-
One summer evening, fire ants attacked a 79-year-old nursing home patient resident as she lay in her bed. Because of the severe bites, she developed a staphylococcal infection and and the trauma further exacerbated her dementia.
-
A recently issued report will be a boon to defendants in cerebral palsy malpractice cases, but it wont eliminate this brand of high-dollar cases or create an insurmountable burden for plaintiffs attorneys, experts say.
-
Reader question: Does the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) require that our hospitals medical staff be required to provide on-call physician services 24 hours a day and 365 days a year?
-
I read with interest the article about the study by the Center for Patient Advocacy involving reprocessed single-use devices (SUDs) in the February 2003 issue of Healthcare Risk Management. Included in the article is advice about obtaining informed consent when using these devices. Interesting information, but, there are other perspectives on the issue.
-
For years a woman suffered from an obsessive-compulsive disorder, which she believed would be corrected through psychosurgery. The procedure resulted in complete incapacitation, and she brought suit against the provider.
-
Two severely ill patients in the emergency department of your hospital need admission to the intensive care unit (ICU), but only one bed is available. Who gets admitted first?
-
For many years, institutions involved in training the nations bioscience researchers have spent a great deal of time and money ensuring that their graduates function at the cutting edge of science and technology.
-
For many years, institutions involved in training the nations bioscience researchers have spent a great deal of time and money ensuring that their graduates function at the cutting edge of science and technology.
-
Although all health care institutions and specialties are challenged by simultaneously rising costs and lack of financial resources, the problem is particularly acute in critical care, say experts.
-
In teaching health care providers how to care for patients at the end of life, many institutions forget to teach the providers that they need to care for themselves as well.