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  • Congressional watchdog asked to jump on JCAHO

    Continuing to face withering criticism from diverse corners, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations has now drawn the ire of a powerful member of Congress.
  • Program takes aim at drug-resistant bugs

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) plans to distribute some 10,000 copies of a new training tool designed to assist laboratorians in selecting and using appropriate testing methods to detect antimicrobial-resistant strains of bacteria. The new tool, an interactive CD-ROM-based training course, provides the most extensive compilation of information on antimicrobial-resistance testing available to date.
  • New TB test can be used for baseline HCW testing

    A recently approved tuberculosis test can be used to diagnosis latent TB infection in health care workers without generating false positives due to boosting effects of the traditional TB skin test, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports.
  • Smallpox vaccination handbook available now

  • Pox plan raises concerns for HIV-infected workers

    Confidentiality and testing concerns about HIV-infected health care workers are starting to surface as the government moves ahead with its plan to offer smallpox vaccine to hospital staff. Those with HIV would be at risk of dangerous complications, including potentially fatal progressive vaccinia, if they receive smallpox vaccine.
  • Will ‘dropout fever’ spread? Hospitals opting out of smallpox offer draw fire

    Deciding that the risk of smallpox vaccine outweighs the current benefit of immunization, an increasing number of hospitals are refusing the governments offer to vaccinate key health care workers. Though public health authorities still are expecting widespread compliance, the move has raised concerns that the nonparticipants will undermine bioterrorism preparedness.
  • Bioterrorism Watch Supplement

    Israel reports 4 hospitalized among 18,000 smallpox immunizations; Smallpox Vaccine Alert: Use only three needle sticks for first-time vaccinees; IOM: Set trigger before a vaccine death occurs; How not to run a bioterror immunization campaign
  • Full February 2003 Issue in PDF

  • Journal Review: EDs best way to deliver pneumonia vaccine?

    Pneumococcal vaccination rates in the United States are reported to be 28% to 47%, well below the desired 90% levels, with the result that many patients are denied effective protection against a major cause of morbidity and mortality. This study demonstrates that an ED-based vaccination strategy would protect most patients at risk for pneumococcal bacteremia in an inner-city public hospital, with a best-case scenario showing cost savings.
  • Stem chlamydia spread in teens with screening

    What is your practice when it comes to routinely screening teen-age girls for chlamydia? If you arent performing such testing, you are missing a prime opportunity to reduce the most commonly reported sexually transmitted disease (STD) in the United States.