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  • HIV Needlestick: Low Risk, High Anxiety

    Worst-case scenario: a healthcare worker experiences a needlestick and is exposed to the blood of an HIV-positive patient. All things considered, there is a less than 1% chance that the healthcare worker will acquire HIV from a known positive needlestick. Despite those odds, many healthcare workers do not feel particularly lucky right after a needlestick.

  • NIOSH Redoubles Emphasis on HCW Mental Health Crisis

    The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health is making good on its promise to restore the battered medical workforce, which is threatening an exodus from the bedside after suffering years of moral injury, belligerent patients, and declining mental health.

  • Using Genetic Testing to Improve Patient Health

    To begin shifting from a reactive to a more proactive approach to healthcare, researchers and providers are taking notice of genetic testing and its benefits in making medical decisions.

  • Motivational Interviewing for Better Patient Care

    Motivational interviewing has been used for decades in substance abuse counseling and is now growing in use in healthcare settings to provide better care for patients and encourage health behavior change. Case managers can use motivational interviewing as a tool to provide patient-centered care that does not come across as judgmental, but rather supports and enhances a person’s motivation to change.

  • Emotional Support Is Important to Caregivers of Children with Emotional-Behavioral Disorders

    Parents raising children with developmental, emotional, or behavioral issues face substantial stress. Researchers studied whether adequate care coordination could improve their ability to cope with the strain, finding that it was very helpful for these families.

  • Lipedema Affects More Patients than Case Managers Realize

    Millions of women live with lipedema, a bilateral loose connective tissue disorder. Too few clinicians diagnose the disease — and too few women know they have it. As case managers work with patients who show signs of lipedema, there could be an opportunity to connect them to their physician for a lipedema evaluation.

  • Communication Tools Can Prevent Medication Errors After Discharge

    A discharge medication communication bundle can help prevent liquid medication errors when caregivers treat children at home after hospital discharge, new research shows. The communication bundle resulted in fewer caregivers making medication errors when compared with a group receiving standard care.

  • Ways to Improve Warm Handoffs and Transitions for Wound Care Patients

    Warm handoffs and better patient/caregiver education on wound care can improve healing when patients are discharged. One way is to ask the patient for permission to take photos of the wound to show caregivers and community providers what it looked like at discharge.

  • Wound Care Patients Receive Inadequate Care Coordination and Follow-Up

    Inadequately preparing patients and caregivers for wound care at home can be costly. Pressure ulcers can cost tens of thousands of dollars a year, per patient. Each patient with this wound needs costly supplies and a special hospital bed. Nurses must turn them every two hours.

  • ‘Safe Harbors’ Can Address ED Providers’ Malpractice Fears

    Many emergency physicians want to follow evidence-based guidelines to reduce unnecessary testing — but worry about liability if they do not order a diagnostic test and a patient sues. The Choosing Wisely campaign, an initiative of the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation, aims to reduce the overuse of potentially harmful tests and procedures.