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  • SDS Accreditation Update: One year to prepare for annual self-assessments

    Same-day surgery managers were apprehensive about periodic performance reviews (PPRs) by the Joint Commission. However, the response has been so positive to the self-evaluation required at the midpoint of an accreditation cycle that the Joint Commission will make the PPR an annual requirement beginning in 2006.
  • Next new hospice product could be palliative care consulting

    Palliative care consulting is much the same as other types of consultations in health care. In general, consultation is a type of service in which one provider seeks the opinion or advice of another provider regarding evaluation or management of a specific problem.
  • One in five terminally ill Americans dies in an ICU

    Although most Americans say they would prefer a low-tech approach to death, the opposite is happening, with more than 20% of terminally ill patients dying in intensive care, according to an article in the March issue of Critical Care Medicine, the journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
  • ‘Cash & Counseling’ leads to more home care

    An evaluation of Arkansas Medicaid Cash & Counseling program, in which enrollees direct their own personal care services, indicates that people in the program are much more likely to receive such services than are those who were eligible for services but had to get them in the usual way.
  • HIPAA Q&A

    Does the HIPAA security rule prohibit transmission of protected health information (PHI) by e-mail? Are health organizations responsible for the protection of unsolicited e-mails sent by patients? If an employee, other than field staff, works out of his or her home, either full-time or part-time (e.g., during maternity leave, on weekends or evenings, or as part of a telecommuting job description), do the HIPAA security regulations apply? If so, how do we ensure compliance?
  • News From the End of Life

    CMS tightens rules for processing claims; Upcoming hospice educational events.
  • Full May 1, 2004 Issue in PDF

  • NIOSH alert: Do more to protect health workers from chemo agents

    Current work practices are not adequate to protect health care workers from chemotherapeutic agents and other dangerous drugs, and hospitals need to be more vigilant in their efforts to prevent exposure, according to a hazard alert from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
  • More chemo protection is needed: Gown, goggle use low

    Nurses who prepare and administer chemotherapy agents in outpatient settings often dont use the proper gloves or other recommended personal protective equipment (PPE), according to a survey of oncology nurses. Furthermore, few nurses who handle chemotherapeutic drugs received health evaluations that included reproductive and cancer evaluation, the survey found.
  • Warning! Handling Hazardous Drugs

    Studies have associated workplace exposures to hazardous drugs with health effects such as skin rashes and adverse reproductive events (including infertility, spontaneous abortions, or congenital malformations) and possibly leukemia and other cancers.