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  • Know the Basics of Medical Malpractice Insurance

    Professional liability insurance is a necessity in the healthcare field, but it often is not fully understood by those who need it the most.

  • Overuse of Travel Nurses Threatens Patient Safety

    New research suggests that relying excessively on travel nurses or nurses working overtime may threaten patient safety. Researchers at the George Washington University and Premier health system looked at this issue, which has received little attention in the past.

  • Telehealth Continues to Pose Liability, Regulatory Concerns

    The use of telehealth boomed during the pandemic and continues to be a popular option for both patients and providers, but legal risks continue.

  • Hospitals Cutting Infection Control Staff, Creating Patient Safety Risks

    The Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology and The Leapfrog Group have joined to express concern about how hospitals are cutting infection control resources and the dire effects that may have on patient safety.

  • Are Rules Really Meant to Be Broken?

    Risk managers spend a lot of time and effort promoting policies and procedures meant to improve patient safety and protect the organization from liability. But is there ever a time to condone breaking those rules?

  • Gender-Affirming Care Caught in Legal Gray Area, Liability Possible

    Healthcare organizations providing gender-affirming care — which may be defined broadly — could face consequences if they do not conform with recently imposed federal restrictions. Understanding the changes and how they affect clinical treatment is key to avoiding potentially serious regulatory violations and other liability.

  • Plasma Exchange for Relapses in MOGAD

    In this multicenter, international study of a cohort of patients with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease (MOGAD), the authors examined the effectiveness of plasma exchange for acute relapses and reported favorable disability outcomes but found that advanced age and delayed initiation of the treatment reduced its benefit.

  • Potential Benefit of Glyburide in Moderate-Volume Acute Ischemic Stroke

    An exploratory analysis of the CHARM trial suggests intravenous glyburide may improve outcomes in large hemispheric stroke patients with infarct volumes < 125 mL, particularly alongside thrombectomy, reducing edema, mortality, and the need for decompressive surgery, and highlighting a potential neuroprotective role.

  • Repeated Head Impacts Are Associated with Tau Astrogliopathy

    This study demonstrates that both traumatic brain injury and participation in contact sports are independently associated with increased tau astrogliopathy, particularly thorn-shaped astrocytes, even when cases of chronic traumatic encephalopathy neuropathologic change are excluded.

  • Intracranial EEG Activity and Consciousness in Frontal Lobe Seizures

    Frontal seizures were classified as focal preserved consciousness (FPC), focal impaired consciousness (FIC), or focal to bilateral tonic-clonic (FBTC). Intracranial electroencephalogram (icEEG) recording was analyzed in those seizures. FPC seizures showed significant icEEG power increases in the seizure-onset region across frequency ranges, with smaller increases in other regions. FIC seizures demonstrated a significant increase in icEEG power not only within the seizure-onset zone but also across distal cortical regions. Widespread power increases also were noted in FBTC seizures. In addition, the power increase in FBTC is much greater compared to FIC seizures.