Articles Tagged With:
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Study: Clinical trial site violations not reported in peer-reviewed literature
A study published in JAMA Internal Medicine in February found that serious violations of good clinical practice discovered by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) at clinical trial sites are not mentioned in peer-reviewed publications in which the trial results are published.
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Here’s what a certification study group program looks like
The only thing better than forming an in-house IRB certification study group is forming a multi-institutional IRB certification group, according to a pair of IRB managers who found good results with their three-institution CIP study group.
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Certification testing can be more successful, less stressful with study group method
As IRB professionals increasingly invest in their careers and seek certification, they sometimes find that taking the certification test can be stressful and all-consuming.
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Single IRB NIH guidance may leave more questions than answers
In December 2014, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) released draft guidance detailing its support and expectations for the use of a single IRB for multisite NIH-funded studies. But for many in the IRB community, the guidance raised more questions than answers.
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Study relates slowing cost boost to quality site
While there is debate about whether publicly reporting quality data has an impact on how the public purchases healthcare or even on patient outcomes — despite showing improving metrics — there is now evidence that it is having an impact on the cost of at least two procedures.
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Breaking bad habits, forming good ones
It is been a dozen years since Rekha Murthy, MD, FRCP(C), FACP, FIDSA, FSHEA, medical director for the epidemiology department at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles, really started working hard to make good hand hygiene a habit for everyone at the hospital. In the intervening years, the hospital has gone from having hand-washing rates in the 70s to consistently over 95%.
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Why are your surgical patients coming back?
A study out in the February 3 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association found that patients who are readmitted to the hospital after surgery are almost always coming back due to post-discharge complications rather than something that happened during their care in the hospital.
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10 tech issues to consider, according to ECRI
When the Ebola outbreak hit the news last summer, the experts at ECRI Institute, a Pennsylvania-based patient safety organization and recently re-designated Evidence Based Practice Center, were already thinking about how to protect patients from infection.
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It is time to start walking the talk of transparency, experts say
The first reports of hospitals talking to patients about mistakes brought gasps and headshakes through the healthcare world.
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Further Reading on Diagnostic Errors