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Newsletter Archive
Dec. 1, 2019
1. Concerns raised regarding CDC's new
strategy to prevent resistant bacteria in nursing homes.
2. Colonized patients in nursing homes may
carry bacteria for months.
3. CDC releases new threat assignment for
resistant bacteria -- It is worse than we thought.
4. Resistant bacteria stalk U.S. Hospitals.
5. Healthcare is a necessity for society.
6. KY Hospitals slip on Leapfrog Ratings.
7. CMS removing problem Docs from Medicare.
8. Nursing home medication errors.
9. Arizona non-profit hospital CEOs often
paid 7 figure salaries.
10. Hospital Consolidation raising prices for
patients.
11. Prozac NOT indicated for Autism?
Nov. 1, 2019
1. High cost of diabetic care.
2. New study found that over 50% of residents
in nursing homes harbor drug resistant bacteria.
3. Residents of nursing homes may be colonized
for months.
4. Judge denies CMS bid for site-neutral
payments (surprise facilty fee charges from your doctors office
visit).
5. Physician groups call court ruling on
site-neutral charges bad for patients.
6. CMS readmission penalities.
Oct. 1, 2019
1. China Rx: The Safety of The United States
Drug Supply.
2. Zantac and other medications found to have
low levels of carcinogen NDMA.
3. Kentucky Hospitals Suing Opioid Makers.
4. Nursing Homes are Breeding Grounds for the
deadly fungus Candida auris.
5. CDC Presentation: Candida Auris: Growing
threat, difficult to contain & treat.
6. CDC Draft recommendations for the control
of MRSA in the NICU.
7. Global Trends of antibiotic resistance in
Farm Animals.
8. Antibiotic resistance in sewage treatment
plants in Sweden is similiar to that of hospitals.
9. GAO report. CMS need to make sure quality
metrics address strategic objectives.
10. Propublica: Health Insurance Companies not
agressively persuing billing fraud.
Sept. 1, 2019 - Newsletter
1. Bacterial Phages - A new hope in defeating
resistant bacteria.
2. CDC Releases report on unnecessary
antibiotic usage.
3. Why are Duodenoscopes so difficult to
sterilize.
4. Resistant Klebsiella and E. coli widespread
in Asia.
5. Link between body weight and the gut
microbiome.
6. Soaring insulin costs.
7. American surgeons now going to Mexico to
perform surgery.
8. Surprise billing up to 43% of Emergency
Room Visits.
9. Johnson & Johnson held responsible for
fueling Opioid Crisis.
10. Federal scientists warned of coming opioid
epidemic.
11. How easy is it to obtain medical records
from Hospitals. "The Patient Scorecard".
Aug. 1, 2019 - Newsletter
1. OpEds regarding Disparities in infectious
disease, government timidity in addressing public health threats and
the need for data for action.
2. Super-bug fighting viruses are making a
comeback
3. WHO declares an EBOLA international health
emergency.
4. HHS fails to report 2/3 of malpractice
payments to National data-bank.
5. Average life expectancy in the US has been
declining for 3 consecutive years.
6. Medical mistakes harm 1 in 10 patients,
many are preventable.
7. Unprofessional behavior and surgical
complications.
8. Pharma pays 3 billion to doctors and
hospitals.
9. Mandatory drug price disclosures in
advertising blocked by federal judge.
10. Pain societies told to disclose financial
ties to opioid makers.
July 1, 2019 - Newsletter
1. The Changing Narrative of MRSA Infection
Control in the United States.
2. Candida auris -- NYTs Reporter Andrew
Jacobs.
3. Hospital Quality Rankings -- Jack Pattie
Radio Show.
4. Control of MSSA and MRSA.
5. Candida Auris Patients Shed Fungus Via
Skin.
6. The Absurdly High Cost of Insulin.
7. Surgeons' Opioid-Prescribing Habits are
Hard to Kick.
8. Coworker Reports of Unprofessional Behavior
predict Surgeons' Surgical complications.
9. Columbia Nursing Study Finds Link Between
Healthcare Associated Infections and Understaffing.
June 1, 2019 - Newsletter
1. Vaccinations & Epidemics Shrouded in
Secrecy
2. Pressure Injury Metric.
3. Travel Ban To Prevent Pathogens.
4. Government Mistrust and Ebola.
5. Senate Healthcare Reform.
6. HHS Requiring Drug Price Disclosure on TV
Ads.
7. Leapfrog Group Releases Hospital Rankings.
8. FDA Pulls Cervical Mesh off The Market.
9. Hidden FDA Medical Device Reports.
May 15, 2019 - Newsletter
1. Second Victim -- Is this a good term?
2. NQF Metric Approval and Unintended Harms of
Risk Adjustment for Disparities.
3. CMS Quality Reporting Metrics.
4. Research Integrity Problems and Meta
Analysis.
5. Pharma Exec from Insys Therapeutics goes to
Jail.
6. NYTs OpEd -- 80 Thousand Deaths - Time for
Reckoning on Medical Devices.
7. Doctors Targeted Online by Vaccine
Opponents.
8. Hospitals Double or Triple Medicare Rates.
Apr. 15, 2019 - Newsletter
1. The dangerous pathogens and the need for
vaccinations.
2. Candida auris: Highly contagious,
hard to stop, hard to kill.
3. The veil of secrecy surrounding infectious
disease in hospitals.
4. Sepsis mortality in the United States.
5. Hospital safety issues in Arizona.
6. Non-profit hospital CEO salaries average
3.1 million.
7. Patient groups funded by drug makers --
Keep silent on high prices.
8. Duke research integrity fine of over $100
million.
