Articles Tagged With:
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Mass Flu Vaccinations Serve as Emergency Drills
Infection preventionists may one day be faced with a pandemic flu or the release of a bioterrorism agent that calls for mass vaccinations or post-exposure prophylaxis of healthcare workers. One novel way to prepare now is to stage annual flu vaccinations as an emergency drill.
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Human Factors: Drug Stewardship in the Emergency Department
Broadly classified as ergonomics in much of the world, human factors engineering ultimately may lead to changes in practices and behaviors entrenched in healthcare that endanger patients with infections and other harms.
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C. auris: A Bad Bug With a Worst-Case Scenario
Imagine if a common healthcare-associated infection became impossible to treat. The nightmare scenario public health officials are contemplating is that an emerging strain of multidrug-resistant Candida auris will displace treatable strains of Candida, which are already a leading cause of bloodstream infections.
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Murderers’ Row: Resistant to Drugs, Threats to Humans
In a recently published report on antibiotic threats in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention classified pathogens as urgent, serious, concerning, or put them on a “watch list.”
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OHRP Gives IRBs a Break With Single IRB Review Exceptions
The Office for Human Research Protections is making implementation of the revised Common Rule a little easier for IRBs with two exceptions to the single IRB review requirement.
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Antibiotic-Resistant Threats: CDC Report Cites Progress, Peril
A combination of public health, antibiotic stewardship, and infection control efforts over the last six years have managed to beat back the devil of multidrug-resistant bacteria. Yet all still hangs in the balance.
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IRB Chairs Can Run Better Meetings by Following These Tips
The most important way to improve IRB meetings is through preparation. The IRB chair has to have a sense of what is on the agenda, and anticipate an important discussion points, an IRB chair says.
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Study: Research Subjects Might Consent to Records Use, But Want to be Asked
Researchers and IRBs could learn a lot about what research participants want with informed consent and privacy if they ask. One way to find out what research subjects think is called democratic deliberation. Using this technique, researchers found that most patients want someone to ask them before deidentified medical records are used for research.
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Need Researchers to Pay Attention? Try Experimenting With Engaging Content
At one time or another, IRBs have ignored some part of the website content, simply adding new information rather than revamping educational pages and instructions. This can lead to redundancy and waste. A better long-term solution is to replace older educational information for researchers with more engaging content.
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Money Matters: Payment to Research Participants ‘Haphazard’
The authors of a new study on payment to research participants underscored concerns that “undue influence” of higher payments may be overemphasized in compensation to human subjects. They found wide variation of payment practices across studies in the same region and populations, suggesting a “haphazard” approach to compensation for research participation.