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  • Death after leaving ED leads to outcry, but was the hospital in the wrong?

    A hospital in Missouri is under fire for having a homeless woman ejected from the emergency department (ED) when she refused to leave; the woman died soon after in police custody from a blood clot. Critics allege the hospital is liable, but others say this might be a case in which the hospital met the standard of care and is not responsible.
  • Enforcement guidance targets background checks

    Healthcare providers using criminal background checks should take notice of enforcement guidance on employer use of arrest and conviction records in employment decisions. Previous arrests and convictions might not be relevant to the current job application, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) says in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, issued in April 2012 by the EEOC.
  • Security improving, but data still vulnerable

    Healthcare providers are addressing data security better than in past years, but the challenge also is growing as electronic health records (EHRs) and mobile devices become more common, according to the "2012 HIMSS Analytics Report: Security of Patient Data."
  • Failure to admit diabetic patient leads to brain damage, $21.4M verdict

    News: A 50-year-old diabetic man was transported to the emergency department (ED) twice in 48 hours after being found unresponsive by family. Each time, he was diagnosed with hypoglycemia, stabilized in the ED, and discharged home. He developed severe hypoglycemia 10 hours after his second hospital discharge, and he suffered brain damage as a result.
  • Hospitals band to reform med mal, cut litigation

    Seven hospitals in Massachusetts have begun a major initiative to improve the medical liability system in the state. The new alliance has launched its effort with the release of a Roadmap to Reform, an alternative approach to medical liability intended to improve patient safety, increase transparency, reduce litigation, and cut costs to the health care system.
  • Background checks useful, but limited

    About 73% of employers conduct criminal background checks on all job candidates, according to a 2010 survey by the Society for Human Resource Management, and another 19% of employers do so only for selected job candidates. They can be particularly important in healthcare when a job applicant must be trusted with vulnerable patients and data, but experts caution that background checks have limitations.
  • Compliance Corner: Complaints or just seeking answers?

    Human research protection programs (HRPPs) often must balance the need to handle research complaints with the goal of conducting fair and reasonable investigations into any potential problem. HRPPs also must use staff time efficiently and not get bogged down in disputes that clearly are not pertinent to protecting research subjects, an expert says.
  • Consent is a major focus of commission's report

    Whole genome sequencing research raises important informed consent issues for IRBs and investigators, and the recent report by the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues (PCSBI) addresses these in its recommendations.
  • Speaker: Greater diversity needed in clinical trials

    More subject diversity is needed in clinical trials to reduce the risk of adverse outcomes, according to the keynote speaker at the Clinical Trials in Georgia conference.
  • Tips for handling study complaints

    Research institutions should make their complaint process as accessible as possible to researchers, participants, and others, an expert says.