Today's Top 20 Clinical Leadership & Infection Control Stories
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AHRQ outlines methods for improving patient care through simulation: 5 important facts
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality outlined guidelines for improving patient safety through simulation. -
5 key study findings on how automated pathology can make GI practices more efficient
New research reported in Gastroenterology & Endoscopy News found an automated pathology program was faster, more accurate and cost effective than manual review for meeting quality initiatives when processing tissue samples after colonoscopies. -
How machine learning can benefit the healthcare industry: 3 key report details
A new report from Quantzig, an analytics solutions provider, identified the top benefits of machine learning in the healthcare industry. -
Patient reported outcomes can increase patient-centered care: 3 The Joint Commission study findings
A new study in The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety showed how advancing patient reported outcomes increased patient-centered care. -
How health IT and EHRs can improve diagnostic testing safety: 3 ECRI Institute insights
The Partnership for Health IT Patient Safety of the ECRI Institute offered three ways practices can use IT and EHRs to reduce diagnostic and medication mix-up errors in a new report. -
How ASCs can improve patient satisfaction — 3 methods
As the healthcare industry shifts toward value-based care, patient satisfaction scores can help ASCs identify ways to improve operational efficiency, according to Lakewood, Colo.-based Pinnacle III. -
AAAHC addresses adverse drug events in ambulatory settings: 3 details
The Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care released a toolkit meant to help ambulatory healthcare organizations avoid preventable adverse drug events. -
Significant injectable opioid shortage leaves anesthesiologists worried — 7 insights
Injectable opioids are in short supply, and drugmakers are struggling to keep up with demand, WAMU reports. -
NJAASC to hold one room educational event
The New Jersey Association of Ambulatory Surgical Centers has announced it will hold an all day, special education event for one room surgical centers in New Jersey. -
The 8 ASC quality reporting measures CMS wants to remove
Within its proposed 2019 ASC and HOPD payment update, CMS also addressed the ASC Quality Reporting Program. The proposed updates would remove eight measures from the required reporting list for payment determination over the next few years, according to an ASCA report. -
Healthcare industry has highest data breach cost: 5 important facts from IBM, Ponemon Institute report
For the eighth straight year, data breaches in healthcare had the highest cost compared to other industries, according to a new report from IBM and the Ponemon Institute, the National Law Review reported. -
Medical assistants are at risk for malpractice suits, 'JAMA' reports: 4 takeaways
Medscape outlined a JAMA study that describes how support staff can either defend against malpractice risks or increase them. -
QI program lowers complication rates in 5 years : 4 project insights
The results of a quality improvement project at Palo Alto, Calif-based Stanford Bariatric, an accredited weight loss surgery center, showed accreditation standard improved quality of care while the center continued to build surgical volume through a multiyear quality improvement project starting in 2013. -
‘Defensive medicine’ increases costs for military patients, Duke, MIT study says
The National Bureau of Economic Research posted a new report from researchers at Durham, N.C.-based Duke University and Cambridge-based Massachusetts Institute of Technology detailing the cost of “defensive medicine,” or the practice of administering extra medical tests to avoid potential malpractice suits, the New York Times reported. -
Ineffective tech slowing patient safety progress, healthcare execs say in Health Catalyst survey
A new survey from Health Catalyst found nine out of 10 physicians, nurses and healthcare executives say their organizations are making strides to improve their patients’ safety, but progress is slowed by ineffective technology. -
Infection control association unveils resource for infection preventionists — 4 quick facts
The Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology published a video for infection preventionist recruitment June 14. -
ECRI Institute to continue guideline database shut down by HHS, launch site with new features this fall
ECRI Institute, the independent nonprofit organization that developed and maintained the national Guideline Clearinghouse since its inception, will continue to provide access to the guidelines -
Cost burden from adverse events estimated at $317.9B, expected to increase by 2022: 3 insights
Frost & Sullivan released an analysis measuring the frequency of adverse events and their effect on patient mortality and costs for healthcare organizations worldwide. -
New cyber security dashboard helps CEOs reduce risks, improve patient safety
Clearwater, a cyber risk management solutions company, released its new CyberIntelligence dashboards, part of its IRM\Pro Enterprise Cyber Risk Management System, for healthcare providers. -
How to improve outcomes, costs savings from University of Minnesota study: 3 key point
A new study from Minneapolis-based University of Minnesota Medical School found increased communication between hospitals improves patient care and survival rates.
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