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  • Educational initiatives create valuable staff

    This is the second of a two-part series that looks at home health aide retention issues such as training, supervision, and benefits. This month, innovative programs that enhance aide education and tips on improving retention are described.
  • Home health and adult care programs team up

    In 2001, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services changed its definition of homebound to allow Medicare home health patients to attend adult day care without jeopardizing the patients home health coverage. Sylvia Nissenboim, director of adult care and enrichment programs at the St. Louis Red Cross and president of the Missouri Adult Day Care Association, thought she would see more referrals between her adult day program and local home health agencies, but nothing happened. After surveying home health agencies, she discovered a need for education of both industries.
  • Personnel File

    3F Therapeutics (Lake Forest, California/Brussels, Belgium) reported three additions to its senior management team. LeRoy LeNarz III, MD, has been named vice president of clinical affairs.
  • Acquisitions

    Abbott Laboratories (Abbott Park, Illinois) completed the asset purchase of the coronary and peripheral interventional business line of the Jomed Group (Helsingborg, Sweden) for a cash purchase price of EUR 60 million.
  • Report from Europe

    German news media reported last month that the center-left government headed by Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and the conservative Christian Democrat opposition had reached agreement on a wide-ranging plan to cut healthcare costs in the country that currently are said to be among the highest in the world. The agreement apparently paves the way for the legislative approvals needed to start implementing the reforms as of Jan. 1 of next year.
  • From the Lab

    The most striking and deadly example of thrombotic disease is atherosclerosis, in which unwanted clots build up in the coronary arteries that nourish the heart. Also, a clot fragment in a leg can break loose and hitchhike via the bloodstream until it lodges in a lung.
  • Guidant, Medtronic report cardiac stent development gains

    Two powerhouse medical device companies reported significant developments in their cardiovascular stent programs in mid-July, with an emphasis on new, lighter materials. Guidant (Indianapolis, Indiana) gained U.S. approval for a significant new stent and Medtronic (Minneapolis, Minnesota) said it has begun a second trial for its Endeavor drug-eluting stent platform.
  • Robust growth is forecast for endovascular repair of AAAs

    An abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a balloon-like enlargement of the aorta, a vessel one-inch (2.5 cm) in diameter that is the largest blood vessel in the body, supplying blood to most organs. An enlarged aorta is considered to be an aneurysm when it expands to 150% of its normal size. On average, an AAA grows about 10% per year or 0.5 cm per year in larger aneurysms (over 6 cms).
  • Full August 1, 2003 Issue in PDF

  • Product Pipeline

    Continuing its rapid pace of product approvals, Guidant (Indianapolis, Indiana) last month received the FDA's okay for the newest iteration of its cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillator (CRT-D) the Contak Renewal 3 system.