Articles Tagged With:
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Differences Between Older and Younger Adults with Viral Respiratory Infections
A prospective study of acute respiratory illness was conducted between 2009 and 2013. Coronavirus and rhinovirus/enterovirus were the most common viral pathogens. Among patients older than age 60 with chronic lung and heart disease (vs healthy adults 18-40 years old), dyspnea, more prolonged illness, and treatment with prednisone and antibiotics were more commonly seen. Myalgia was more common in younger patients.
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Azithromycin to Prevent Asthma Exacerbations?
Azithromycin helped prevent progression from upper airway infection to wheezing in a select group of preschool-age children. Further studies are needed before considering widespread use of azithromycin for young children with “colds.”
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Hospital-acquired Infections and Other Hospital-acquired Conditions — How Are We Doing?
There was a large decrease in the number of total hospital-acquired conditions from 2010-2014, but with no improvement from 2013-2014. While there were decreases in hospital-acquired infections, much further improvement is needed.
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Jobs outlook improving in healthcare industry
The healthcare economy is improving enough that healthcare professionals are reporting significantly more confidence in their careers, and risk managers might have reason to feel confident in their futures.
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Incomes on the rise after being flat for six years
Incomes in healthcare risk management are inching upward after six years of stagnation. The jump isn’t much, but at least the trend is in the right direction.
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Risks increasing, but risk managers are losing traction in hospitals
At a time when the risks to hospitals and health systems are on the increase, some healthcare risk managers feel as though they are being pushed to the sidelines and their responsibilities delegated among other hospital administrators, says Leilani Kicklighter, a patient safety and risk management consultant with The Kicklighter Group in Tamarac, FL, and a past president of the American Society for Healthcare Risk Management in Chicago.
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Risks increasing, but risk managers are losing traction in hospitals
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ED Push - December 2015 Second Issue
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Echo Diagnosis of Left Ventricular Non-compaction
The echocardiographic diagnosis of left ventricular non-compaction is difficult, and experienced readers disagree frequently. Careful attention to suggested criteria and the use of other imaging modalities in difficult cases resolves most diagnostic disagreements.
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FAME Data Shows Durability of Fractional Flow Reserve Strategy at 5 Years
The 5-year results of the FAME study did not show any late catch up in major adverse cardiac events in the fractional flow reserve-guided group, supporting the long-term safety of the fractional flow reserve-guided approach to percutaneous coronary interventions.