Same-Day Surgery – April 1, 2008
April 1, 2008
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Be prepared: Some payers are taking hard-core stance with their rates
At a time when surgery centers are facing Medicare changes and proposed freezes that are causing a seemingly endless financial struggle, a standoff that developed between a private payer and a surgery center chain in Ohio is causing some centers to call foul. -
CDC: Hepatitis C outbreak at surgery center isn't isolated
Improper infection control practices at a surgery center in Las Vegas that led to a hepatitis C outbreak, plus the nation's largest number of patient contacts 40,000 for blood exposure, may be replicated at other health care facilities across the country, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). -
NY attorney general plans to sue payers
Andrew Cuomo, the New York state attorney general, is going to sue UnitedHealth Group and four of its subsidiaries, including Ingenix, on allegations that they defrauding consumers by manipulating reimbursement rates, according to the American Hospital Association (AHA). -
To survive payment cuts, reduce overhead
Regardless of the specifics of an individual contract, outpatient surgery providers are facing decreased reimbursement overall, says Anne Dean Schilling, RN, BSN, consultant with The ADA Group in DeLand, FL. This reduction means you need to reduce overhead, she says. -
Grocery store technology finds place in OR
Every year in the United States, about 1,500 people have surgical items accidentally left inside them following a surgical procedure.1 About two-thirds of these items are sponges, which can lead to pain, infection, difficulty healing, and additional surgeries. -
Outreach emphasizes infection control basics
Basic infection control practices are being reviewed in light of six cases of hepatitis C that have been linked with a surgery center in Las Vegas that reportedly reused syringes, with new needles, and reused single-dose vials. -
Surgeon involvement generates financial rewards
I'm following up on my last column in which I urged surgical programs to include surgeons in decision-making processes to help hospitals and surgery centers alike function better and become more cost-efficient. Talk is cheap, so here are some real-life examples: -
What is the impact of med-tech on the economy?
The impact of medical devices on the cost of health care was one of the topics addressed at this year's National Health Policy Conference, but, typical for such gatherings, no answers were clearly established. -
SDS Accreditation Update: Are your physicians in your program familiar with emergency protocols?
The accreditation survey was going well when the surveyor turned to the medical director and asked, "What would you do if the surgery center received a bomb threat or if a fire broke out right now?" -
SDS Accreditation Update: Near-miss reports provide valuable information
Identification and reduction of potential adverse events and patient safety risks are required by all accreditation organizations, but not all outpatient managers look at using information from near misses to develop performance improvement projects to address risks. -
SDS Accreditation Update: Escort now ensures correct patient ID
It wasn't a surgical procedure that almost tripped up the staff at Blue Ridge Surgery Center. It was a pain procedure, says Suzanne L. Broome, RN, director of the Seneca, SC, facility. -
Patient Safety Alert Supplement