Month: September 2014

Uncategorized Published - 24 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
How to handle a chronic complainer: 6 tips

Every workplace seems to have that one employee who is nothing but a perpetual fountain of gripes. It’s tempting to ignore the constant complainer as a crank who can never be satisfied. But sooner or later, the complaints will lead to a confrontation that can seriously undermine a manager’s authority. Clearly this subordinate is challenging […]

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Uncategorized Published - 24 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
Vasoconstrictor May Treat Anesthesia-Induced Hypotension

A pilot study has concluded that 0.5 mg of the blood pressure drug metaraminol has a variable effect on cardiac output and oxygen delivery in patients who develop hypotension during induction of anesthesia. The researchers said they planned to test the drug at different doses as a treatment for hypotension in surgical patients. In the […]

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Uncategorized Published - 24 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
Pain Care Improving in Hospitals, but Slowly and Minimally

Pain management in hospitals is improving across the board, but not as much as might be hoped, according to the results of a study pending publication. The study found a statistically significant increase in patient satisfaction with pain care in government-owned, for-profit and nonprofit hospitals between October 2006 and March 2012, but also found that […]

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Uncategorized Published - 23 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
What managers need to know about hiring: 4 principles

While legal problems can crop up during an employee’s tenure, the two events that carry the most legal risk for employers are the hiring and the departure of an employee. Hiring discrimination lawsuits are particularly dangerous because the applicant doesn’t yet have a relationship with the employer and, therefore, is much more willing to sue. […]

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Uncategorized Published - 23 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
Anesthesia Staff Continue To Cope With Shortages of Needed Medications

As you fumble through the anesthesia drug tray, you begin to sweat. You notice that some drugs are missing. You quickly move to open the Pyxis machine but those drugs are missing, too. You swing open the heavy door to the operating room next door. Before you can speak through your mask, your colleague frames […]

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Uncategorized Published - 23 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
Opioid Prescription Should Include Risk Assessment

When Steven Passik, PhD, slipped on the ice earlier this year and tore his supraspinatus tendon, he needed rotary cuff surgery and was given a prescription for opioids to deal with the pain — no questions asked. “They didn’t ask me who I am or what I do; they didn’t ask me a single question […]

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Uncategorized Published - 23 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
New Screening Tool for Chronic Migraine

Researchers have developed a new tool that can accurately identify patients with chronic migraine (CM). The screening questionnaire — called the ID-CM — can potentially be used by physicians or by patients themselves. “The way we imagine it in clinical practice is that someone completes this questionnaire in a physician’s office and it provides a […]

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Uncategorized Published - 23 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
Presurgery Quality-of-Life Score May Predict Complications

Patients awaiting colon cancer surgery who rated their quality of life (QoL) low were 2 and a half times more likely to encounter early, serious surgical complications than those who reported a higher quality of life, a new study shows. The findings were published in the August Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery. Patients who scored below […]

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Uncategorized Published - 22 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
Ketamine Viable Choice for Adult Intubation in ED

Ketamine does not increase intracranial pressure, increase risk for death, or extend intensive care unit length of stay compared with drugs commonly used to intubate adult patients in the emergency department (ED), new data indicate. In a systematic review, Lindsay Cohen, MD, from the Royal College Emergency Medicine Residency Training Program, University of British Columbia, […]

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Uncategorized Published - 22 September, 2014    By - Dr. Clemens
Fraud prevention through prediction

I thought this was important since it is about healthcare fraud. Businesses are using analytics to curb losses The Federal Bureau of Investigation estimates that healthcare fraud costs are approximately $80 billion annually. But it could be closer to $700 billion annually if fraud and improper payments are lumped together, said Julie Malida, principal of […]

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