Articles Tagged With: Sepsis
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Fewer Delays in Sepsis Treatment via Provider in Triage Model
However, more research is needed to identify which key elements of this process can be reliably replicated using cost-effective resources to balance liabilities and risks.
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New Diagnostic Tools Expected to Revamp Sepsis Care
An expert panel agreed a test is needed to indicate the severity of dysregulated host immune response. Although there was some uncertainty over which patients would benefit most from such a test, the panel agreed the sepsis test should be conducted at triage and produce results in less than 30 minutes.
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Sophisticated Technology Gives Clinicians Head Start on Diagnosing, Treating Sepsis
At Tampa General Hospital, staff have shortened the average length of stay for patients with sepsis and lowered mortality rates. When early recognition and treatment is the goal, the ED plays a critical role in ensuring patients with sepsis are set up for success.
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Early Missed Sepsis Diagnosis Leads to $2 Million Award for Patient
This case highlights the importance of screening patients properly and the compounding risks for nurses, physicians, and hospitals that can result when staff miss a screening.
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Lawsuits, Complaints Detail Medical Terror Some Pregnant Patients Face
Since states like Missouri and Texas rushed to ban abortion, using language that is vague and with narrow exceptions, hospitals and physicians across the South and in other areas with abortion bans are denying health-saving care to pregnant patients in crisis.
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Physicians Anonymously Tell Their Stories in New Study
It is tough to have a uterus in the post-Dobbs United States. The physicians who treat pregnant women are outraged and horrified, according to their anonymous stories in a new report: Care Post-Roe: Documenting cases of poor-quality care since the Dobbs decision.
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Abortion Bans End Standard Pregnancy Care in Large Swaths of the United States
When South Carolina and North Carolina passed abortion bans in May 2023, they were among the last states in the Southeast to end standard pregnancy and abortion care. Standard abortion care for women in most of the South and parts of the Midwest will now be denied to all but a small percentage of people. Those who want or need abortion care a couple of months into pregnancy will need to travel hundreds of miles to a state where abortion care is legal.
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Azithromycin Prophylaxis for the Prevention of Maternal Sepsis or Death in Women Undergoing Vaginal Delivery
A single oral dose of azithromycin dramatically reduced the risk of maternal sepsis or death among women planning vaginal deliveries compared to placebo but had little effect on neonatal sepsis or mortality.
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Pediatric Mental Health Crisis Is ECRI’s Top Safety Concern for 2023
The pediatric mental health crisis is No. 1 on ECRI’s top 10 patient safety concerns for 2023.
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Wash Your Hands to Prevent Patient Deaths
Healthcare workers generally self-report hand hygiene compliance at much higher levels than the observers watching them. In one Japanese study, healthcare workers reported a handwashing average of 77% before touching a patient. Shockingly, the actual compliance tracked by observers was 12%.