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  • SDS Accreditation Update: Unintended retentions of foreign bodies increase in 2010, even higher in 2011

    In 2010, the number of unintended retentions of a foreign body jumped to the highest level since The Joint Commission started tracking statistics in 1995: 133 reported events. Already, through the third quarter of 2011, there have been 136 incidents reported to the agency.
  • Same-Day-Surgery Manager: Lessons learned with new ASC opening

    We just opened our newest ambulatory surgery center (ASC) in Texas this week. We think it is our 206th, but we could be off on that number. While it is an ASC, there is some useful information for our hospital readers here. Please read on!
  • SDS Accreditation Update: EHRs can help you comply with NPSGs

    Electronic health records, or EHRs, can be valuable tools for managers as they strive to comply with The Joint Commission's National Patient Safety Goals. That's a clear message communicated in a recent commentary in The Journal of the American Medical Association; however, the authors take care to not only outline some best practices for EHR use, but to also review some of the challenges presented.
  • SDS Accreditation Update: Compliance issue: clinical privileges

    One of the accreditation standards causing the most headaches for ambulatory organizations is the one on credentialing. In fact, statistics gathered by The Joint Commission indicated that for the first half of 2011, 48% of ambulatory organizations and 56% of office-based facilities were noncompliant with standard HR 02.01.03: The organization grants initial, renewed, or revised clinical privileges to individuals who are permitted by law and the organization to practice independently.
  • Guest Column: Substance diversion can and will happen

    Controlled substance diversion is one of those things that every administrator thinks "could never happen to me. I don't have any thieves or drug abusers working here." In my 20 years of being a pharmacist consultant for surgery centers, I've heard that more times than I can count.
  • Quarter of providers report breach in past year

    About one-quarter of healthcare respondents reported that their organization has experienced a security breach in the past year, according to survey results from the Healthcare Information Management and Systems Society (HIMSS) in Chicago.
  • Is your patient dealing with high out-of-pocket?

    More often, outpatient surgery staff members find themselves in the unenviable position of telling patients about out-of-pocket responsibilities running into the thousands of dollars.
  • Don't want a $1 million fine? Pay attention to regulated drugs

    [Editor's note: In this issue of Same-Day Surgery, we put a special focus on compliance with regulated drugs. We've talked with some of the top pharmacy consultants in the country to find out foolproof systems for avoiding diversion and theft. These stories will help you decide where to focus your time and energy, while avoiding liability.]
  • Coaching helps cut readmissions

    A year after Saint Joseph-London Hospital in London, KY, began a heart failure readmissions program, 30-day readmissions dropped from 27.7% to 15.9%. A similar program for patients admitted for acute myocardial infarctions (AMI) reduced the readmissions rate from 23% to 10% in a short time.
  • Rule emphasizes quality and cost savings

    When the Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) final rule for 2012 was issued, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) stated that its goal is to encourage hospitals to provide higher quality of care at a lower cost and to promote greater efficiencies across all care settings and throughout the entire health system.