Articles Tagged With:
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Money-back guarantee aimed at patient satisfaction
In the retail world, a money-back guarantee is offered as proof of quality and a dedication to customer service. Why can’t the same reasoning be applied to healthcare?
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Health system screens all patients for suicide risk
In what appears to be a first for a health system, Parkland Health & Hospital System in Dallas recently implemented suicide screenings for all patients.
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Meaningful Use and Measuring Quality
Here's how one health system found effective meaningful use strategies to accurately measure and improve quality.
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Fear and Loathing in Pill Mill Country
In a race against time, how will America save itself from its prescription pill demons?
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Prescient Warning Symptoms: A New Target for Sudden Cardiac Death Prevention
Typical cardiac symptoms frequently precede sudden cardiac arrest and are frequently unheeded, but when acted on are associated with decreased mortality.
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Five-year EVEREST II Results Allay Long-term Safety and Durability Concerns About MitraClip
Although MitraClip patients had higher rates of re-operation in the first year, adverse event rates in the 1- to 5-year range were reassuringly low and were comparable with surgery.
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Selecting Patients for Statin Primary Prevention
The new vascular disease risk calculator discriminates who will experience a vascular event in the near future better than using a trial entry criteria approach or a hybrid approach.
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Blood Transfusion in Cardiac Disease Patients
In patients admitted to the ICU with comorbid cardiac disease, the hemoglobin level below which transfusion was associated with lower hospital mortality was < 8-9 g/dL and < 9-10 g/dL if the admitting diagnosis was acute myocardial infarction.
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Is Sodium Restriction Detrimental in Chronic Heart Failure?
Dietary sodium restriction may have a detrimental effect on outcome in patients with symptomatic chronic heart failure. They stress that a randomized clinical trial is warranted to resolve the issue.
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Optimal Antiplatelet Therapy for Secondary Prevention of Ischemic Stroke
This study strongly suggests that compared with maintaining patients on aspirin alone, switching to a different antiplatelet agent, or adding a second antiplatelet agent to aspirin may be better in preventing subsequent vascular events in patients who experienced a new ischemic stroke while taking aspirin.