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Hospital Peer Review

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  • ASQ healthcare costs and quality survey findings

    Read the story behind the survey's findings here.

  • ASQ health survey highlights communication, patient experience

    The link between quality, the patient experience, and satisfaction received more data support in April with the release of the American Society of Quality’s healthcare survey report.

  • Patient experience gains a foothold

    There was a time, very recently, when Jason Wolf, PhD, the president of the Beryl Institute in Washington, DC, could talk about patient experience and people would think he was referring to the food you get in hospitals or whether the parking was easy. But it goes beyond that.

  • The Joint Commission issues Sentinel Event Alert on health IT

    It is hard to imagine health information technology as a potential safety hazard, but The Joint Commission is pointing out some of the ways hospitals and health care organizations should reconsider the potential risk to patients as a result of health information technology (HIT).

  • ICU program gets patients moving sooner

    The intensive care unit is that place you think of for the sickest patients, full of tubes and wires — patients who are comatose, unmoving, unaware. Yet a collaborative through Partners Healthcare in Massachusetts has created a program — now in its fifth year — that has critically ill patients getting up sooner rather than later, getting rid of those tubes and wires, and getting better sooner because of it.

  • Alarms top safety list again

    At press time, ECRI released its annual list of top 10 patient safety issues. At the top again was alarms; something that has been a concern for ECRI over the course of several lists. This time, the issue list focuses on the policies and practices around alarms. Other familiar items on the list include Health IT — a concern to regulators like The Joint Commission, which issued Sentinel Event Alert related to Health IT last month.

  • Successful sepsis program leads to national award

    It has been five years since Martin Doerfler, MD, came to North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System as senior vice president for clinical strategy and development and associate chief medical officer. When he started, the 18-hospital system based in Great Neck, NY, had a sepsis rate that was above the national average. Healthgrades noted the system was “underperforming” in the area. Before he started, sepsis was the largest single contributor to mortality in the health system. They created a task force to try to deal with it, he says.

  • Medication reconciliation: Make it somebody’s job

    Medication reconciliation is so important to the wellbeing of patients that proof it is done is something that is required by accreditors. But who should do it? Is there someone who is best placed to do it? And if there are multiple people who could do it, do any of them know who is doing it?

  • ICD-10 is finally on the horizon

    At a time when the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is putting extreme value on high-quality data, the repeated delays to the implementation of ICD-10 are impeding progress toward that very goal.

  • Proposed: Eight Stage 3 meaningful use objectives and their measures

    The list of proposed Stage 3 meaningful use objectives and their measures.