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Responding to the potential for new terrorist attacks in the United States, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations has issued a report warning of a brewing cataclysm of underfunding, inexperience, and unpreparedness of emergency response capabilities across America.
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The upcoming switch to unannounced surveys by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations will require a dramatic change in how you prepare for the visit, experts say.
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Case manager interventions can benefit patients who are dealing with chronic conditions, a member of an advisory board working to improve health care says.
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Before you start your outcomes measuring program, you need to decide what youre going to track and how youre going to document your savings.
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Todays case managers need to understand outcomes and track them in order to prove that their interventions have value, says Mary Jane McKendry, RN, CCM, MBA, director of education, training and consulting for McKesson and is president-elect of the Case Management Society of New England in Hampstead, NH.
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When members call a nurse triage line about a health problem, theyre at a teachable moment when they are receptive to taking action about their conditions, Kevin Maher, RN says.
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Patients with traumatic brain injuries are turning to complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) therapies to supplement conventional medical care, but the majority is not discussing it with their physicians, a new study has concluded.
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Medicaid recipients with disabilities who direct their own supportive services were significantly more satisfied and appeared to get better care than those receiving services through home care agencies, according to a demonstration project supported by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
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The majority of hospital report cards created by employer groups do not improve the quality of care, according to a new report.
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The 32.7 million patients in the nations hospitals in 2001 had a much shorter average stay (4.9 days) than patients in 1970, who were hospitalized for an average of 7.8 days, according to the National Hospital Discharge Survey from the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).