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  • Bioterrorism program may harm public trust

    Public health officials should carefully evaluate the reasons for low rates of participation of health care workers in Phase 1 of the federal Smallpox Preparedness Plan before expanding the vaccination campaign if they hope to preserve the publics trust in vaccination campaigns as a viable public health measure, a group of ethicists from the University of Pennsylvania warn.
  • AHA releases guidelines on fair billing and collection

    On Dec. 17, the American Hospital Association (AHA) announced it would provide guidelines for hospitals on billing and collection practices to ensure that poor patients and patients who lack health insurance are treated in a fair-and-balanced manner.
  • Full February 2004 Issue in PDF

  • Regional offices have autonomy, consistency

    The regional offices of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas each have their own identity but they follow consistent policies and procedures based on URAC standards for the companys case management program.
  • NICU case management pays off for health plan

    A case management program dedicated to infants in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) has saved Blue Shield of California an average of four days length of stay off each NICU admission, saving the health plan about $3,500 a day.
  • Case study of an infant needing complex care

    On July 5, 2002, Baby A was born at a term gestation of 38 week by emergency cesarean due to prolonged decelerations. The infant had Apgar scores of 0/0/0 at 1/5/10 minutes, respectively, and a poor score of 4, 20 minutes after birth.
  • Positive news: Culture results a matter of time

    Diagnosing potentially deadly central venous catheterrelated bloodstream infections may be difficult, but the authors found that a lot of it may be a matter of timing.
  • ICPs have skills to expand job; do they have resources?

    Infection control professionals have the expertise to handle a rapidly expanding job definition, but must have the resources and staff to accomplish the new demands on the profession, a leading ICP recently said in Chicago at a conference held by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.
  • JCAHO cites collaboration, adequate resources for 2005

    New infection control standards by the Joint Commission describe a widely supported and collaborative program that represents one of a hospitals top priorities. Highlights of the 2005 standards, which are effective next Jan. 1, include this statement in the overview:
  • Between the unknown and the uninformed

    Amid increasing sensational press exposés and consumer advocates demanding release of hospital infection rates, comes this cold truth from a leading public health official: Health care-associated infections are fraught with so many variables that epidemiologists dont really know how many occur and how many can be prevented.