Articles Tagged With:
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Emerging Candida auris Infects 13 in U.S.
Four patients have died and nine others were infected as the 13 cases of a drug resistant strain of Candida auris that is emerging globally have been reported in the United States by the CDC.1
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‘Clean It Like You Mean It’ Improves Quality, Reduces Costs
A nursing-led program designed to get clinicians to follow best practices at a New York City hospital has significantly reduced the incidence of central line-associated bloodstream infections in neonatal, pediatric, and pediatric cardiac intensive care settings.
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IPs Target HAI Reduction Goals for 2020
Although considerable progress has been made in reducing targeted healthcare-associated infections, the Department of Health and Human Services has set a new baseline and established ambitious new goals for 2020.
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A Bold New Day for Infection Prevention in LTC
The CMS has finalized its new infection control regulations for long-term care, revising a few areas in response to comments while implementing landmark changes to protect increasingly vulnerable resident populations.
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CDC Q&A for Hospitals Notifying Patients About Heater-Cooler Device
The CDC recently issued the following answers to common questions about notifying cardiac surgical patients potentially exposed to contaminated heater-cooler devices.
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CDC Calls for Massive Patient Notification on Heater-Coolers
The CDC is alerting hospitals that hundreds of thousands of open-heart surgery patients may be at risk of slow-growing infections caused by heater-cooler devices that were intrinsically contaminated during production.
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Program Focuses Nursing on Patient Care Transitions
A Massachusetts program has developed a number of resources for improving transition of care that are now available for healthcare facilities to use at no cost.
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Most Common Problems in TJC Surveys
With The Joint Commission changing its scoring system in 2017, it may be difficult for hospital quality leaders to anticipate what could go wrong on a survey. Experience will still yield some clues, but the first surveys may provide some insight into what hospitals should expect.
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AHA/HRET QI Project Cuts HACS 40%, Readmissions 20%
Hospitals are continuing to improve patient care, per results from the second round of the American Hospital Association/Health Research & Educational Trust (HRET) Hospital Engagement Network (HEN), part of the CMS’ Partnership for Patients initiative.
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Shorter Data Interval Gives Better Readmission Picture
The standard for studying readmissions, and what they say about hospital quality, has long been 30 days. The 30-day window is used by the federal government to penalize hospitals believed to provide lower-quality care because patients return to the hospital following discharge, but recent research suggests that window should be shortened.