Patient Safety Concerns Over New 24-hour Shift Rule for First-year Doctors

Patient Safety Concerns Over New 24-hour Shift Rule for First-year Doctors

On Saturday, 30,000 first-year medical residents begin work and new rules taking effect that same day could add eight or more hours to their shifts. Doctors fresh out of medical school will be able to work for up to 24 hours... read more

Association of Attitudes Regarding Overuse of Inpatient Laboratory Testing With Health Care Provider Type

Association of Attitudes Regarding Overuse of Inpatient Laboratory Testing With Health Care Provider Type

Routine hospital laboratory testing is common, and unnecessary tests can harm patients. Multiple professional societies have recommended against routine laboratory testing in hospitalized patients. Advanced practice health... read more

WHA Adopts Resolution on Sepsis

World Health Assembly and the World Health Organization made sepsis a global health priority, by adopting a resolution to improve, prevent, diagnose, and manage sepsis. This marks a quantum leap in the global fight against... read more

Implications of Prevalent Noncardiac Disease in the Cardiac ICU

Implications of Prevalent Noncardiac Disease in the Cardiac ICU

Half of >1000 patients of admitted to the cardiac intensive care unit (ICU) at a major tertiary-care center over about 1 year also had acute respiratory failure, acute kidney injury, or sepsis. Those with lung or kidney... read more

Emory Healthcare leverages Philips eICU platform to save $4.6 million

Emory Healthcare leverages Philips eICU platform to save $4.6 million

Emory Healthcare used Philips' technology for an eICU program, resulting in massive savings, lowered readmission rates and more. Emory's story began in 2010 and 2011, when team members saw tele-ICUs based on platforms... read more

Rules of thumb for writing research articles

Rules of thumb for writing research articles

The paper provides 'rules of thumb' for writing research articles (RA) and getting them published. These were discussed during the "Scientific writing course" organized for ITC PhD students by Cressie... read more

Addition of vitamin B12 to exercise training improves cycle ergometer endurance in advanced COPD patients

Addition of vitamin B12 to exercise training improves cycle ergometer endurance in advanced COPD patients

Vitamin B12 is essential in the homocysteine, mitochondrial, muscle and hematopoietic metabolisms, and its effects on exercise tolerance and kinetics adjustments of oxygen consumption (V'O2p) in rest-to-exercise transition... read more

Implementation of a Clinical Documentation Improvement Curriculum Improves Quality Metrics

Implementation of a Clinical Documentation Improvement Curriculum Improves Quality Metrics

Clinical documentation improvement/ICD-10 training in an academic surgery department is an effective method to improve documentation rates, increase the hospital estimated reimbursement based on more accurate CD, and provide... read more

Alternative techniques for tracheal intubation

Alternative techniques for tracheal intubation

Conventional direct laryngoscopy with the curved Macintosh blade is a fundamental skill for all anaesthetists and has been the cornerstone of airway management for many years. This technique relies on the operator aligning... read more

Evaluations of Male vs Female Emergency Medicine Residents Milestone Duiring Training

Evaluations of Male vs Female Emergency Medicine Residents Milestone Duiring Training

In this longitudinal, retrospective cohort study of 33 456 direct-observation evaluations from 8 emergency medicine training programs, we found that the rate of milestone attainment was higher for male residents throughout... read more

Excessive Resource Utilization

Excessive Resource Utilization

Overuse is inconsistent with professionalism because of the associated patient and societal harms and should receive equal attention as adverse events in health systems. Timely communication by inpatient specialists with... read more

Creating a Culture of Caring

Creating a Culture of Caring

How do you build and maintain a culture of shared purpose in the infinitely complex arena of health care? How do you ensure that you engender in employees a dedication and commitment to doing what's right? Identifying the... read more

Different Rest Intervals in Low-load Resistance Training

Different Rest Intervals in Low-load Resistance Training

Acute hormonal responses, as well as chronic changes in muscle hypertrophy and strength in low-load training to failure are independent of the rest interval length.... read more

Milestone-based Assessment for Internal Medicine Residents

Milestone-based Assessment for Internal Medicine Residents

This Cross-Sectional study investigates how well correlated are 2 academic rating systems measuring medicine residents' training and whether medical knowledge scores correlate with American Board of Internal Medicine... read more