NPR Story
2:00 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

Electronic Medical Records Catch On In Oregon

Originally published on Tue December 27, 2011 5:31 pm

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Robert Siegel.

This year, the federal government gave billions of dollars of stimulus money to medical providers to help speed up their use of electronic health records. The idea is for doctors to coordinate care better so that patients can see their charts online, and to allow clinics to grade their doctors.

Oregon is ahead of the curve. Sixty-five percent of clinicians have electronic medical records, compared to about 45 percent nationwide.

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Tiny Desk Concerts
1:55 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

Maria Volonte: Tiny Desk Concert

Deceptive Cadence
1:54 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

Classical Lost And Found: The Art Of The Concerto In Azerbaijan

Originally published on Tue December 27, 2011 9:24 am

The folk music of Azerbaijan pervades the very rarely heard symphonic works on this album. A winning synthesis of East and West, these pieces — mostly for piano — feature five of the country's most celebrated composers, including Farhad Badalbeyli, who's also the principal piano soloist.

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Planet Money
1:51 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

The Undertakers Of The Retail Industry

Credit Joe Raedle / Getty Images

When the internet kills a big box retailer, Gordon Brothers is the undertaker.

"They're stuck with selling the things that are inside the box," says bankruptcy lawyer Steve Jakubowski.

Gordon Brothers specializes in retail liquidations. When a store dies, they put on a suit, greet the guests and sell them whatever remains. And that means everything — not just books and clothing and DVDs, but shelves, lighting fixtures, even the chairs.

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The Two-Way
1:25 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

Reports: Democratic Sen. Ben Nelson Won't Seek Re-election

Credit Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.).

The race for control of the Senate just got even more interesting with word from several news outlets that Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) won't be seeking re-election in 2012.

The Omaha World-Herald says "it's good news for Republicans, but incredibly bad for Democrats who need the equivalent of a Christmas miracle to keep the seat."

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The Two-Way
1:15 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

Brazil Overtakes U.K. As World's Sixth Biggest Economy

Credit Vanderlei Almeida / AFP/Getty Images
Thousands of people crowd Ipanema Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil as summer gets going in the Southern Hemisphere.

Brazil is now the world's sixth biggest economy overtaking the U.K., according to the Centre for Economics and Business Research. As the Financial Times puts it, it's another milestone that's part of a larger trend where emerging economies outpace developed ones. China, they report, overtook Japan earlier this year.

The BBC explains:

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Politics
1:14 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

Congress Really Is As Bad As You Think, Scholars Say

Credit Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer answers reporters' questions about the House's inability to pass a payroll tax cut extension. At right is Democratic Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland.

Congressional approval ratings are on the rocks, hovering in or near single digits for the first time since pollsters started measuring them. But just how bad is the current congressional stalemate?

Thomas Mann, senior fellow of governance studies at the Brookings Institution in Washington, is working on a book about Congress with a title that provides a succinct answer: It's Even Worse Than It Looks.

In modern history, Mann says, "there have been battles, delays, brinkmanship — but nothing quite like this."

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Music Interviews
1:12 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

The 'Guitar Passions' Of Sharon Isbin And Steve Vai

Credit Afshin Javadi
Sharon Isbin (left) and Steve Vai switch axes.

Originally published on Tue December 27, 2011 5:31 pm

Classical guitarist Sharon Isbin started the Juilliard guitar program. Her new album, Guitar Passions, features collaborations between Isbin — who studied with Andres Segovia, among others — and artists with very unclassical careers: jazz guitarist Stanley Jordan, rock singer Nancy Wilson of the band Heart, soprano saxophonist Paul Winter and several others.

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All Tech Considered
12:45 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

Tutors Teach Seniors New High-Tech Tricks

Credit Courtesy of Pace University
At Pace University in New York, college students who tutor seniors in local retirement homes are prepped with sensitivity training. Brittany Beckett (left), a Pace student, and Muriel Cohen work together at United Hebrew of New Rochelle.

A week after Christmas, many Americans are no doubt trying to figure out how to use the high-tech gadgets they got as gifts. This can be especially challenging for seniors. But a number of programs across the country are finding just the right experts to help usher older adults into the digital age.

For Pamela Norr, of Bend, Oregon, the light bulb went off as she, yet again, was trying to help her own elder parents with a tech problem. To whom did she turn?

"My teenage kids," she says.

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The Two-Way
12:40 pm
Tue December 27, 2011

India's Hazare Begins New Hunger Strike In Corruption Fight

India's anti-corruption crusader Anna Hazare, 74, has begun another three-day fast in Mumbai just as Parliament begins debate on a bill that would create an office with the authority to investigate corruption.

But, as The Christian Science Monitor reports, Hazare calls the bill "weak and useless." The Monitor adds:

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