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  • Follow the money: IRB office boosts collections

    IRB fees that are not billed or collected may cost an IRB office the staffing and resources it needs to maintain efficiency and quality in reviewing human subjects research. So it's a good idea for research institutions to take a second look at the IRB fee collection process and improve the policies and procedures wherever necessary.
  • Court treatment order raises serious ethical questions about research

    When a judge recently ordered a pharmaceutical company to provide an investigational drug to a teenage boy who had not met the enrollment criteria for a phase II trial, the IRB world took note.
  • Full October 2008 Issue in PDF

  • Safety reward program results in 'huge ROI'

    Digital cameras, blenders, food processors, waffle makers, espresso machines, jewelry, luggage, gas grills, fishing rods, and telescopes. These are some of the items that workers at Wika Instrument Corp., a Lawrenceville, GA-based manufacturer of pressure and temperature instrumentation, can receive for improving their own safety.
  • Research: Sedentary workers risk chronic illness

    Exercise can improve a worker's health and productivity. That's a no-brainer, right? The vast majority of employees and managers at your workplace probably take that statement as a given. But new data show that lack of exercise can actually cause chronic, costly, and debilitating diseases.
  • ACEP: Diagnose, treat TIAs more rapidly

    Citing a growing body of evidence showing that patients who have had a transient ischemic attack (TIA) are at a significant risk of having a stroke within 48 hours, authors of a four-article supplement in the latest edition of the Annals of Emergency Medicine have underscored the need to diagnose and treat TIA much more quickly than previously believed.
  • 'Smart card' speeds triage, boosts safety

    ED managers are not often thought of as inventors, but David Soria, MD, chief of emergency medicine at Wellington (FL) Regional Medical Center, has created a device that has helped his department knock an average of 2-3 minutes off its triage time, which was already an impressive 10-15 minutes.
  • Incorporating end-of-life issues into education

    End-of-life issues should be discussed while people are in good health. Just as people prepare for birth, it is important to prepare for death.
  • ACS, NMA join to reduce cancer disparities

    The American Cancer Society in Atlanta and the National Medical Association in Washington, DC, have joined the strengths of their respective organizations targeted to end disparities in cancer treatment and diagnosis among ethnic minority and underserved population groups.
  • Pharma industry revises ethics provisions

    "In interacting with the medical community, we are committed to following the highest ethical standards, as well as all legal requirements. We are also concerned that our interactions with health care professionals not be perceived as inappropriate by patients or the public at large. This Code is to reinforce our intention that our interactions with health care professionals are professional exchanges designed to benefit patients and to enhance the practice of medicine."