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  • 2004 Salary Survey Results: Work environment may hasten nurse retirement

    Work stress and dissatisfaction with the work environment may hasten the retirement of aging nurses, according to a study by the Center for American Nurses, an Austin, TX-based affiliate of the American Nurses Association.
  • CMS and JCAHO quality measures now are the same: Will that save you time?

    Are you tired of dealing with multiple data definitions and similar but differing performance measures? Youve probably wished many times that the quality measures from the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) were identical.
  • Accreditation Field Report: Survey finds problems with nonurgent medications

    A recent four-day Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) survey at United Regional Health Care System in Wichita Falls, TX, was very patient-focused, with direct caregivers much more involved, reports Darlene Adams, RN, MSN, the organizations patient care safety/quality management officer.
  • The Quality-Cost Connection: Incident evaluations aid voluntary reporting

    A high priority has been placed on improving incident reporting as the first step in reducing unintended patient injuries. The incident reporting system in many health care organizations is evolving into one that focuses on near misses, provides incentives for voluntary reporting, ensures confidentiality (not necessarily anonymity), and emphasizes data collection, analysis, and improvement.
  • 2004 Salary Survey Results: Quality role is evolving from number cruncher to leader

    The quality professionals role continues to evolve, with many professionals stepping into leadership and business roles, according to the latest Hospital Peer Review salary survey.
  • Full November 1, 2004 Issue in PDF

  • Abbott enrolls first patient in study of its ZoMaxx DES

    The Abbott Vascular Devices (Redwood City, California) division of Abbott Laboratories (Abbott Park, Illinois) reported in mid-September that it had enrolled the first patient in its ZOMAXX I drug-eluting coronary stent clinical trial. ZOMAXX I is a 400-patient, randomized clinical trial that will be conducted in more than 30 centers in Europe, Australia and New Zealand.
  • Report from Europe

    CoreValve (Paris) will begin a European Phase I clinical trial of its ReValving System at The Heart Center (Seigburg, Germany), having received institutional review board (IRB) approval at that institution. The trial calls for use of the ReValving System to non-surgically replace diseased aortic heart valves in 10 patients who are contraindicated for open-heart surgery. The principal investigator will be Eberhard Grube, MD, chief of cardiology at The Heart Center.
  • Acquisitions

    Automated blood processing systems developer Haemonetics (Braintree, Massachusetts) reported that it has acquired all of the blood conservation technologies assets of Harvest Technologies (Plymouth, Massachusetts), a company that designs products intended to accelerate healing naturally, for roughly $4 million.
  • Business Developments

    Abiomed (Danvers, Massachusetts) last month submitted to the FDA an application for market approval of its AbioCor implantable replacement heart under a Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE). Approval under an HDE would make the AbioCor commercially available to treat a defined subset of not more than 4,000 irreversible end-stage heart failure patients.