Articles Tagged With:
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Should Acute Appendicitis Be Managed Without Appendectomy?
A retrospective cohort study that used national insurance claims data found patients with acute appendicitis who were treated nonsurgically had higher rates of complications and higher overall cost of care.
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Is Sanitizer Better Than Soap?
In day care settings, the implementation of hand hygiene programs reduced respiratory illness, absenteeism, and antibiotic use in children 0 to 3 years of age. Using hand sanitizer was more effective than washing with soap and water.
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Nocturia: Does Salt Intake Play a Role?
Researchers suggest that excessive salt intake can contribute to urinary frequency and nocturia.
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Exercise Improves Physical Function in Patients With Knee Osteoarthritis
Tailored exercise therapy can improve physical functioning in patients with knee osteoarthritis and comorbid conditions.
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Limited English Proficiency Associated With Significant Differences in End-of-Life Care
In a retrospective cohort study, patients with limited English proficiency had lower rates of do not resuscitate orders, comfort measures orders, and advance directives; higher rates of receiving certain types of life support; and longer hospital stays compared to their English-speaking counterparts.
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The Mediterranean Diet Keeps the Mind Sharp
Italian seniors who ate a high-quality Mediterranean diet exhibited better cognitive function than those who did not.
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Leadership in the Trenches Helps Hospital Win Awards for Women’s Care
Getting leaders out on the floor, mixing it up with patients and staff, is one of the keys to success at South Nassau Communities Hospital in Oceanside, NY, which has established itself as a tertiary referral center and a standout in the region for women’s healthcare. -
Knowledge Gap Threatens Outcomes, Patient Safety
Hospitals should address physician knowledge gaps to improve quality of care, outcomes, and patient safety, says a surgeon who has searched Google mid-surgery to help a fellow physician determine how to proceed. -
CMS Requiring Price Transparency, Compliance Program
CMS now requires hospitals to post “standard charges” for all hospital inpatient and outpatient services online, but compliance may be a challenge if hospitals are careless about how they post prices. The measure could interfere with efforts to draw in patients who use quality and safety scores to choose their hospitals. -
Documentation in Peer Review Meetings: How Much Is Just Right?
The need for documentation of peer review meeting minutes is clear, but there are two schools of thought on how detailed records should be: general and broad to prevent their being used against participants in future challenges to their decisions, or detailed so that they provide a solid explanation and defense.