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  • Abstract & Commentary: SARS, pandemic flu: Fear, memory, infection control

    The perception of health care risks motivates behaviors in health care workers as well as patients. Several years after the SARS outbreak in China and Hong Kong, Japanese industrial scientists found that health care workers had a high perception of risk for SARS manifest primarily by a desire to avoid patients. At the same time these workers had a low acceptance of risk and felt little personal control.
  • FDA approves rapid tests for MRSA, influenza

    In what could be a boon for infection surveillance and treatment programs, the Food and Drug Administration has approved a new rapid test for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) that can identify the bug in two hours.
  • Stop CR-BSIs at your facility

    Sign up now for AHC Media's upcoming audio conference, The Buck Stops Soon: Prevent CR-BSIs or Pay Up on Thursday, March 26, 2008, from 1 p.m-2:30 p.m. ET.
  • The Joint Commission Update for Infection Control: Joint Commission ups the ante on infection prevention

    The Joint Commission has broadly expanded its emphasis on infection prevention in proposed 2009 patient safety goals that recommend specific strategies to fight a veritable "murderers' row" of health care-associated infections (HAIs).
  • Transitioning patients from clinic to physician-managed care didn't work

    What do you do when your successful hospital-based anticoagulation clinic has more patients than available slots? Detroit Medical Center pharmacist Candice Garwood, PharmD, faced that situation about three years ago and tells Drug Formulary Review she thought she had come up with a workable solutiontransition the most stable patients from the pharmacist-managed clinic to their physicians to continue their anticoagulation care.
  • Caution when starting statins in high-risk patients

    Research at the University of Mississippi Medical Center indicating that statin therapy reduces risk of developing all cerebrovascular events (CVE) and ischemic stroke, but is associated with a nonsignificant increase in risk of hemorrhagic stroke, is not likely to cause a major change in medical practice.
  • Drug Criteria & Outcomes: New FDA Approvals

    FDA recently announced these approvals: Biogen Idec's Tysabri® (natalizumab) has been approved by FDA for treating moderate-to-severe Crohn's disease in patients with evidence of inflammation who have had an inadequate response to or are unable to tolerate conventional Crohn's disease therapies.
  • CDIX program makes alerts more meaningful

    Electronic drug interaction alerts can be useful in preventing harmful drug-drug interactions, but too many clinically insignificant alerts can lead to "alert fatigue" and clinically significant alerts may be overridden.
  • Drug safety lapses at Cedars-Sinai

    The California Department of Public Health says Los Angeles' Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's handling of high-risk drugs placed its pediatric patients in harms way.
  • News Briefs

    FDA cleared for marketing BD Diagnostics' GeneOhm StaphSR assay that uses molecular methods to determine whether a blood sample contains Staphylococcus aureus bacterium. It's the first rapid blood test for the drug-resistant MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus), which can cause deadly infections.