Articles Tagged With:
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Plaintiff Challenges Hospital Policy on Radiology
A recent malpractice case in North Carolina illustrates how plaintiffs may challenge the validity of a hospital’s standard of care for a particular situation.
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Policies Must Be Consistent With Standard of Care, but Fluid Also
The standard of care is at the heart of most malpractice allegations, but often disputed. Internal policies and procedures must allow clinicians to follow the standard of care.
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Neuroimmunology and Movement Disorders: When Should We Test for Autoantibodies?
Autoantibody-associated neurological disorders can mimic neurodegenerative and other movement disorders, but are likely under-diagnosed, resulting in missed treatment opportunities. This review is a “must read” for all neurologists.
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Lifestyle Approaches to Prevent and Manage Cognitive Impairment
Despite billions of dollars in research and nearly 200 medications tested for dementia, pharmacologic treatment for Alzheimer’s disease is severely limited in effectiveness and safety. With the disappointing benefits of drug treatment, the promise of lifestyle changes to prevent and delay cognitive decline appears hopeful.
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Study: Pain Research Can Harm Participants
Researchers must pay greater attention to the rights of study participants in pain research, concludes a recent paper by the Ethics Committee of the Pain-Omics Group.
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Is It Safe? NIH Ends Moratorium on Enhancing Pandemic Pathogens
"Gain-of-function” research designed to make pathogens deadlier or more transmissible in order to develop treatments and countermeasures has been given a green light by the National Institutes of Health.
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Improve Staff Efficiency, Productivity With These Tips
Staff training that includes a thorough focus on each employee’s job description and expectations, along with staff engagement, can be crucial to improving an IRB office’s workflow and efficiency. Consistency also is key.
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IRBs, Researchers Gain Much by Adding Statistical Reviewer
After an incident involving a protocol modification, the Northwell Health IRB of New Hyde Park, NY, found that the board needed certain expertise that it had been lacking.
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Identifying Key Personality Traits Affected by Parkinson’s Disease, Deep Brain Stimulation
Parkinson’s disease and deep brain stimulation procedures sometimes used to treat it can alter personality, including key traits that make a person, in essence, who they are. While many patients and families report positive changes, there is a need to better identify exactly what personality characteristics may be affected and to what degree personality is altered.
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Preparing for the Transition to a Single IRB Policy
One of the more sweeping changes in the revised Common Rule is the single IRB policy. However, there will be exceptions to this requirement when the regulations become effective, and there has been some confusion about the difference between a single and a “common” IRB.