Same-Day Surgery
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Telephone counseling reduces pain and disability in patients after spinal surgery
Research by Johns Hopkins scientists suggests that having a short series of phone conversations with trained counselors can substantially boost recovery and reduce pain in patients after spinal surgery.
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ECRI Institute’s top patient safety concerns include scope reprocessing
ECRI Institute’s second annual list of the top 10 patient safety concerns for healthcare organizations includes inadequate reprocessing of endoscopes and surgical instruments.
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Primary care physicians are investing in ambulatory surgery centers
How this trend eventually will play out is fairly easy to predict. Tenet and others will continue to gobble up facilities worthy of their lofty requirements, and the more they acquire, the greater their appetite for more will grow.
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Disruptive behavior isn’t always addressed, either in policy or in practice
Despite the fact that The Joint Commission issued a Sentinel Event Alert in 2008 on behaviors that undermine a culture of safety, disruptive behavior remains a troubling problem in healthcare.
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Double jeopardy: Hospitals, surgeons dinged twice by CMS for surgical infections, readmissions
Surgical site infections are a costly twice-told tale, as surgeons and hospitals are penalized when they occur and again if the patient is readmitted.
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Guide offers information about outpatient providers and charges
The Consumer Guide to Outpatient Procedures from Virginia Health Information in Richmond offers information about commonly performed outpatient procedures and where they are performed in the state.
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Price transparency is growing, but hear lessons from frontrunners first
Patients traditionally have come in for outpatient surgery, then you would send them a bill. The patients might be surprised by the price, but they usually would pay.
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Nurses text, send images from the OR with new app
Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children in Orlando, FL, uses a new app that feeds information from the operating room directly to the smartphones of a patient’s family and loved ones. It’s called EASE, which stands for Electronic Access to Surgical Events.
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Study: Minimally invasive surgery could lower healthcare costs by hundreds of millions a year
A new analysis of surgical outcomes nationwide concludes that more use of minimally invasive surgery for certain common procedures can dramatically reduce postoperative complications and shave hundreds of millions of dollars off the nation’s healthcare bill.
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One year after surgery, preoperative program to quit smoking still shows benefits
Patients receiving a brief intervention to help them quit smoking before surgery are more likely to be nonsmokers at one-year follow-up, reports a study in Anesthesia & Analgesia.