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Risk managers focusing on the risk of suicide should remember that their own physicians also can be at high risk, says Matt Steinkamp, vice president of service delivery at Physician Wellness Services, a company based in Minneapolis that helps employers deal with impaired physicians.
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The phone on your desk can ring with news of a wide variety of events that will make your heart sink and yield trouble for the hospital for months to come, but few can rival being notified that a patient has committed suicide in your emergency department (ED).
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A 30-year-old pregnant woman presented to a hospital ER complaining of abdominal pain at a level of 10 out of 10. The woman was seen by an ER physician who diagnosed the woman as having a partial bowel obstruction. No further testing or procedures were immediately ordered, and the ER physician communicated to the surgeon that the situation was not serious.
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These are more results from the "Benchmark Study on Patient Data Security Practices," conducted by the Ponemon Institute in Traverse City, MI:
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You may be proud of your hospital's progress towards adopting electronic health records (EHR), but you could be overlooking the additional risks of data security breaches.
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The Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester is conducting a $12 million, multisite study funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health aimed at improving suicide prevention in hospital emergency department (ED) patients.
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Escitalopram for menopausal hot flashes, rifaximin for IBS without constipation, herpes zoster vaccination, antiepileptics drugs and fracture risk, and FDA Actions.
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