The practice of pediatrics is relatively unique from a risk management perspective. One study placed the risks associated with the practice of pediatrics relative to other specialties as 25th out of 26 specialties with regard to the risk of being sued. However, although the risk of being sued is relatively low, another study found that the risk that a pediatrician may be sued in a given year was 3.1% as compared with 7.4% for all physicians.
Blog & Articles
Thoracic Aortic Dissection: The Great Masquerader
Not all chest pain is a heart attack. While acute coronary syndrome (ACS) may be the most common serious cause of chest pain, clinicians must keep other dangerous conditions in the differential diagnosis and eliminate the possibilities based on the patient’s history, risk stratification, physical exam and diagnostic testing. One of the most dramatic and perplexing causes for acute chest pain, other than ACS, is thoracic aortic dissection.
7 Strategies to Reduce Hospital Readmissions
Preventable hospital readmissions cost taxpayers billions of dollars each year. As we move further into the age of healthcare reform, practitioners will feel rising pressure to reduce costs and decrease unnecessary and preventable re-hospitalizations.
Providers cannot and should not avoid the readmission of patients when medical or surgical situations require inpatient care. However, a fair percentage of unintended readmissions can and will be reduced by implementation of initiatives that not only improve quality, but support patients as they transition through the care continuum.
Heart Disease in Women: Underdiagnosed and Undertreated
February is American Heart Month and an appropriate time to recognize the recent reduction in mortality rate from cardiovascular disease in women. The increased awareness of women and healthcare professionals has resulted in better care and is at least partially responsible for the lower death rate from heart disease seen over the past decade.
However, the battle against women’s heart disease is far from over. Awareness has improved, but the realities of heart disease in women remain underappreciated.
Diagnostic Error: Chaos or Conquerable?
Given that proven effective solutions exist today, why haven't more institutions implemented programs that have proven to reduce diagnostic errors?
I listened with great interest to the interview conducted by Dr. Robert Wachter with Dr. Mark Graber in the January 2016 podcast of “Perspectives on Safety,” also published in the AHRQ PSNet.
Avoid Readmissions vs. Death After Discharge
It is certainly a good idea to avoid readmissions that are deemed unnecessary. However, from the vantage point of risk and patient safety, the sword of readmissions reduction has another sharp and dangerous edge. Plain and simple, along with sensible system solutions, there will be irrational but powerful pressures exerted on the gatekeepers of inpatient admission to send sick patients home rather than readmit them.
Prevention and Treatment for Stroke
[4 MIN READ]
World Stroke Day, established by the World Stroke Organization in 2006, is observed worldwide on October 29 to underscore the serious nature and high rates of stroke, raise awareness of the prevention and treatment of the condition, and ensure better care and support for survivors.
Stroke has emerged as one of the most significant quality, risk and safety issues of the 21st century.
Consider some of the numbers:
CMS Programs that Impact Healthcare Reimbursement
Clinicians play an integral role in leading the adoption of CMS regulatory changes.
What follows is a summary of program updates for FY2017 that will impact healthcare reimbursement.
Value-Based Purchasing Program:
The Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program for FY2017 (with performance period of 2015) will focus on several domains:
Managing Patient Volume in ED
Are you prepared for surges in your ED patient volumes?
As we head into the peak of flu season, many facilities are already feeling the effects of increased volumes, such as:
- Longer waiting times
- Staff exposed to more airborne illnesses resulting in increased sick time
- A shift in perceptions of care resulting in lower patient satisfaction scores