Articles Tagged With:
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Is a Dabigatran Reversal Agent Effective?
A pragmatic clinical study of idarucizumab for counteracting the effects of the oral anticoagulant dabigatran showed rapid and complete reversal of its effects in patients with major bleeding or urgent surgery, without any adverse safety concerns.
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RE-DUAL Deals Another Blow to Triple Therapy
In this trial of post-percutaneous coronary intervention patients with atrial fibrillation, dual antithrombotic therapy with dabigatran and a P2Y12 inhibitor showed lower rates of bleeding but similar ischemic and thrombotic outcomes compared to a triple therapy regimen with warfarin.
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Study: Readmissions More Common After Observation Stays
Patients often are readmitted to the hospital after an observation stay, according to recent research which suggests hospitals may want to target this population.
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Program Offers Psychological First Aid, Support to HCWs Following Traumatic Events
When an adverse outcome occurs, support rightfully flows to the affected patients and families. However, the clinicians involved with such cases often suffer, too, and the resulting stress and anguish can lead to decreased productivity, time away from work, depression, and other serious mental health effects.
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Expert: Health Systems Should Emphasize Value-based Care Management
Since health insurers first developed case management programs in the 1980s, the marketplace for case management has evolved and changed across the continuum of care, with one possible exception: hospital settings.
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Recent CMS Payment Model Cancellations Could Affect Case Management
Case management programs could see some effects from the recent canceling of advanced care coordination through episode payment by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
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Case Management Program Cuts Heart Failure Readmissions in Half
A case management program targeted health improvements among congestive heart failure patients and succeeded in cutting readmission rates to half the national average.
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Angiotensin II Raises Blood Pressure in Patients with Vasodilatory Shock
Infusion of recombinant angiotensin II improved blood pressure control in patients with vasodilatory shock already receiving conventional vasopressors.
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Spontaneous Breathing Trials and Occam’s Razor
Different ventilator modes used for a spontaneous breathing trial affected a patient’s work of breathing (WOB) variously and differed regarding WOB measured after extubation. The clinical relevance of these differences is uncertain.
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Intensive Care Enteral Nutrition in 2017
Enteral nutrition, defined as any method of feeding that uses the gastrointestinal (GI) tract (including oral feeding), usually refers to the delivery of nourishment to the GI tract through a tube. Nutrition is of utmost importance for patients suffering from a critical illness, and EN is a mainstay of nutrition in the ICU. Malnutrition and nutritional risk are common in patients admitted to the ICU. The presence of critical illness causes the body to enter a catabolic state, putting patients at risk of development or worsening of malnutrition. The Society of Critical Care Medicine and the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition have published and revised joint guidelines to offer evidence-based recommendations for how best to feed critically ill patients.