'July Effect' doesn’t apply to length of surgery
The "July Effect" -- when newly trained physicians begin their residency at teaching hospitals, potentially increasing the risk of medical errors -- doesn't appear to lengthen surgeries during that month, according to an American study.
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1EKi7NE
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1EKi7NE
Acute heart failure patients bounce back to ERs for complex reasons
A tool designed to assess what interferes with acute heart failure patients' ability to care for themselves after hospital discharge holds promise for improving patient outcomes and reducing re-admissions to the hospital. The patient survey shed light on the non-medical issues that limit patients' ability to care for themselves.
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1uOp13W
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1uOp13W
Improving antibiotics to treat staph infections
New information about how antibiotics like azithromycin stop staph infections has been uncovered, including why staph sometimes becomes resistant to drugs. Staphylococcus aureus (familiar to many as the common and sometimes difficult to treat staph infection) is a strain of bacteria that frequently has become resistant to antibiotics, a development that has been challenging for doctors and dangerous for patients with severe infections.
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1EKi707
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1EKi707
Prescription painkillers, widely used by childbearing age women, double birth defects risk
Many women are unaware that prescription opioid-based medications such as codeine, oxycodone, hydrocodone, or morphine, used to treat severe pain, may increase the risk for serious birth defects of the baby's brain, spine, and heart, as well as preterm birth when taken during pregnancy. Use of these medications also can cause babies to suffer withdrawal symptoms when born, a condition known as neonatal abstinence syndrome or NAS, a growing problem in US birthing hospitals.
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/18gdq3h
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/18gdq3h
Empowering family caregivers assures successful acute care transitions
When hospitals adopt proactive, enhanced care transition interventions to assure that family caregivers are well prepared when patients are discharged, the incidence of adverse outcomes due to communication lapses with clinicians or medication mistakes can be reduced significantly, according to new research.
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1usiu9w
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1usiu9w
New machine-perfusion organ preservation system keeps livers healthier for transplant
A new preservation system that pumps cooled, oxygen-rich fluid into donor livers not only keeps the organs in excellent condition for as long as nine hours before transplantation, but also leads to dramatically better liver function and increases survival of recipients, according to animal studies.
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1Egm7ry
from Today's Healthcare News -- ScienceDaily http://ift.tt/1Egm7ry
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