therapy center in University City

    Penn Medicine to open new proton therapy center in University City

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    Penn Medicine will open a fourth proton therapy center, expanding its ability to provide patients with the non-invasive cancer treatment that is associated with fewer side effects than other cancer treatments.

    Penn Medicine is building the new facility at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, at 51 N. 39th St. in University City, and refurbishing its original Roberts Proton Therapy Center that opened in 2010 in the Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine, 3400 Civic Center Blvd., also in University City. The project will cost approximately $317 million, Kevin Mahoney, CEO of the University of Pennsylvania Health System, told the Philadelphia Business Journal. The new center, slated to open in 2027, will be built next to Penn Presbyterian.


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    The Roberts Proton Therapy Center treats more than 100 patients daily and is the largest center in the world for proton and conventional radiation therapy. Penn Medicine has two other proton therapy centers, one that opened in Lancaster in 2022 and another at Virtua Health’s hospital in Voorhees, Camden County, that opened in 2023.

    There are 45 proton centers in the United States, according to the National Association for Proton Therapy.

    Proton therapy, a type of radiation therapy also known as proton beam therapy, uses the positively-charged particles to destroy cancer cells, causing little or no damage to surrounding tissue. Doctors have more control with proton therapy and can therefore use higher doses of radiation.

    Because it is more precise than other types of cancer treatment, proton therapy can target tumors near organs. It is used when possible in children with cancer to reduce the amount of damage to healthy tissue. Proton therapy can also treat cancer that recurs after other radiation treatment.

    Penn Medicine touts the treatment as less-invasive and having fewer side effects than other cancer therapies. A 2020 study showed that patients treated with proton therapy were less likely to experience severe side effects than patients treated with traditional radiation. Proton therapy can be used in combination with chemotherapy and other radiation treatments.

    Most insurance plans in the U.S., including Medicare, cover proton therapy.

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    Courtenay Harris Bond

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