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A doctor who called himself the “leg saver” is shutting down his vascular clinics in Michigan, where he performed thousands of lucrative procedures that have come under scrutiny for being unnecessary and potentially dangerous. Earlier this month, patients received a letter from the staff of Dr. Mustapha’s clinic, Advanced Cardiac & Vascular Centers, informing them that the business, which has clinics in Grand Rapids and Lansing, was closing and advising them to find new doctors. Dr. Mustapha and Dr. Saab didn’t respond to requests for comment. Dr. Mustapha is a prominent player in a booming industry that targets the roughly 12 million Americans with peripheral artery disease, in which plaque builds up in arteries, clogging the flow of blood. He was paid hundreds of thousands of dollars by device manufacturers to conduct clinical trials, train other doctors and speak about their products, according to a federal database of industry payments to doctors.
Persons: Jihad Mustapha, Mustapha’s, Dr, Mustapha, Fadi Organizations: New York Times, Vascular Centers, Fadi Saab, Saab Locations: Michigan, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Ocala, Fla, Dearborn, Mich
Listen and follow The DailyApple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon MusicA Times investigation has found that dentists and lactation consultants around the country are pushing “tongue-tie releases” on new mothers struggling to breastfeed, generating huge profits while often harming patients. Katie Thomas, an investigative health care reporter at The Times, discusses the forces driving this emerging trend in American health care and the story of one family in the middle of it.
Persons: Katie Thomas Organizations: Spotify, Times, The Times
Linda Hennis was checking her Medicare statement in January when she noticed something strange: It said a company she had never heard of had been paid about $12,000 for sending her 2,000 urinary catheters. But she had never needed, or received, any catheters. The report used a federal database of Medicare claims that is available to researchers. Doctors, state insurance departments and health care groups around the country said the spike in claims for catheters that were never delivered suggested a far-reaching Medicare scam. “We think it’s outrageous,” said Clif Gaus, executive director of the group that conducted the analysis.
Persons: Linda Hennis, Hennis, , Ms, , Clif Gaus Organizations: Boutique, National Association of, Care Locations: Chicago, Texas
“I was afraid it would burst,” said Ms. Hudson, 74, a retired airport baggage screener in Ocala, Fla. The painful protrusion was the result of a surgery gone wrong, according to medical records from two doctors she later saw. One of the doctors she saw later, a leading hernia expert at the Cleveland Clinic, doubted that Ms. Hudson had even needed the surgery. Ms. Hudson’s original tear, which was about two inches, could have been patched with stitches and mesh, the surgeon believed. And that figure is a fraction of the actual number, researchers said, because most hernia patients are too young to be covered by Medicare.
Persons: Peggy Hudson’s, , Hudson Organizations: Cleveland Clinic, Medicare Locations: Ocala, Fla
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMajority of consumers will save in one category to spend in another, says KCI's Katie ThomasKatie Thomas, lead at the Kearney Consumer Institute, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss consumer trends indicating thoughtful spending habits, consumer dependency on price-value equations for purchase decisions, and the concept of trading up versus trading down.
Persons: Katie Thomas Katie Thomas Organizations: Kearney Consumer Institute
Kelly Hanna’s leg was amputated on a summer day in 2020, after a Michigan doctor who called himself the “leg saver” had damaged her arteries by snaking metal wires through them to clear away plaque. Her podiatrist referred Ms. Hanna to Dr. Jihad Mustapha. Over 18 months, he performed at least that many artery-opening procedures on Ms. Hanna’s legs, telling her they would improve blood flow and prevent amputations. They didn’t — for Ms. Hanna or many of his other patients. An insurance company told state authorities that 45 people had lost limbs after treatment at his clinics in the past four years.
Persons: Kelly Hanna’s, Hanna, Dr, Jihad Mustapha, , Mustapha Organizations: Surgeons, The New York Times Locations: Michigan
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailKearney Consumer Institute: Consumers are in the driver's seat when it comes to pricing and demandKearney Consumer Institute Lead Katie Thomas discusses December retail sales and the outlook for the sector.
Katie Thomas is a senior executive assistant at Uber and a former assistant to Postmates' CFO. Before that, she was the executive assistant to Postmates' chief financial officer. Thomas Googled the executive assistant at Salesforce and saw that she had an impressive background. Getting a "good vibe" from email exchanges, Thomas said, she asked if the other executive assistant wanted to get a coffee or a drink. Thomas said that they went for a drink a few weeks later and that the executive assistant "really helped me think through what my next steps would be."
Is this the last Christmas for Sears?
  + stars: | 2022-11-29 | by ( Chris Isidore | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +13 min
Easterling was at the Sears in her hometown of Jersey City, New Jersey, one of only 15 full-line Sears stores still open. The two started a catalog business selling watches and jewelry in 1888, incorporating under the Sears Roebuck name in 1893. The Sears catalog was the way many Americans first started to buy mass-produced goods. File photo/AP People shop inside a Sears store in Morton Grove, Illinois, in 1961. AP Soldiers guard a Sears store in Baltimore after riots broke out following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968.
If you're a retailer, and it's the holiday season, the thing you most want consumers to feel is a sense of urgency. Unlike last year, holiday shoppers don't need to fear empty shelves at the store. Walmart said it saw more shoppers with incomes above $100,000 ring up items in its stores, drawn in by less expensive groceries. He suggests investors position themselves in discounters like Walmart or Family Dollar or in luxury stocks like RH or Lululemon . She explained that many shoppers perceive Target as a place where "you go in for two items and come out $150 later."
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThomas: Consumers are focusing on good value and competitive pricesKatie Thomas, Lead at the Kearney Consumer Institute, joins Worldwide Exchange to discuss what this week's retail earnings are saying about the state of the consumer.
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