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  • Electronic databases can find trends more easily

    A well-conceived electronic database can make it possible for a quality improvement (QI) department to quickly identify and act on noncompliance trends.
  • Strike fine balance when placing ads to recruit research subjects

    Research investigators need to find a balance between giving enough information about potential subjects in study advertisements to giving too little information and being inundated with unnecessary calls.
  • Our Q&A with new AIDS United CEO

    AIDS Alert asked Mark Ishaug, president and chief executive officer of the newly-formed AIDS United of Washington, DC, to discuss why the National AIDS Fund and the national policy advocacy group AIDS Action merged and what this will mean for people living with HIV/AIDS and the clinicians providing their care. His answers are presented below in a question-and-answer (Q&A) format.
  • Protect & Respect helps HIV+ women with condoms

    A new model HIV/AIDS prevention program uses a group skills-building and peer-group led model to build on HIV clinicians' risk reduction messages to disadvantaged women who are HIV positive.
  • HIV prevention efforts mired in patient denial, physician discomfort

    New research shows that despite nearly three decades of safe sex and clean needle messages and HIV prevention work, a large proportion of people at risk for HIV infection continue to engage in high-risk behaviors.
  • Acupuncture helps cancer treatment

    Recent studies have shown that acupuncture can help control several symptoms and side effects such as pain, fatigue, dry mouth, nausea, and vomiting associated with a variety of cancers and their treatments.
  • Study shows hospice accessible

    Researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine have found that 98% of the U.S. population lives in communities within 60 minutes of a hospice provider, which suggests that disparities in use of hospice are not likely due to a lack of access to a hospice provider.
  • Some EOL care is not adequate

    Shortness of breath in terminally ill patients is often managed poorly, says Mark Rosenberg, DO, MBA, FACEP, chairman of emergency medicine at St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center in Paterson, NJ, and co-creator of its new Life-Sustaining Management and Alternative (LSMA) program.
  • Case shows hospital met patient's request

    A recent case in the ED at St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center in Paterson, NJ, shows the value of its new Life-Sustaining Management and Alternative (LSMA) services, says Mark Rosenberg, DO, MBA, FACEP, chairman of emergency medicine and co-creator of the program.
  • ED program targets end-of-life patients

    An emergency department (ED) program designed to serve the terminally ill? It makes perfect sense to Mark Rosenberg, DO, MBA, FACEP, chairman of emergency medicine at St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center in Paterson, NJ. So much so, in fact, that his department recently introduced Life-Sustaining Management and Alternative (LSMA) services. The program is designed to provide comfort, control, and choices for chronic and terminally ill patients and their loved ones.