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  • Nurse admits stealing body parts, forging papers

    A nurse in Philadelphia has admitted that he removed body parts from 244 corpses and then helped forge the paperwork that would allow those parts to be transplanted.
  • Turning 'green': Howto help the environment

    Although patient care is the No. 1 priority for hospice managers and staff members, a growing number of health care employees are recognizing that their workday activities can affect more than a patient's health — they can affect the environment.
  • Bunnies and bears help children face grief

    "I don't want to go to no stupid funeral." These words uttered by a key character in a puppet show convinced Penne Williams, LCSW, an instructor at University of South Florida at Lakeland, that the puppet show used by LifePath Hospice and Palliative Care in Tampa, FL, is exactly what is needed to help many children handle their grief.
  • Address specifics of patient care up front

    Four years of a program focused on partnerships with long-term care facilities and contracts with 88 different facilities has taught the staff at Hospice Care in Madison, WI, a few tricks on how best to manage multiple relationships in different areas.
  • Medicare issues updates, revisions

    The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has issued a revision to Transmittal 1304 (Change Request 5567) which was titled "Reporting of Additional Data to Describe Services on Hospice Claims."
  • Tips for safe disposal of pharmaceuticals at home

    The following guidelines are recommended by the Drug and Food Administration (FDA) for disposal of medications.
  • Agreements

    Amic; Arbor Surgical Technologies; Medtronic; CV Therapeutics; Medlogics Device; St. Jude Medical; HealthTrust Purchasing Group; Masimo
  • Business developments

    As if a huge debt, a sagging share price, weakened sales and a variety of regulatory problems arent enough, a jury has ordered Boston Scientific (Natick, Massachusetts) to pay $431 million in damages to Dr. Bruce Saffran, a New Jersey radiologist who charged that the medical device maker's drug-eluting stents (DES) infringe a patent that he received in 1997.
  • Acquisitions

    Acacia Research; Acacia Patent Acquisition; Acrongenomics; Molecular Vision; Angiotech Pharmaceuticals; Symphony Medical; Boston Scientific; Getinge Group; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Bristol-Myers Squibb Medical Imaging; Micrus Endovascular; Genesis Medical Interventional; NewCardio; Marine Park Holdings; Synovis Life Technologies; Heraeus Vadnais
  • International report

    England's influential National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has reversed its earlier position opposing use of drug-eluting stents (DES), clearing the way for reimbursement of such interventions in what is estimated to be a $100 million market. If there are no appeals against the draft decision, the final guidance on DES will go into effect in March.