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Old habits in antibiotic prescribing add nothing to patient safety and health, while costing hospitals thousands of dollars each year, according to recent research involving health care-associated pneumonia (HCAP) and ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP).
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Hospital pharmacies continually search for ways to improve quality, safety, and develop best practices. But they might not be going about this as efficiently and effectively as they can.
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Hospitals that have pain management teams with pharmacists on board benefit from having a medication specialist help improve safety and improve patient outcomes, experts say.
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Hospitals need a pharmacist who specializes in pain management on board, although this model hasn't taken off as a trend as quickly as many experts in the field believe it should.
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Most hospitals, large and small, have medication dispensing cabinets. But the question is: Are you using these devices to maximize their safety potential?
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Investigators have found that patients who are admitted to hospitals with heart failure as a secondary diagnosis often had a worse prognosis than those for whom heart failure was the primary diagnosis.
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Clinical pharmacists have many skills that would be of great use on hospital pain management teams, including conducting thorough medication histories and doing medication reconciliation.
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Hospitals could improve the overall care of patients who are admitted for surgery, palliative care, or for diseases that result in chronic pain if they employ a pharmacist to assist with medication utilization and develop defined medication plans for the more complex cases, an expert suggests.
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