Hospital
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ED-based Universal Screening Helps Identify Patients at Risk for Suicide
Can a universal screening approach for suicide be implemented efficiently in a busy emergency setting where taking care of acute problems is the primary focus? Parkland Hospital & Health System in Dallas has demonstrated that it can, and administrators there believe their approach could be adapted for use in other hospital systems.
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JAHF Age-friendly Initiative Showing Results
Hospitals are reporting positive results from a program sponsored by The John A. Hartford Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization in New York City that works to improve conditions for the care of older adults in the healthcare system.
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Want a Case Management Revolution? Here’s How It’s Done
Using a homegrown seven-day case management program, a Florida hospice gives case managers more time to work with patients, improving quality and efficiency of care.
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Here’s How Complex Case Management Can Work
A case management complex care team handles a health system’s most challenging patients by working toward a number of goals, including using a risk stratification tool to triage patients who could benefit the most.
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Complex Care Teams Can Take Case Management to New Levels
Patients with unusually difficult obstacles to transitions can end up with long lengths of stay or too many ED visits and rehospitalizations. A complex care team is one way to solve this problem.
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CHI Goes to Data to Improve Quality and Safety
The nation’s third-largest nonprofit healthcare system realized double-digit improvement in several key quality and safety measures in just 12 months by starting with its data.
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CAUTIs More Expensive Than Previously Thought
Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) generally are thought to cost hospitals about $1,000 each, but new research suggests the actual cost may be much higher.
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Strict Safety Briefings Reduce CAUTIs, CLABSIs, and Falls
Daily safety briefings are not a new concept, of course, but Baptist Memorial Hospital-Memphis (TN), a flagship hospital for Baptist Memorial Healthcare System, found a way to make them particularly effective.
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Avoid ‘Hypothetically’ and Lounge Gossip
People can let their guard down in the doctors’ lounge and chat about what they’ve seen in records or what the peer review committee is considering. That’s a very bad move, says Christopher Metzler, PhD, chief growth officer and CEO of FHWFit, a global healthcare conglomerate in Washington, DC.
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Fair Hearing Process Can Require Outside Help
Exactly when an “investigation” begins under hospital bylaws can be crucial in the peer review process, says John C. Ivins Jr., JD, partner with the Hirschler Fleischer law firm in Richmond, VA.