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Ebola Outbreak Sustained by Superspreaders
Prior to the epic Ebola outbreak of 2014-2015, the prevailing dogma was that the virus was not a pandemic threat because it killed its victims too quickly to sustain itself in a prolonged outbreak. That myth was certainly exploded, and now we have one clue as to why: “superspreaders.”
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The Joint Commission Will Cite for Powdered Gloves
As previously reported in Hospital Infection Control & Prevention, the FDA has banned1 the use of all powdered gloves in healthcare due to latex allergies and other issues.
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IDSA Issues New Guidelines on Brain Infections
In new guidelines1 on healthcare-associated ventriculitis and meningitis following surgery, the Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) calls for a collaborative approach to prevent and detect complex infections with a high percentage of adverse outcomes for patients.
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Will Vaccine Critics Be Emboldened?
Beneath all the bombast of the current political climate, there is one issue that has gained relatively little national attention but is of great concern to public health advocates – a reenergized attack on vaccine safety. Longtime vaccine safety critic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and actor Robert DeNiro recently offered a $100,000 prize to anyone that can prove vaccines are safe.
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ANA Prepares for Return of Ebola – or Anything Else
It seems like only yesterday — and we can certainly be thankful it wasn’t — that many U.S. hospitals and healthcare workers felt unprepared to deal with a potential incoming case of Ebola linked to the outbreak in Western Africa.
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CDC: Zika Virus Will Hit U.S. Again as Weather Warms
Any hopes that Zika virus would strike and disappear like SARS and other episodic infectious disease outbreaks have been dashed by the CDC. Zika is fully expected be a mosquito-borne infection threat in the U.S. as the warmer months arrive, primarily in the form of a horrific panoply of birth defects to infants born to infected mothers.
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$1.2 Million Awarded in Fatal Injection Case
A patient experienced cardiac arrest following a nerve block injection, resulting in death and a lawsuit from the patient's estate.
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Failure to Diagnose Case Settles for $8 Million
Two facilities failed to diagnose a patient's condition, leading to quadriplegia and an $8 million settlement.
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$5.5 Million Settlement Related to Audit Controls
In a case that highlights the need for proper audit controls, Florida’s Memorial Healthcare System (MHS) has paid the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) $5.5 million to settle potential HIPAA violations.
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Cloud Encryption Not Used Enough in Healthcare
A quarter of healthcare organizations do not use encryption to protect data in the cloud, leaving the electronic protected health information (ePHI) of patients at risk of exposure, according to a recent survey by HyTrust.