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Primary Care/Hospitalist

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  • AAASC creates new state advocacy program

    The American Association of Ambulatory Surgery Centers (AAASC) has announced a new state advocacy program in collaboration with state associations, corporate ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs), and allied national organizations.
  • Purchase of presbyopia-correcting IOL clarified

    Medicare beneficiaries can purchase presbyopia-correcting intraocular lenses (IOLs), under a new ruling from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
  • Save your program money: Shop at department stores

    Many of us thinking about shopping at discount department stores or office supply stores when we want to save money on household items, but one surgery center saved thousands by hitting these same stories to purchase medical equipment.
  • How can administrators ensure medication safety?

    To ensure medication safety in your program, perform regular safety rounds in perioperative areas to observe labeling procedures, promote consistency, and inquire about barriers to implementing this safety practice, advises the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) in Huntingdon Valley, PA.
  • Dizziness

    Few chief complaints cause more apprehension and dread for emergency physicians than dizziness. It is a common condition seen in the emergency department, is understood poorly, and has potentially malignant etiologies. Dizziness cannot be measured. It can mean different things to different patients and is often difficult to precisely characterize. Unfortunately, it is the ability to obtain a precise history and perform an exacting examination that allows a diagnosis to be made and appropriate treatment instituted. This article examines some of the different causes of dizziness, how they can be differentiated via history and physical examination, and their appropriate treatments and dispositions.
  • Full June 27, 2005, Issue in PDF

  • Emergency Medicine Specialty Reports: Informed Consent for Emergency Procedures

    Barriers to the informed consent process may exist among emergency patients, including impaired decisional capacity, impaired cognition, language barriers, illiteracy, insufficient time and communication, and numerous others. Because of the inherent vulnerability of ED patients, particular attention should be paid to addressing barriers to adequate informed consent, and steps should be taken to ensure adequate delivery of information, understanding of the proposed intervention and its risks and benefits, and voluntariness of the informed consent.
  • Avoiding Common Pediatric Radiological Errors

    The emergency department physician is the critical link between the patient and the diagnostic tests, including radiographs, that are ordered. This article provides information on common radiographic errors to help clinicians improve their accuracy, confidence and subsequent patient care.
  • Pharmacology Watch: Is Nesiritide Associated with a Higher Death Rate?

    Stopping Aspirin Before Surgery; The Sponge Returns; Preventing Metabolic Syndrome; FDA Actions
  • Updates By Carol A. Kemper

    On Marh 5, 2005, the Arizona Republic newspaper reported spread of invasive Group A streptococcal infection to a health care worker at the Flagstaff Medical Center, resulting in severe infection requiring hospitalization.