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Nurse Sues Health System for Firing After Safety Complaints
A hospital and health system in California is facing a lawsuit from a nurse who says she was fired for blowing the whistle on unsafe working conditions that threatened patients and staff.
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Red Light Says ‘Not Now’ for Nurses in Critical Work
There are times when a nurse's full attention is needed for a task that is critical to patient safety. One hospital is using red lights on workstations to indicate that the nurse must not be interrupted.
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Strict Safety Briefings Reduce CAUTIs, CLABSIs, and Falls
Baptist Memorial Hospital-Memphis was experiencing a problem familiar to many hospitals: It could make quality improvements, but had difficulty making those improvements stick, as there was a lack of bedside accountability.
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Integrated Case Management Model Shows Which Resources Are Needed
An integrated care management team approach helped a health system improve clinical outcomes for patients, lower costs, and lower rates of healthcare utilization, according to a 10-year study.
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Go 3-D: Here’s How to Add Power and Depth to Case Management Assessments
Case management assessments will lead easily into care plans when they’re created more robustly — a 3-D vs. 1-D assessment.
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To Know Patients’ Social Determinants of Health Is to Understand Their Obstacles
Patients’ underlying social and personal issues, known as social determinants of health, can affect their hospital lengths of stay, readmissions, and overall health.
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Population Health Program Jumps From Lowest to Highest Performer
Healthcare organizations collaborate on population health initiatives, and the result is a quick improvement in clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction.
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Employees Face Opioid Overflow in EDs
In data reported from July 2016 through September 2017, the CDC found that ED visits in 45 states showed that opioid overdoses are increasing across all regions.
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Student March Lends Momentum to Healthcare Violence Regulation
Antiviolence efforts to protect healthcare workers have been underway with limited success for years, so the latest federal bill in that regard would normally be seen as another well-intentioned, but ultimately futile, effort. However, things are not normal.
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Occupational Threat to Dental Workers?
Looking over the medical records at a specialty clinic in Virginia, public health investigators have uncovered a cluster of dental workers with a progressive lung disease that appears to be occupationally acquired.