Same-Day Surgery – June 1, 2006
June 1, 2006
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When you go through an unannounced survey, will you sink or soar?
Since the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations launched its unannounced surveys in January, more than 1,370 organizations have gone through the new process. -
You can't bluff your way through patient tracers
Don't think that your staff can fake their way through answers during the patient tracer section of an unannounced survey by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, says Nancy Hammes, patient care director in day surgery at Franciscan Skemp La Crosse (WI) Campus. -
Surgical site infection rate drops to zero in months
Between 2% and 5% of patients undergoing surgical procedures will develop a surgical site infection that results in additional costs that range from $2,734 to $26,019 for each infection, according to the Centers for Disease Control's National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance system. -
Study compares business practices, technology use
Billing data, supply costs, staff costs, and patient satisfaction are top issues for all outpatient surgery managers, but benchmark studies that address these areas don't always focus on similar procedures so that comparisons can be made easily. -
Results compare cataract, colonoscopy study groups
Results of the recent Ambulatory Surgery Non-Clinical Study for Cataract Extraction with Lens Insertion and Colonoscopy include the following statistics: -
Staff costs affected by mix of staff, tenure
Reaction to the results of the "staff costs" category of the Ambulatory Surgery Non-Clinical Study for Cataract Extraction with Lens Insertion was mixed, with the organization that reported the lowest cost expressing surprise and the organization posting the highest cost not planning any changes. The study was conducted by the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care's Institute for Quality Improvement. -
Same-Day Surgery Manager: Want to be cost-efficient? Consider these ideas
Do you ever compare yourself with others? Do you compare how you look and what you weigh? What about how much you make and what kind of car you drive? What about other things, like your supply cost per case? What are other people paying for the same stuff you buy? Nothing riles us quicker than thinking we have been taken advantage of in some aspect of life. -
Surgery providers warned of TASS outbreak
An increased incidence of toxic anterior segment syndrome (TASS) following outpatient cataract surgery has been reported recently, according to an alert issued by the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery and the American Academy of Ophthalmology.