Doc Technique Plays Major Part In TKA Failures
March 25, 2013 9:28 am | by Nancy Walsh | CommentsThe reasons for failures of implanted knees have changed over the past 15 years, with the majority of failures today relating to surgeon-dependent factors such as component malpositioning, a researcher stated.
Race A Factor In Decision To Amputate A Leg?
March 22, 2013 9:27 am | by Chris Kaiser | CommentsAmputation for peripheral arterial disease was nearly twice as likely for blacks as for whites, despite access to good hospitals or high patient income.
Doc Support for Patient Safety Movement Lags
March 20, 2013 9:46 am | by David Pittman | CommentsDespite all the work in the last decade to improve patient safety and raise awareness of preventable medical errors, physicians by and large have been slow to support the movement, a leader in patient safety said.
Cervical Cancer Surgery Decision A Tradeoff
March 19, 2013 9:20 am | by Charles Bankhead | CommentsTwo approaches to fertility-preserving surgery yielded results suggesting that younger women with cervical cancer face tradeoffs involving fertility versus disease control, investigators reported.
Dollars And Sense
March 18, 2013 3:39 pm | by Mike Schmidt | CommentsWhether to invest in new tools for minimally-invasive procedures should be more than a question of upfront cost.
Foreign Debris And Post-Surgical Issues
March 18, 2013 3:30 pm | by Wava Truscott, PhD., MBA, Director Medical Sciences & Clinical Education, Kimberly-Clark Health Care | CommentsWhen lint or other debris manages to contaminate your surgical tools, the effects can be devastating.
Q&A: Handle With Care
March 18, 2013 3:07 pm | CommentsIf addressed properly, patient transfer can have major effects on patient experience and help reduce preventable nurse injuries.
Proper Prep Prevents Poor Performance
March 18, 2013 2:21 pm | by Mike Schmidt | CommentsThe busier the environment at your hospital or medical facility, the more difficult it is to track all the steps of surgical prepping with manual processes.
Q&A: Wrong Time, Wrong Place
March 18, 2013 2:10 pm | CommentsThe proper products and processes can significantly decrease the chances of wrong-site surgery and other "never" events.
No Greater Stroke Risk Seen With Radial PCI
March 18, 2013 9:33 am | by Chris Kaiser | CommentsRadial access for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) was not linked with a significant risk of clinically detected neurologic complications compared with femoral access, a retrospective study found.
High Resolution Endoscopes As Thin As Human Hair?
March 15, 2013 9:11 am | by John Hewitt | CommentsA new kind of endoscope technology with a factor of four image improvement over any previous design has recently been demonstrated by researchers from Stanford University. It may lead to flexible endoscopes producing about 80,000 pixels at a resolution of three-tenths of a micron, as compared to 10,000 pixels at three micron resolution for current state of the art.
Why More Women Are Choosing Double Mastectomies
March 13, 2013 9:22 am | by Allison Gilbert | CommentsWhen her breast surgeon assured her the tumor was isolated to her right breast, and she knew she had no family history of the disease, Vanessa Thiemann still opted for a double mastectomy.
Fearing Cancer, Woman Has Colon Removed
March 12, 2013 9:22 am | by Nick Schifrin | CommentsWhat would you do to reduce the chance of dying of cancer? How far would you go if you had a 70 to 90 percent chance of contracting bowel cancer -- and your uncle, mother, father, and two of your brothers had died from it? Lynne Fisher decided she would do almost anything.
AORN Survey: Better SSI Prevention Strategies Needed
March 11, 2013 9:05 am | by IrriMax | CommentsSurgical site infections (SSIs) are a concern for 96 percent of operating room nurses responding to an industry survey at the recent Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN) 60th Annual Congress in San Diego. Adding to that concern is the need for new and better infection prevention strategies which the majority (92 percent) of respondents think is very important.
New York City Ties Doctors’ Income To Quality Of Care
March 8, 2013 9:01 am | by Anemona Hartocollis | CommentsIn a bold experiment in performance pay, complaints from patients at New York City’s public hospitals and other measures of their care — like how long before they are discharged and how they fare afterward — will be reflected in doctors’ paychecks under a plan being negotiated by the physicians and their hospitals.


