Nurses face some of the highest levels of work-related depression, stress and burnout
of any profession.
It may help to reduce that stress if hospitals rethink how nurses and
staff fit into the healthcare chain of command while making the
organizations better and more profitable places to work, according to National Public Radio.
o learn more:
- here's the NPR report
- read the Forbes article
- here's the New Haven Register article
Information Age Health Care
Empower Yourself...Welcome to your future and beyond.... Working together we will build upon our "collective wisdom" to create, for tomorrow, what we can only imagine today...J. Perl, Editor
Florida governor signs law shielding patients from surprise medical bills
he movement to protect consumers from surprise medical bills won a major victory Thursday
when Republican Gov. Rick Scott of Florida signed a bipartisan bill
that will exempt patients from having to pay balance bills from
out-of-network providers in certain situations.
Read More
Florida: Health Care Providers Not Waiting For Telehealth Bill
Gov. Rick Scott has a few more days left to sign a bill that would
create a statewide telehealth advisory council, but health care
providers aren't waiting. For example, Tampa General Hospital next week will launch a mobile app
to help patients connect with doctors any time and day of the week. Tampa-based WellCare is already allowing Medicaid patients to meet virtually with doctors for mental health care. Read More
So It WAS Ransomware: The Implications of the Attack on MedStar Health
Now
that it has been revealed that the cyberattack on the 10-hospital
MedStar Health system was in fact a ransomware attack, what are patient
care organization leaders nationwide actually going to do to address
this frightening new trend? Read More
4 ways to push healthcare into a new era
To grow and thrive, the healthcare industry must enter a "third era"
combining the strongest features of previous healthcare landscapes, according to former Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Donald Berwick, M.D. Read More
6 ways to improve hospitalist-patient communication
Frustrated
by its low communications scores for its hospitalists in the Hospital
Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS)
survey, eight years ago Chicago's Rush University Medical Center set out
to improve hospitalist-patient communication as part of a patient-centered care initiative.
Its efforts have paid off, according to a NEJM Catalyst blog post... Read More
Overcoming the Barriers to Telehealth Use in Urban Settings
Drones Enter the Lives and Careers of Nurses
Drones are far more than toys. Drones will transform diverse areas of
life, including business, defense, education, entertainment, and, of
course, health and medicine. Drones will also transform the role and
function of nurses and other healthcare professionals. Just consider the
possibilities...
As nurses look forward to a future where drones are active participants, they may witness myriad problems-from privacy, security and designated delivery spots to traffic patterns, durability and licensing. However, nurses can become part of the drone revolution if they take action on the following: Read More
As nurses look forward to a future where drones are active participants, they may witness myriad problems-from privacy, security and designated delivery spots to traffic patterns, durability and licensing. However, nurses can become part of the drone revolution if they take action on the following: Read More
Medicare to reimburse for Diabetes Prevention Program, including Omada's digital version
HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell announced 3/23/2016 that
Medicare will cover the Diabetes Prevention Program, including digital
versions like Omada Health’s. This marks the first time a preventative
model from a CMS Innovation Center has been expanded into the Medicare
program.
In a recent study, six months after starting the program, 84 percent of participants, with an average age of 69, remained engaged and lost an average of 7.8 percent of their body weight. Read More
In a recent study, six months after starting the program, 84 percent of participants, with an average age of 69, remained engaged and lost an average of 7.8 percent of their body weight. Read More
NY providers prepare for coming e-prescribing mandate
Starting Easter Sunday, March 27, electronic prescribing for both
controlled and non-controlled substances will be required in New York,
making it the first state to require all prescriptions be created
electronically. Physicians who fail to comply with the mandate face
fines and imprisonment.
Read More
Read More
NIST issues draft guides on telework security
New draft guidelines aim to improve security of telework and bring-your-own-device practices. The draft guide outlined:
-
Access control for network communications
-
Access control for applications
-
Remote access client software security
-
Telework client device security
Hospitals rethink ERs with patient satisfaction in mind
Many
hospitals, recognizing the ED's importance to hospital revenues, have
made changes such as allowing patients to schedule appointments or
working to attract specific patient sub-populations such as parents. Not
only does this draw patients to emergency services, it can also benefit
hospitals' patient satisfaction scores, themselves a driver of
payments, according to the article.
Patients and their family members respond well to efforts to meet their needs. To learn more:- read the article
4 red flags for geriatric ER patients
Monday, March 7, 2016 | By Zack Budryk
Elderly
emergency department patients with a few key symptoms are at particular
risk for intensive care admission or death in the hospital, according to a new study published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine.
Researchers,
led by Gelareh Gabayan, M.D., of the Department of Medicine at the
University of California at Los Angeles, analyzed ED visit records for
300 elderly patients discharged from any of 13 hospitals in 2009 and
2010. They found four symptoms made patients more likely to die or be
admitted to the intensive care unit or die within a week of the visit:
- Low blood pressure
- Elevated heart rate
- Cognitive impairment
- Changes in disposition between admission and discharge
"Emergency
physicians must exercise extra caution when making the decision to
admit or discharge a geriatric patient," Gabayan said in a statement.
"These patients tend to be more delicate than their younger
counterparts. Even abnormal vital signs, like blood pressure and heart
rate, are associated with potentially catastrophic events for patients
who are discharged from the ER rather than admitted."
The
results, Gabayan added, demonstrate that hospital leaders and patient
family members alike should exercise caution when it comes to
discharging geriatric patients from emergency settings. In early 2014, four
healthcare industry group issued new standardized guidelines for
geriatric emergency care to address the risks such patients present, FierceHealthcare previously reported, including falls, delirium, dementia and medication mismanagement. As the population ages, hospitals have increasingly tailored emergency services to geriatric patients, to the point of opening EDs specifically for the elderly.
Related Articles:
Hospitals gear more services toward growing senior population
Growing number of hospitals open ERs for the elderly
Aging population: Hospitals must consider growing number of patients without advocates
How an interprofessional geriatrics workforce can treat complex, elderly patients
Aging population poses threats and opportunities to practices
Elderly monitoring system would link home, hospital
Geriatric ER popularity grows to meet demand
Hospitals gear more services toward growing senior population
Growing number of hospitals open ERs for the elderly
Aging population: Hospitals must consider growing number of patients without advocates
How an interprofessional geriatrics workforce can treat complex, elderly patients
Aging population poses threats and opportunities to practices
Elderly monitoring system would link home, hospital
Geriatric ER popularity grows to meet demand
8 Reasons to Adopt Telehealth
Telehealth has been a big buzz word in the healthcare industry over the past couple years. A recent survey by the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) found that 78% of physicians believe telemedicine improves access to care. Another report found 75% of surveyed patients said they would be interested in doing a telemedicine visit in lieu of an in-person medical visit.
There’s clearly momentum behind telehealth. But what many physicians may wonder is - is telemedicine worth it? How will it directly help my practice? Is it worth the initial time and investment? Read More »
There’s clearly momentum behind telehealth. But what many physicians may wonder is - is telemedicine worth it? How will it directly help my practice? Is it worth the initial time and investment? Read More »
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Ethics and HIT
Challenges...
http://jamia.bmj.com/site/icons/amiajnl8946.pdf
http://jamia.bmj.com/site/icons/amiajnl8946.pdf
- patient safety should trump all other values; corporate concerns about liability and intellectual property ownership may be valid but should not over-ride all other considerations;
- transparency and a commitment to patient safety should govern vendor contracts;
- institutions are duty-bound to provide ethics education to purchasers and users, and should commit publicly to standards of corporate conduct; and
- vendors, system purchasers, and users should encourage and assist in each others’ efforts to adopt best practices.