Articles Tagged With:
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Proposed HIPAA Change on Reproductive Care Could Be Significant
If finalized, the rule would modify HIPAA to create stricter privacy standards for reproductive healthcare records. Covered entities would need to evaluate their practices surrounding, and interactions with, reproductive healthcare information. That includes creating a process by which they can determine the lawfulness of any reproductive healthcare for which they possess protected health information.
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Behavioral Treatment for Clinicians Now Protected with Rule Changes
Recent changes to the federal Anti-Kickback Statute and Stark Law provide protection to hospitals and health systems seeking to offer mental health, behavioral health improvement, or maintenance programs to physicians and other clinicians.
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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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Some Informed Consent Claims Do Not Require Expert Testimony to Establish Standard of Care
This case reinforces the importance of comprehensive communication practices and staying up to date on FDA guidelines and warnings for prescribed medications. The ruling could open the door to additional lawsuits for plaintiffs who otherwise would be unable to locate an expert willing to submit an affidavit.
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Direct Oral Anticoagulants vs. Warfarin When Treating Renal Dysfunction
A patient-level meta-analysis of five pivotal trials of direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) vs. warfarin for patients with atrial fibrillation and creatinine clearance levels ranging from normal to 25 mL/min revealed standard-dose DOACs exhibit superior safety and efficacy compared to adjusted-dose warfarin and lower-dose DOACs.
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Patients with COVID-19 on ECMO Therapy Benefit from Early Guided Palliative Care Communication
Patients with severe COVID-19 acute respiratory distress syndrome that require extracorporeal membrane oxygenation support can benefit from implementing palliative care communication early in their treatment course.
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Cultural Sensitivity in End-of-Life Discussions in the Intensive Care Unit
When clinicians treat patients and communicate with families who come from cultures that are different from their own, cultural sensitivity can improve the experience for families.
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Preconception Hepatitis B and Congenital Heart Disease
A new study suggests that both women and men who have had hepatitis B infection prior to conceiving offspring are more likely to give birth to children with congenital heart disease.
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Maternal, Fetal, and Infant Implications of a Positive Syphilis Screening During Pregnancy
Although syphilis screening during pregnancy is effective in identifying maternal syphilis, it is not without consequences. False-positive syphilis testing can result in unwarranted antibiotic therapy; re-screening based on risk is not always consistent, and among pregnant women who truly test positive to syphilis, treatment is not always optimized to prevent congenital syphilis.
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Barriers to Urogynecologic Care
There is a paucity of literature on barriers to urogynecologic care in racial/ethnic minorities. Continued evaluation is needed to better understand the unique barriers to urogynecologic care in these populations.