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The Joint Commission (TJC) says it is teaming up with top hospitals and health systems across the United States to use new methods to find the causes of and put a stop to dangerous and potentially deadly breakdowns in patient care.
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"We contend that the proposition that brain death constitutes death of the human being is incoherent and, therefore, not credible."
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The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued its guidance on the use of antiviral drugs for pandemic influenza in December 2008, suggesting that health care workers and emergency services personnel who could have direct contact with individuals who are ill during a pandemic should be protected.
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IRBs have an important role to play in improving community involvement in cancer clinical trials everything from increasing their own community membership to working with community advisory boards and pushing for more community-friendly informed consent.
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Recently released data reflecting 2007 usage of hospice indicates that 38.8% of all deaths in the United States were under the care of hospice, up from 35% the previous year.
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The National Association of Social Workers (NASW) and the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO) have created the advanced certified hospice and palliative social worker credential (ACHP-SW).
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(Editor's note: Medical Ethics Advisor will run monthly items on what leads people to become involved in their hospital ethics committee and/or choose to enter the profession of bioethics.)
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Over the past decade, several large-scale disasters have tested emergency response teams and health care providers. They've also tested the research community's ability to quickly, efficiently, and ethically dispatch investigators to do vital research that could help prevent and respond to future disasters.
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More meaningfully involving communities especially minorities and other ethnic groups in clinical research isn't just good ethics it could help address underrecruitment and failure of cancer clinical trials, says one of the authors of a new report on the subject.
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Change is never easy, but the toughest type of change is behavior or culture change within a hospice, says Susan Levitt, executive director of CNS Home Health and Hospice in Carol Stream, IL.