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The finalized 2005 National Patient Safety Goals of the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) bore a close resemblance to the proposed goals announced earlier, with one notable exception: The elimination of the bar-coding requirement.
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As of Jan. 1, 2005, hospitals will be paying an estimated $2700 more in average triennial survey fees. This is due to the need to make further investments in the new accreditation process that was introduced this year, according to the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO).
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Arranging care for uninsured and underinsured patients has become more complicated in the past four or five years, says Jennifer DeCamp , MSW, LSW, a social worker at Swedish Covenant Hospital in Chicago.
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When it comes to oral contraceptives (OCs), when should pills be prescribed, and when should they be withheld? Respondents to the 2004 Contraceptive Technology Update Contraception Survey take a cautious approach when it comes to providing pills for older women who smoke.
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The evaluation of a febrile child is an extremely common scenario in most emergency departments. Emergency physicians must decide which children require a work-up, the nature of that work-up, and the need for antibiotics with or without hospitalization. This process often is in the context of evaluating many febrile children, with only subtle clues as to which child truly may be ill. Unfortunately, it is common for inadvertent errors in judgment to end up in the courtroom as a subject of malpractice lawsuits. This months issue focuses on some of the risks and controversies in the evaluation of the febrile child.
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The great majority of typhoid fever cases diagnosed in the United States occur in patients who have visited friends and relatives overseas, especially travelers returning from South-central and Southeast Asia, including short-term travelers. Among other precautions, typhoid fever vaccine should be recommended to these high-risk travelers.