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Pregnancy Temporarily Increases Breast Cancer Risk: Parallels to Hormonal Contraception?
In a pooled analysis of prospective studies, researchers found an increased risk of breast cancer among parous women that persists for more than 20 years after childbirth. Breastfeeding did not modify this pattern.
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Low-Dose Aspirin and Preterm Birth
SYNOPSIS: A reanalysis of an earlier randomized clinical trial to assess the ability of low-dose aspirin to prevent preeclampsia has shown that the drug diminishes the risk of spontaneously delivering prior to 34 weeks by about half.
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Does Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis Prevent Spontaneous Preterm Birth?
In this randomized, controlled trial from France, screening for and treatment of bacterial vaginosis in pregnant women at low risk for preterm birth with oral clindamycin or placebo did not reduce the rate of spontaneous preterm birth between 16 and 36 weeks.
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Paternal Age Is Important for Perinatal Outcomes
Fathering infants at or after age 45 years is associated with negative effects on both the mothers and the resulting offspring.
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Speech Recognition Technology for EDs May Increase Malpractice Risks
Seven out of 100 words in speech recognition-generated documents contain errors, many of which involve clinical information, according to the authors of a recent study.
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After Malpractice Allegations, EP Productivity Decreases
One researchers says the results of one study suggest legal reforms surrounding damage caps may not fully address liability pressure for physicians and other healthcare providers. In other ongoing work, investigators are studying whether EPs adjusted practice patterns equally for all patient types after a malpractice litigation, or whether EPs used information from the allegation to adjust care for clinically relevant patients.
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Negligence or Innocent Mistake? Either Can Trigger Investigation of ED Nurse
The best way for an ED nurse to protect his or her license against both disciplinary action and malpractice allegations? Practice according to the standard of care with every patient encounter.
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Is EMR to Blame for Bad Outcome? Possible Liability Exists for EP, Hospital, and Vendor
Not uncommonly, an ED patient’s bad outcome can be traced back in some way to the EMR. If so, multiple parties may find themselves defendants in malpractice litigation. Insiders break down some factors one can use when determining who is ultimately found liable.
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New E-Triage Tools Unlikely to Face Standard of Care Challenge
New e-triage tools have produced some solid data demonstrating their validity. But what are the liability implications for EDs who are early adopters?
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Shared Decision-Making in ED Mitigates Malpractice Risk
Three groups of participants read a conversation and were asked to imagine they had been part of that conversation and then experienced an adverse outcome. In the two groups' conversations that included some level of shared decision-making, participants were 80% less likely to report a plan to contact a lawyer.