Posts Tagged ‘hospital’
Health Policy Research Roundup: Length Of Hospital Stays, Analyses Of Obama’s Reform Proposals
Archives Of Internal Medicine: Hospital Cost Of Care, Quality Of Care, And Readmission Rates – This study compares patients treated for pneumonia and congestive heart failure (CHF) and finds that high-cost hospitals don’t always deliver better care…
Medicare Pays Almost Half Of Rural Hospital Stays
Medicare patients accounted for almost half of all stays (45 percent) at rural hospitals in 2007, while the percentage of Medicare beneficiaries who were admitted to urban hospitals was considerably lower (35 percent) , according to the latest News and Numbers from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality…
Dialysis Extension At Atlanta Hospital Eases Crisis For Illegal Immigrants
Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta will continue to finance dialysis treatments for some illegal immigrants. The New York Times: “In early October, when Grady, Atlanta’s public hospital, closed its outpatient dialysis unit for budgetary reasons, it agreed to pay for three months of dialysis at private clinics for about 50 dislocated patients…
A survey of attitudes toward clinical research among physicians at Kyoto University Hospital
Background:In Japan, only clinical research related to investigational new drug trials must be notified to regulatory bodies, and this lack of a uniform standard for clinical research has caused a number of difficulties. The objective of this study was to assess the willingness of physicians to participate in clinical research and to identify effective methods to promote and enhance clinical research.Methods:We conducted a cross-sectional survey by administrating questionnaires to physicians in 31 departments in Kyoto University Hospital from October through November 2007.Results:A total of 51.5% (310 of 602) of physicians completed the questionnaire. More than two-thirds of them reported currently participating in clinical research, and nearly all believed that clinical research is necessary for physicians. Less than 20% of respondents had specific training regarding clinical research, and most reported a need to acquire concepts and skills regarding clinical research, especially those related to statistics. “Paperwork was complicated and onerous” was the most frequently cited obstacle in conducting clinical research, followed by “few eligible patients” and “lack of time”. Previous participation in and prospective participation in clinical research, previous writing a research protocol were positively associated with current participation in clinical research.Conclusions:Physicians in university hospitals need more training regarding clinical research, particularly in biostatistics. They also require administrative assistance. Our findings indicate that the quality of clinical research could be improved if training in clinical research methodology and biostatistics were provided, and if greater assistance in the preparation of study documents requested by the institutional Independent Ethics Committee were available.
Heart Failure: One In Four Hospitalized Patients With Medicare Back In Hospital Within A Month
Almost a quarter of heart failure patients with Medicare are back in the hospital within a month after discharge, researchers report in Circulation: Heart Failure, a journal of the American Heart Association. Each year, from 2004 through 2006, more than a half million Medicare recipients over age 65 went to the hospital for heart failure and were discharged alive.
Major Nurses Strike And Picket Looms October 30 As RNs To Protest Hospital Gaps In Swine Flu Safety
As many as 16,000 registered nurses from three large Catholic hospital chains in California and Nevada will join a one-day strike and picket October 30, as RNs step up the protest over poor readiness by many hospitals to confront the H1N1 swine flu pandemic, the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee (CNA/NNOC) announced today.
Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital And Stanford Hospital & Clinics Implement New Visiting Policy To Limit Presence, Spread Of H1N1 Flu To Patients
Due to the severity of the H1N1 flu and its potential to spread to patients, children and expectant mothers, Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital and Stanford Hospital & Clinics announced today that effective Monday, October 19, 2009, both hospitals will no longer allow non-patient visitors or family members under the age of 16 inside the hospitals.
CBO Estimate Left Out Hospital Exemption; Baucus Savings Likely Lower
The Congressional Budget Office “did not consider that hospitals would be exempt from a Medicare cost-cutting commission in Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus’ healthcare overhaul mark, an omission that will slash a conservative $11 billion from $23 billion in savings the commission was expected to produce,” CongressDaily reports.
Houston Northwest Medical Center Becomes The First And Only Hospital In Houston To Receive Prestigious Cycle III Chest Pain Center Accreditation
In its continuous pursuit of quality cardiac care, Houston Northwest Medical Center was proudly recognized as the first accredited chest pain center in Houston and one of a handful in Texas to be named a Cycle III Chest Pain Center with PCI (percutaneous coronary intervention). Cycle III accreditation is the highest accreditation possible for treatment of chest pain — by the Society of Chest Pain Centers.
Insurers Say Seniors In Medicare Advantage Spend Less Time In Hospital
Insurers say seniors in Medicare Advantage spend less time in the hospital. CQ HealthBeat reports: “A new study issued Tuesday by the health insurance industry touts the benefits offered by Medicare Advantage, just as Congress contemplates slashing bonus payments to the managed-care program to help pay for the health care overhaul.



