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Articles

  • A Healthy Nurse Means a Healthy Nation

    The American Nurses Association is challenging those who wear the white to step up and take care of someone else: themselves.

  • Surgeons Prevail: Skull Caps Are Back

    A recent victory means surgeons can continue to wear their traditional skull caps. A previous recommendation for surgeons to fully cover their hair and ears to prevent infections has been jettisoned for a lack of evidence.

  • Legal Matters: Religious Exemptions for Flu Shots

    Healthcare facilities enacting flu shot mandates without some effort to reasonably accommodate healthcare workers claiming religious exemption could be open to a lawsuit.

  • New Nurses May Struggle With Errors, Injuries

    A newly graduated nurse, or even one more experienced who is going through orientation in a new job, may have a higher risk of errors and accidents.

  • Lock Down Drugs to Prevent Diversion

    Although it is rarely detected, experts tell us that drug diversion by healthcare workers is a rampant and longstanding problem. Locking and securing crash carts and pharmacy supplies on a given unit is critical to prevent drug theft or some form of tampering and substitution.

  • Where’s the Fire? Extend Safe Handling to EMTs

    There is a prevailing misconception that firefighters, first responders, and EMTs are young and strong enough to physically lift patients without being injured.

  • Ex-OSHA Chief: With Violence Reg Stalled, Hospitals Should Act

    In the current political climate, OSHA has no realistic way forward to achieve its goal of issuing a proposed standard to protect healthcare workers from violence, a former OSHA director tells Hospital Employee Health.

  • Center Addresses Needs of Acutely Intoxicated Patients, Links Them to Treatment

    Soon, EDs in Baltimore may feel some relief from the crushing volume of patients with substance use problems, thanks to the creation of a new type of facility designed for patients who are under the influence of drugs or alcohol and need a place where they can safely recover while receiving short-term medical care.

  • Emergency Clinicians Steer Patients With Substance Use Problems Into Effective Treatment

    To address an increasing volume of ED patients with substance use issues, leaders at the University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore decided to integrate peer recovery coaches into the emergency medicine team. The peer recovery coaches are people in long-term recovery from their own addictions who have received training on how to counsel other addicts toward positive change and facilitate their transition into appropriate treatment programs. The approach has been in effect for two years, and administrators say it is affecting patients and emergency staff positively.

  • The Case for Educating At-risk Patients About Firearms Violence

    Investigators from the Violence Prevention Research Program at the University of California, Davis have unveiled a new resource for clinicians to guide them in their discussions with patients about firearms violence. Called the “What You Can Do” initiative, developers are encouraging frontline clinicians to familiarize themselves with the risk factors for gun violence, provide counseling to appropriate patients on safe firearms practices, and to intervene when there is an imminent threat of harm.