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  • Product Pipeline

    A third player has entered the drug-eluting stent sector in Europe, though the company claims it was really the second firm to earn the CE mark. While that may be the case, the real question may be the devices speed of entry to U.S. launch.
  • Full March 1, 2003 Issue in PDF

  • CardioGenesis reports impressive results

    SAN DIEGO, California When introduced to the U.S. market in the summer of 1998, many industry observers expected that transmyocardial revascularization (TMR) would be adopted rapidly by the cardiac surgery community.
  • Acquisitions

    Angiotech Pharmaceuticals (Vancouver, British Columbia) reported completing its purchase of biomaterials engineering and biosurgical products manufacturer Cohesion Technologies (Palo Alto, California).
  • Business Developments

    The cardiovascular field last month saw the unveiling of a couple of significant new developments in the cardiovascular arena, one a study for a combination medical device/biotechnology therapy for the enhancement of revascularization and the other a pivotal trial for a self-expanding carotid stent system.
  • So far, so good: As vaccinations begin, few serious smallpox reactions emerge

    Screening adds safety to smallpox vaccination. Despite widespread fears about the smallpox vaccine, there were few serious adverse reactions and no known spread to contacts in the first month of the vaccination program.
  • Adverse Events

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that these adverse events after smallpox vaccination be reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting Systems and to state health departments.
  • More hospitals seek to be ‘magnets’ for nurses

    Hospitals that give more autonomy to nurses and have less hierarchy qualities that gained them designation by the Magnet Recognition Program of the American Nurses Credentialing Center in Washington, DC have lower levels of emotional exhaustion and burnout, lower rates of needlestick injuries, higher job satisfaction, and better retention and recruitment of nurses, according to several recent studies.
  • Is it a vaccine reaction? CDC offers guidance

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an adverse event can be causally attributed to vaccine more readily if one of the following is true.
  • Terror alert: Are you ready for any possibility?

    How ready are hospitals to respond to an act of terrorism that results in contaminated patients and mass casualties? Preparedness experts worry that the smallpox vaccination program may be diverting resources from other types of emergency capability.