Articles Tagged With:
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Opioid-induced Nausea and Vomiting
Opioids are highly effective when administered for appropriate indications. Unfortunately, opioid-induced nausea and/or vomiting (OINV) can limit opioid effectiveness. In the immediate postoperative period, OINV can stress wound integrity and prolong hospital stay. In the outpatient setting, some patients are faced with the dilemma of accepting lesser levels of pain control in exchange for less OINV as they consider whether they should decrease their opioid dosing schedule.
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FDA Actions
In this section: The FDA unveils new adverse events dashboard tool, announces intent to hasten generic drug approvals, greenlights a generic drug to treat multiple sclerosis, greenlights biosimilar to treat multiple types of cancers, gives go ahead to leukemia treatment, and approves updated herpes zoster vaccine.
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Possible Adverse Cardiovascular Events Slow Osteoporosis Drug Approval Process
Romosozumab appears to outperform alendronate for fracture prevention in women with osteoporosis, but an increase in cardiovascular adverse events has derailed FDA approval.
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Comparing Two Important Hormone Therapy Treatments
New data from the Women’s Health Initiative may be reassuring for women on postmenopausal hormone therapy. The data show no higher mortality rate with hormone use after long-term follow-up.
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What Is the Appropriate Length of Opioid Prescriptions After Routine Surgeries?
Postsurgical opioid prescriptions often lead to extra pills stored in unsecured locations in homes. This represents a potential source for non-medical opioid use and associated morbidity and mortality for patients and their families.
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Making the Most of a High-deductible Plan Environment
It was just in one summer month, but Bluffton Okatie Surgery Center in Bluffton, SC, logged a cash collection rate of 100.2%.
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For Your Consideration: A Few Interesting FAQs and Answers
Stephen Earnhart answers reader questions on communication, investing, and electronic medical records.
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Surgery Center Finds Success With High-acuity Spine Cases
ASCs that are expanding their services might find that high-acuity spine cases can work well. Some strategies for expanding into spine cases are similar to expanding into total joint cases.
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Follow These Steps for Analysis in Infection Investigations
Because ASCs experience high patient volumes, any lapse in infection control best practices at an ASC can create major problems. The way to prevent a post-surgery infection outbreak is to follow quality improvement steps in surveillance, detection, analysis, and process changes.
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Learn More About Payers to Improve Collections Success
Learning more about the payer market can help surgery centers reduce denials and improve collections.