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Best Practices for Healthcare Organizations to Ensure OSHA Compliance

American Medical Compliance

In this blog, we’ll delve into the best practices that healthcare organizations can adopt to achieve and uphold OSHA compliance. Maintain Comprehensive Recordkeeping Document workplace injuries and illnesses. Don’t miss out on this opportunity to elevate your team’s compliance standards. Click here.

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Guidelines for Consultants to the Trauma Service

The Trauma Pro

Here are my thoughts on best practices in using their services. You can download the full document using the link at the bottom of this post. Document your consultation results in writing (paper or EMR) promptly. Bottom line: A uniform “code of behavior” is essential!

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Healthcare Providers’ Role in Preventing Fraud, Waste, and Abuse 

American Medical Compliance

Here are key areas where they can make a significant impact. Accurate Documentation and Coding Accurate documentation and coding are fundamental in preventing fraud, waste, and abuse. This includes segregation of duties, regular audits, and having checks and balances in billing and coding processes.

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Crafting And Refining Your Massive Transfusion Protocol – Part 2

The Trauma Pro

MTP logistics include details such as who will be delivering the blood, what actually goes in each cooler, what ratios should be used, limitations imposed by the use of frozen plasma, and documentation. Documentation is critically important, both in the trauma bay and the blood bank. And there are plenty around all the time!

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How to Ensure Dental Regulatory Compliance 

American Medical Compliance

These are recordkeeping and documentation. In a survey , dental providers agree that careful and precise recordkeeping is indispensable, emphasizing the importance of documenting elements such as patient histories, examination results, diagnoses, radiographs, treatment plans, consent forms, and clinic notes.

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The Latest in Critical Care, 2/5/24 (Issue #28)

PulmCCM

You can read the document here. Read the original document here. Ultrasound before CT for patients with suspected abdominal source of fever would be ideal, all else being equal, but it seems like a “best practice” only in settings without the above concerns. What’s a Fever?

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Improving Care for Patients with a Non-English Language Preference (NELP)

EMDocs

13 Interventions may include: Ascertaining a patient’s preferred language early in the clinical encounter (during registration, for instance), and clearly documenting this preference in a place that is visible to all providers. Utilizing certified interpreters and documenting their use. Educating patients on their rights.