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In a move that emergency medicine experts hope will provide at least partial relief to the call coverage challenge, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has proposed a new regulation that would allow hospitals to establish community call arrangements at a regional level to satisfy their Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) on-call physician requirements.
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Just because surveys by The Joint Commission are no longer announced, it doesn't mean you can't prepare for them, say ED experts.
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After years of lobbying by emergency medicine groups and a summit last fall to take a closer look at the issue, a significant change has been made in the National Patient Safety Goal concerning medication reconciliation for 2009. ED managers welcome the change.
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When The Joint Commission announced its National Patient Safety Goals for 2009, it became clear that the recent interest in hospital-acquired infections (HAIs) has only intensified.
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In The Joint Commission's revised standards, rationales and elements of performance for 2009, which will take effect on Jan. 1, 2009, the emergency management standards have, for the first time, been placed in their own chapter.
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Increasing numbers of EDs are implementing electronic medical records (EMRs), including computerized physician order entry (CPOE), with the goal of improving patient safety. However, not much is known about the liability risks of these new tools.
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The ED physician has some liability to care for these tremendously ill patients, "and you are doing so in a unit that is not really designed for ICU patients," says Robert Shesser, MD, professor and chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine at George Washington University Medical Center in Washington, DC.
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When you are faced with more patients than resources, and a lawsuit results, one possible defense argument that would encompass the hospital and the emergency physician is that everyone did everything that could be reasonably expected under bad circumstances.
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Crowding is increasingly becoming a factor in litigation involving ED care and is putting nurses and physicians at increased risk for being named in a lawsuit.