Skip to main content

All Access Subscription

Get unlimited access to our full publication and article library.

Get Access Now

Interested in Group Sales? Learn more

Hospital Management

RSS  

Articles

  • Some Solid Foods May Boost Colonoscopy Prep

    There’s good news for your patients who dread the clear-liquid diet before a colonoscopy. A new study finds that patients who ate certain solid foods, considered “low residue,” were better prepared for their colonoscopies than individuals who followed the conventional liquid diet. Also, researchers saw that these patients who ate foods such as eggs, white bread, cheese, white rice, and chicken breast the day before their screening were more comfortable during the 24 hours leading up to the test than individuals who could have only apple juice, chicken broth, coffee, and similar clear liquids.

  • Hospital Readmissions Tied to Mental Health, Substance Abuse, and Homelessness

    An analysis of risk factors for hospital readmission following general surgery finds that a large number of readmissions were not caused by suboptimal medical care or deterioration of medical conditions, but by issues related to mental health, substance abuse, or homelessness, according to a study published online by JAMA Surgery.

  • Auth in Place, Then Additional Procedure Is Done? Take Steps to Avoid ‘No Auth’ Claims Denials

    When a physician orders a procedure to be performed in a surgical setting at Birmingham, AL-based UAB Hospital, staff start the process of obtaining required authorizations.

  • First Dual-licensed ASC Developed, Opens the Door for Similar Facilities

    Timeshares aren’t just for vacationers anymore. Surgeons in Colorado now have a legal pathway to lease operating rooms in ambulatory surgery centers following approval of that state’s first dual-licensed ambulatory surgery center. It is believed to be the nation’s first such ambulatory surgery center.

  • Task Force Offers Colorectal Cancer Screening Recs

    Final colorectal cancer screening recommendations from the United States Preventive Services Task Force assigned an “A” grade to colorectal cancer screening in those ages 50-75 years and provided a list of recognized screening exams. The Affordable Care Act now would require private insurers that take part in insurance exchanges to fully cover, with no co-pay, all of the colorectal cancer screening exams recognized by the United States Preventive Services Task Force, including CT colonography. Medicare should now recognize this overall “A” grade and provide full coverage for CT colonography.

  • A List of Recruiting Tools for Attracting Surgeons

    One of the most frequent questions we receive from clients is how to recruit new surgeons into their hospital outpatient department or a freestanding ambulatory surgery center. My response? It isn’t easy!

  • Can Alarm Fatigue Be Conquered?

    Healthcare providers are finding ways to effectively address the problem by minimizing the number of alarms and prioritizing everything else.

  • Battle Lines Drawn: Proposal Says CRNAs Could Practice Alone at VA

    The West isn’t the only place experiencing firestorms. A just-published proposal from the Department of Veterans Affairs to allow full practice authority for APRNs, including CRNAs, has ignited a battle with the American Society of Anesthesiologists over whether CRNAs should be allowed to practice without physician supervision at VA facilities. The proposed change would allow CRNAs to work without the collaboration, supervision, or other involvement of physicians.

  • Study: $50,000 Would Make Most Americans More Likely to Donate a Kidney

    The majority of U.S voters surveyed by telephone stated they’d be more likely to donate a kidney if they received $50,000 in compensation, according a recent study.

  • UK Audit on End-of-Life Care Results in Widespread Negative Media Coverage

    An audit of 9,302 patients who died in National Health Service hospitals conducted by London’s Royal College of Physicians revealed that for 19% of cases, there was no evidence that the do-not-resuscitate order was discussed with the patient’s loved ones.