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  • Study shows 'troubling results' with CPOE alerts

    Whether it's over-alerting or under-alerting, it's a problem. A number of studies have taken on computerized physician order entry (CPOE), but the latest findings from a Leapfrog Group study made public June 28 shows CPOE problems can lead to harmful or even fatal errors.
  • Quality of care during off-peak hours: Are you monitoring this?

    From about 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday to Friday a hospital is a busy place with a host of clinical and administrative staff and department chairs and chiefs. But on nights and weekends, it's often quite different.
  • News Briefs

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention which erred on the side of caution and consternation for infection preventionists during the flu pandemic now concedes surgical masks are sufficient to protect health care workers against H1N1 influenza A. Draft guidelines for seasonal influenza downgrade the controversial recommendation to wear N95 respirators.
  • New blood: APIC seeks to embrace 'diverse views'

    In a discussion that goes well beyond the implied semantics of a simple name change, the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) continues to try to define its "brand" in a rapidly changing marketplace.
  • Linking best practices, electronic surveillance

    Hospitals that adopt advanced computer technology to identify healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) are more likely to have implemented best practices to prevent such infections, according to research presented recently in New Orleans at the annual conference of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC).
  • Behavioral health groups applaud Joint Commission

    Four founding partners in a public-private collaboration to advance performance measurement in behavioral health on July 21 applauded The Joint Commission's (TJC) announcement of the next phase of the "Hospital-Based Inpatient Psychiatric Hospitals" (HBIPS) core measures initiative.
  • USCCB: "Deficiencies" in conscience protections

    The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities, Richard Doerflinger, suggests that following the passage of health care reform, "there's still a number of deficiencies in conscience protection."
  • Banja: Shortcuts and normalization of deviance

    While not every physician or nurse makes a decision to deviate from standard medical practice or rules and regulations governing that practice, it certainly does happen, according to John D. Banja, PhD, professor, department of rehabilitation medicine and medical ethicist, Center for Ethics at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta.
  • When the patient wants to go home to die

    It's not unusual for a patient to express a desire to go home when facing the end of life, say two experts interviewed by Medical Ethics Advisor. But the decision-making to allow this can be fraught with complexity, depending on the patient's medical condition and needs.
  • Informed consent when the victim is a black male

    Young black men are disproportionately more likely than other groups to be victims of violent crime. But when researchers set out to study this group, they encounter difficulty in recruiting and retaining subjects.