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If you have ever been to a yard sale, bought something on eBay, or have children, you can negotiate your own managed care contracts. Unless you paid full price for the exercise equipment, didnt actually bid on the eBay product, or let your kids run your home, you are qualified.
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In the fifth annual Knee Arthroscopy with Meniscectomy study performed by the Wilmette, IL-based Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Cares (AAAHC) Institute for Quality Improvement (IQI), all organizations indicated they had standing procedures to prevent wrong-site surgery, and in 60% of the cases, the physician and patient initialed the surgery site.
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A preliminary analysis of data collected on 246,552 breast implant procedures performed in facilities accredited by the American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities (AAAASF) in Gurnee, IL, shows a high level of safety for patients undergoing the procedure in outpatient settings.
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The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has published a notice of proposed rulemaking that changes rules related to investigations of breaches of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
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Terrorists may be behind a recent spate of incidents in which people pose as accreditation surveyors, doctors, or government officials to gain access to hospitals. Experts in hospital security and terrorism say the most likely explanation for these impostors attempts to gain access is they are collecting information for future attacks on health care facilities.
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As medical practitioners mature with experience, many discover that what was taught in medical school — History is the most important part of the patient encounter — is actually true. Yet, taking a history is a practiced skill even for the examiner who speaks the same language as the patient. The problems encountered with taking a history from a patient are compounded exponentially when the examiner and the patient are not skilled in speaking the same language. In this issue, the author explores numerous facets of caring for patients who speak a language other than the physician’s language.
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What-If analysis is a structured brainstorming method of determining what things can go wrong and judging the likelihood and consequences of those situations occurring.
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Would you like a simple way to reduce pain and increase satisfaction of elderly patients? Allow them to sit on reclining chairs instead of gurneys, suggests Scott Wilber, MD, FACEP, director of the emergency medicine research center at Summa Health System in Akron, OH.