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  • Medtronic, Genzyme form j-v for cardio disease therapies

    In an agreement that appears to bolster the growing trend toward medical device/biotechnology combination products, device giant Medtronic (Minneapolis, Minnesota) and Genzyme (Cambridge, Massachusetts), a large biotech company that focuses on rare genetic diseases as well as other disorders, have formed a joint venture to accelerate the development of new treatments for some of the most intractable forms of cardiovascular disease.
  • Personnel File

    Angeion (St. Paul, Minnesota) said Richard Jahnke, president and chief executive officer of Angeion and its Medical Graphics subsidiary, plans to retire at the end of the fiscal year on Oct. 31. Jahnke became CEO of Medical Graphics in August 1998 and CEO of Angeion in January 2000 after Angeion acquired Medical Graphics the previous month. The board of directors has selected Rodney Young to succeed Jahnke. Young was most recently president and CEO of LecTec.
  • Product Pipeline

    As part of its ongoing association studies in several cardiovascular indications, Celera Diagnostics (Alameda, California) has presented data linking genetic variations in two genes with increased risk for myocardial infarction (MI), commonly known as heart attack.
  • Full July 1, 2004 Issue in PDF

  • Patient Safety Alert Supplement

  • Use upfront collections to help hospital and patients

    The main reasons Susan Baxley, corporate admitting manager, wanted to work for Adventist Health were because of its mission statement to share Gods love by providing physical, mental, and spiritual healing, and because of its desire to implement best practice registration.
  • Nurses help ED collections and customer service grow

    Cash collections in the emergency department (ED) at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, in Winston-Salem, NC, have almost doubled in the past two years as staff continue to focus on enhancing customer service and gaining buy-in from clinicians.
  • Full July 2004 Issue in PDF

  • OSHA hears plea for annual respirator fit-testing delay

    Fit-testing is still on, but the timing may be off. Hospitals may take as long as a year to implement their annual fit-testing of filtering facepiece respirators used for protection against tuberculosis.
  • Fire group allows alcohol rubs in hospital hallways

    Hand hygiene may get a boost from more widespread use of alcohol-based hand rubs, as the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) voted to permit dispensers in corridors of hospitals.