-
Hospital pharmacy directors will have another year of anticipating slow budget growth in drug costs due to the ongoing health care industry trends of focusing on reducing drug utilization, increasing generics, and the slowdown in new drug approvals by the FDA, drug budget experts say.
-
-
Hospital pharmacies might expect a new antibiotic, dalbavancin, to be available soon, since the FDA sent Pfizer Inc. an approvable letter in late December 2007.
-
Most hospital pharmacy directors can only dream of having an integrated computer system in which doctors' prescriptions are automatically translated into a format that makes the pharmacist's job more efficient and easy.
-
There was a "Wow!" moment during a new medication safety education program at a Florida hospital when central materials staff reported they didn't handle any drugs.
-
In light of a hepatitis C virus outbreak that resulted in public health officials advising 40,000 patients to be tested, Dipak Desai, MD, majority owner of the Endoscopy Center of Southern Nevada, issued the following statement on March 10, 2008:
-
Do ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) and other freestanding health care facilities resemble the Wild West when it comes to infection control practices? This appears to be the perception among at least some members of the infection control profession.
-
-
How many times have you thrown up your hands in frustration and said, "Nothing pleases this surgeon! No matter what we do, it is not good enough."
-
As one recent case shows, it is difficult to prevent a nurse or other health care professional under investigation in one state from moving to another state and practicing.