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Toxic chemicals in the environment harm our ability to reproduce and are associated with poor semen quality and prostate cancer, among other long-term health problems, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Society for Reproductive Medicine.

Urology Times congratulates Howard M. Snyder, III, MD, who received the Urology Medal at the recently concluded Pediatric Urology Fall Congress in Las Vegas. The Urology Medal is given to an individual who has made outstanding contributions to the field of pediatric urology.

New research shows a significant decrease in PSA screening by primary care physicians since the release of the United States Preventive Services Task Force recommendation against screening in May 2012.

A proposed rule from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services that would cap payments for more than 200 physician services at outpatient prospective payment system or ambulatory surgery center rates would threaten patient access to optimal, cost-effective health care, according to the Large Urology Group Practice Association.

Is the end of SGR near?

The widely unpopular Medicare sustainable growth rate enacted under the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 has threatened cuts to Medicare payments to physicians for years. This year there is hope that a solution to the perennial problem will be enacted into law.

Three different procedures to treat stress urinary incontinence led to high rates of recurrence-free outcomes at 5 years, and the choice of retreatment of SUI varied according to the initial procedure, long-term follow-up in two randomized trials showed.

Stress-incontinent women whose urinary urgency incontinence worsens following a sling procedure are a heterogeneous group, according to research presented at the AUA annual meeting in San Diego.

Researchers say they’re seeing positive results in early analysis of an adaptive optical element they have developed to increase the flexibility of surgical lasers in the treatment of upper urinary tract disorders.

A new survey of urologic surgeons from around the world found that an overwhelming majority believes simulation-based training for robot-assisted surgery should be a mandatory part of their surgical programs.

Even though there’s been no change in the rules, we decided it was time to review the global rules and shed some light on two key questions about global: when to charge for an additional service and when not to charge for an additional service.

In this case, the patient tried to keep the observing urologist in the case as another source of payment by claiming a physician-patient relationship existed, thus establishing he had a legal duty to ensure the care was within the accepted standard.