Articles Tagged With:
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Investigators Tackle Antimicrobial Resistance
Researchers suggested that “modified use of antimicrobial agents and public health interventions, coupled with novel antimicrobial strategies, may help mitigate the effect of multidrug-resistant organisms in the future.”
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Antibiotics for Upper Respiratory Infections in Elderly Patients
Physicians who were more likely to prescribe an antibiotic for an acute upper respiratory tract infection included mid- and late-career physicians, physicians trained outside of Canada or the United States, and high-volume physicians.
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New PPI Mortality Data: Is There a Risk?
Are proton pump inhibitors associated with excess risk of mortality? That is the finding of a highly publicized study.
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The Epidemiology of Violence: Knowledge Is Power
As hospital violence has become a national issue and the subject of a possible federal regulation, researchers are showing that interventions using the basic epidemiologic principles of measurement and feedback can reduce unit-level violence by patients against healthcare workers.
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Making the Business Case for Safe Patient Handling
Employee health professionals can convince administration that safe patient handling equipment is a good investment if they show how an increasingly immobile patient population affects the physical health of the worker and the fiscal health of the hospital.
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WHO Ready to Use Ebola Vaccine in Congo
The World Health Organization is poised to begin vaccinating healthcare workers with an experimental new Ebola vaccine, but continues to hold off as an outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo appeared to be dissipating as this report was filed.
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Profiles in Wellness: Tom Jackson Makes a Difference
When an employee reports an injury or illness, the astute employee health professional is well aware that many other life stresses and work pressures may be simmering just beneath the surface.
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AOHP Not in Favor of OSHA Violence Regulation as Proposed
While emphasizing its support for violence prevention programs to protect healthcare workers, one of the nation’s leading occupational health groups says it does not support promulgation of a new standard by OSHA as currently outlined.
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NIOSH Network Provides Local Solutions to a National Problem
The federal Occupational Health Safety Network is expanding exponentially. With the recent addition of two new reporting categories for needlesticks and blood exposures, a national reporting system that touts local interventions is on the horizon.
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The Potential Long-term Payoff of Good Initial Diabetes Control
The results of a recent study encourage clinicians to pursue the best control of type 2 diabetes they can attain without incurring significant adverse events.