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CDC gives a nudge to hospitals on sepsis care

PulmCCM

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention formally called on hospitals to develop robust sepsis care programs to systematically identify and treat sepsis, track outcomes, and improve care delivery. ” What is that, a sepsis Stasi? Unlike strokes and STEMIs, sepsis has no gold standard for diagnosis.

CDC 98
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Nursing Malpractice: The Basics – Part 1

The Trauma Pro

Documentation provided by the nurse or other providers in the medical record must demonstrate that they were in some way involved in care of the patient. The exact duties may vary somewhat geographically and even between individual hospitals. Following are the basics of malpractice as it relates to nurses.

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84 Implementation of emergency department discharge diagnosis coding - a national pilot

Emergency Medicine Journal

Accordingly, this pilot study aimed to test whether clinician-assigned ED discharge diagnosis coding could be implemented in an Irish ED, and whether coded data would be of sufficient quality to support operational needs and the proposed model of activity-based funding (ABF). 67% of available codes were used.

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Issue #3: The Latest in Critical Care, 6/5/23

PulmCCM

veterans’ hospitals did not show a mortality reduction from low-dose methylprednisolone. Patients receiving hydrocortisone required more insulin, but did not have higher observed rates of hospital-acquired infections or gastrointestinal bleeding. iatrogenic or hospital-acquired) were excluded.

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The Expert Witness re-visits a chest pain Malpractice case using the Queen of Hearts

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Her first set of vitals were documented: BP 116/57 Pulse 94bpm Respiratory rate 24/min O2 sat 90% on room air Temp 97F She had been cleaning a Jeep in the sun, and was sunburned. The physician documented “normal sinus rhythm”. The physician documented that she was “improved” and the patient was discharged. CK MB was 1.9

EKG/ECG 88
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How to Conduct Effective Compliance Audits 

American Medical Compliance

From small clinics to expansive hospital systems, healthcare providers must navigate a complex web of federal, state, and local regulations designed to protect patient care. What’s more, they improve operational efficiency and enhance patient trust. This staggering figure highlights the importance of staying vigilant.

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

PulmCCM

You can read the document here. Depends On the Patient, and Who You Ask The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines a fever (for general hospitalized patients) as >38°C. Read the original document here. Please comment below if you have any suggested additions or edits to this document. °C (100.9°F).