Articles Tagged With:
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Robust Data Collection, Careful Review Key to Preventing Disparities
A Boston health system has launched a multimillion dollar program aimed at eliminating disparities and promoting antiracist care.
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Common Factors if Emergency Nurses Are Named in Malpractice Claim
In an analysis of more than 4,600 claims, researchers found 18% of nursing-related malpractice claims involved ED nurses. Treatment and transport delays were top complaints, underscoring the importance of teamwork and structured communication.
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Point Person Dedicated to Nurse, Support Staff Well-Being
Understanding the critical importance of nurse well-being, a Washington, DC-based health system created a new position dedicated to this work.
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Leverage Rounding, Team-Based Interventions to Address Frontline Burnout
A Texas-based health system looks at employee well-being through a quality and safety lens, directly connecting worker well-being to the organization’s efforts to improve patient safety.
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LWBS Patients Pose Risks for EDs Under EMTALA
Solid documentation is the best weapon against accusations a clinician violated the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act and a patient who left the ED without being seen who files a malpractice lawsuit.
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Malpractice Outcome Hinges on ‘Reasonableness’ of Wait Time
To prevail in malpractice litigation involving a leave without being seen patient, the patient must prove the ED’s failure to treat him or her within the time frame of the visit violated the standard of care. Also, the attorney must prove his or her client suffered harm as a result of that violation.
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Unprecedented Strain on EDs Predates COVID-19 Pandemic
The American College of Emergency Physicians and other groups sent a letter to the White House in which they declared the ED boarding problem a “public health emergency.” The groups asked the Biden administration “to convene a summit of stakeholders from across the healthcare system to identify immediate and long-term solutions to this urgent problem.”
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Infectious Disease Alert Updates
Animal Reservoirs for Human Infection; Novel Rat-Derived HEV Infection in Humans; Household Contamination with Monkeypox
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Genital Herpes — No Longer Just HSV-2 as HSV-1 Makes its Move
Viral shedding after a first episode of genital herpes simplex virus type 1, which is gradually replacing herpes simplex virus type 2 as the major cause of genital infection, occurred in 12.1% at weeks 8-12 and decreased to 7.1% at the end of one year.
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Disseminated Infection Due to Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Only 0.24% of patients with gonorrhea had disseminated infection, with septic arthritis occurring in approximately one-half.