Skip to main content

Articles Tagged With:

  • Injury Claims, Accident Inquiries: ‘Freeze the Facts’

    Occasionally, occupational health professionals can be involved in a legal case when there is some dispute over an employee’s injury, workers’ compensation, or a monetary settlement. From a legal perspective, “freezing the facts” as soon as possible will pay off as the case moves forward.

  • Employee Health Q&A on Current Challenges

    In this Q&A, Olga Hays, interim manager of employee well-being at Sharp Healthcare in San Diego, spoke to Hospital Employee Health about wellness programs and other challenges in employee health.

  • SCOTUS Race Ruling: Nurses, Physicians Appalled

    The nation’s leading nursing and physician groups blasted the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that eliminates race as a factor in college and medical school admissions.

  • With No Annual HCW Screening, Treatment of Latent TB Imperative

    The CDC dropped its labor-intensive recommendation for annual routine screening of healthcare workers for tuberculosis (TB) in 2019. However, there are multiple TB issues with which occupational health departments must contend. These include post-hire pre-placement testing, treating latent TB that could activate later in life, identifying and following up on worker exposures, and the threat of multidrug-resistant strains.

  • How a Decision Aid on Permanent Contraception Counseling Works

    My Decision/Mi Decisión, a web-based decision aid for permanent contraception decision-making, can be used in a variety of settings, including family planning clinics, health departments, hospitals, and OB/GYN offices.

  • New Web-Based Decision Aid Can Help with Permanent Contraception

    The most commonly used contraceptive method, tubal sterilization, is on the rise. Requests for the procedure have increased since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Increased demand suggests the need for comprehensive counseling on sterilization procedures, as well as alternatives. Clinicians could benefit from offering a patient-centered decision aid that educates people about permanent contraception.

  • Patients Want 12 Months of Birth Control, But Most Do Not Receive It

    A 12-month supply of birth control pills could be a huge benefit to many people, particularly those who live in areas where it is difficult to see prescribers and pick up prescriptions. It could help people stay on the contraceptive of their choice and reduce discontinuation rates.

  • Forensic Nurses Need Facts on Emergency Contraception

    Forensic nurses, who work with victims of violence, hold a fair amount of misinformation about how emergency contraception works, according to new research.

  • Reproductive Health Clinicians Can Improve Access to Emergency Contraception

    More people are buying emergency contraception, but they face barriers related to misinformation, pharmacy stocking issues, pharmacy staff’s lack of knowledge, and challenges in obtaining prescription EC.

  • Tachycardia in the Emergency Department: Part I

    This issue is the first of a two-part discussion of tachycardia, the most common rhythm abnormality seen in the emergency department. Part I will discuss the epidemiology, etiology, and characteristics of the different tachycardic arrhythmias. Part II will discuss conditions affecting other organ systems that can produce tachycardia, then finish by reviewing the assessment and management of these patients. We hope these two issues will be useful to your clinical practice.