Fitch Sees Impact of Reform as Case-Specific from HFMA News
Although Fitch Ratings recently revised six health insurers' rating outlooks to negative, the net effect of healthcare reform on the nonprofit acute care sector is less clear and is more likely to vary in magnitude and direction among individual hospitals and health systems. Fitch's revision of the insurers' outlooks reflects the potential financial stress of healthcare reform and results in a negative outlook for all 12 of Fitch's rated health insurance organizations.
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Emergency Department Ultrasounds: Saving Time and Lives from Hospital News As Congress heads into its annual August recess without having achieved a consensus on healthcare reform, a new Zogby Interactive survey finds a majority of Americans are evenly split on the basic structure of proposed reform.
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ER Docs Should Trust Their Gut Instincts, Study Finds from DOTmed Emergency physicians should trust their "gut instincts" when evaluating patients who report chest pain, says Abhinav Chandra, M.D., who is director of acute care research and clinical evaluation at Duke University Medical Center. Dr. Chandra told DOTmed News that an ER doctor's gut instincts about a heart patient are usually accurate -- and that's not just a gut feeling--he set up a study to prove his theory.
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Research Provides New Insights into Heart Attack from TheHill.com The health insurance industry is fighting back against intensified Democratic attacks and vowing to “correct the record” on its role in healthcare reform, its chief lobbyist said Tuesday.
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Medicines Top Source of Kids' Poisonings from Yahoo! News The leading cause of accidental poisonings among American children can be found in the family medicine cabinet, a new government report shows. Each year in the United States, more than 71,000 children aged 18 and younger are seen in emergency rooms for unintentional overdoses of prescription and over-the-counter drugs, the researchers found.
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Emergency Department Management of Colles-type Fractures: A Prospective Cohort Study from MDLinx The study highlights the importance of the initial `on arrival' and `post–reduction' X–rays in the ED. Displaced fractures are more likely to go onto poor outcome, as are inadequately reduced fractures. Medical officers working in ED should be aware of the importance of measuring the dorsal angle. They should be referring patients with >15° dorsal angulation to orthopaedics early. Reduction should not be accepted until the dorsal angle has been adequately corrected.
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Join us for our next webinar!
Critical Access Hospitals: Past, Present and Future
August 20, 2009 at 2:00 PM EDT, 1:00 PM CDT, 12:00 PM MDT, 11:00 AM PDT
This presentation will include a discussion of the characteristics of Critical Access Hospitals and how they contribute to rural America's Emergency Medicine system. More information & register.
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40 Percent of Emergency Room Visits Billed to Public Insurance, Says Report from MedNews More than 40 percent of the 120 million visits that Americans made to hospital emergency departments in 2006 were billed to public insurance, according to the latest News and Numbers from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
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Hospital Cameras Help Battered Women from WCBSTV.com When it gets too noisy on the second-floor cardiac care unit at St. Joseph's Hospital Health Center, a traffic light on the wall near the nurse station turns red and the overhead lights dim. That signal means the staff needs to quiet down. The device, called a Yacker Tracker, measures sound levels. St. Joe's installed it in May as part of a broad effort to dampen the din.
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The Emergency Department Practice Management Association
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