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Many pregnant patients ask whether it is bad to exercise regularly and vigorously, while others ask whether exercising in any way helps to improve outcome. These questions were addressed in a recent publication in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.
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In this Issue: Pioglitazone and heart disease; ARBs manufacturers spend millions to show the non-inferiority of their products compared to less expensive, generic ACE inhibitors; some athletes turn to growth hormone because it is difficult to detect; FDA Actions
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Most of us dread the chief complaint of weakness. This nonspecific symptom engenders a differential that ranges from malingering to fatal, from psychiatric to cancer. The finding of demonstrable muscle weakness helps, but then leads to a confusing set of relatively rare diagnoses.
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Faced with an increasing number of patients in observation status, Brandon (FL) Regional Hospital began an observation management process that resulted in a 16% decrease in observation patients and a 27% drop in observation length of stay in just one year.
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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has proposed significant expansion in hospital quality reporting requirements, including adding 46 new quality measures for which hospitals must submit data over the next two years, and increasing the number of hospital-acquired conditions for which Medicare won't reimburse.
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Gilbert (AZ) Hospital has one of the busiest emergency departments in the area and an average ED waiting time of less than 12 minutes.
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An elderly woman tells ED triage nurses she's had an excruciating, unrelenting headache for the past two days. She has a steady gait.