9. Malware causing fake cancers in CT
scanners.
Mar. 15, 2019 - Newsletter
1. CMS Requires The Posting of Hospital
Prices.
2. CDC Releases Data and Recommendations on
Staph. Aureus & MRSA.
3. Kentucky's Response to Hepatitis A.
4. Los Robles Hospital in California.
5. Hospitals Not Farms Main Driver of
Antibiotics.
6. Chlorhexidine Bathing Not Effective in
facility wide MRSA Prevention.
7. Association of Urinary Tract Infections and
Antibiotic Consumption.
8. Drug Companies Battle Fecal Transplants.
9. The Opioid Epidemic -- 60 Mins.
10. Opioid Maker Rap Video.
11. Healthcare Journalist Struggles to
Navigate Her Own Healthcare Chrisis.
Feb. 15, 2019 - Newsletter
1. PACCARB Comments: Importance of the
microbiome, The need to increase surveillance of carriers and
healthcare worker safety.
2. The Opioid Crisis and Project Tango -- Jack
Pattie Radio Show
3. Big Pharma Funding of Medical Education.
4. HW USA CMS Comment regarding conflicts of
interest between hospitals and accreditation agencies.
5. Timely reporting of outbreaks of deadly
drug resistant bacteria in Mexico but not the United States.
6. State reports on Hospital Acquired
Conditions posted by AHRQ.
7. Comment on Caps on Malpractice Payments.
8. Kentucky Representative files bill
requiring patient notification if their healthcare provider is
sanctioned by their Board for sexual misconduct.
Jan. 15, 2019 - Newsletter
1. New Guidelines for Infectious Disease,
Healthcare Worker Safety
2. Medical Review Panels
3. Health Watch USA Comments of the Goals of
the Presidential Advisory Committee for Antibiotic Resistance
4. Hospitals Now List Charge Master Prices
Online
5. Physicians Overuse
6. Prominent Doctors are Not Disclosing
Conflicts of Interests
7. Conflicts of Interests in Medical Journals.
Authors, Editors and Institutions.
Dec. 15, 2018 - Newsletter
1. Healthcare Worker Safety, Medical Devices,
NICU MRSA -- HICPAC Comment
2. CDC: C. Difficle Infections Have Not
Decreased, MRSA Reduction Not On Track To Meet Goals.
3. MDRO (MRSA) Transmits Early, Readily and
Frequently in Patient Rooms.
4. Antibiotic Stewardship Programs are Of Poor
Quality.
5. LHL OpEd on Spiraling Healthcare Costs.
6. Doctors Not Informed of Defective Implants.
7. Deaths From Medical Errors Have Researchers
Alarmed.
8. Sales Reps. May Not Be Welcome in Operating
Rooms.
9. GAO: FDA Oversight of Its Orphan Drug
Program is Flawed.
10. Why Are More Americans Dying From Drug
Overdoses.
11. Massive Database of Retracted Papers.
12. Association Between Physician Burnout and
Patient Safety.
13. ER Wait Time Metric NOT Renewed by NQF.
Nov. 15, 2018 - Newsletter
1. Comment on NQF Proposed Tracking of
Dialysis Patients Being Placed on Transplantation Lists.
2. Public Comment on Healthcare Worker Safety
and Dangerous Pathogens.
3. 1 in 4 Biostatisticians Were Asked to
Commit Scientific Fraud.
4. Scientific Misconduct and Medical Journals
5. Antibiotic Resistant Infections Double in
Europe.
6. Probiotic May Help Eliminate
Staphylococcus.
7. Doctor With HAI Sues Hospital Over Not
Being Told of Outbreak.
8. Associated Between Hospital Outcomes and
Accreditation.
9. Public Transparency of Doctors Placed on
Probation.
Oct. 15, 2018 - Newsletter Issue 2
1. The FDA's MAUDE Database and Hip Implants
2. The Fecal Transplant Foundation
3. Readmission Penalties Against Safety-Net
Hospitals are Eased.
4. California Hospitals are Buying Physician
Practices.
5. AHA Is Against Same Payment For the Same
Service Despite Where it is Provided.
6. Workers' Healthcare Costs Continue to Rise.
7. CMS Announces Ramped Up Oversight of
Hospital Inspection Agencies.
8. California Requires Physicians to Tell
Patients of Probation Status.
9. Kentucky Lawmakers Want Hearing on Nursing
Home Staffing.
10. Mass Resignations Guts the Research
Integrity Watchdog -- The Cochrane Collaborative.
11. Carriers at a higher risk for Resistant
Bacterial Infections.
12. European Medicine Agency Recommends
Restricting Fluorquinolone Usage.
Sept. 27, 2018 - Issue 2
1. Newly published article in Antimicrobial
Resistance & Infection Control. It deals with the prevention of
surgical site infections and points out that a World Health
Organization standard is to screen all preoperative patients for
Staph. aureus, not just MRSA. In addition, the article addresses the
problem of healthcare workers who all too often can become carriers
of dangerous pathogens.
2. Short public comment (2 mins) before the
Presidential Advisory Council for Combating Antibiotic Resistant
Bacteria (PACCARB) stressing the need to focus on stopping the
spread of drug resistant bacteria, not just on antibiotic
development and stewardship.
3. An OpEd in the Lexington Herald Leader on
the importance of setting standards.
4. Comment letter to PACCARB to recommend
requesting that the FDA withdrawal Polymyxins from over-the-counter
formulations.
5. Candida auris, a new highly deadly and
resistant pathogen rapidly spreading throughout our facilities.
6. 100+ restaurants put on probation,
including two in large Kentucky medical centers.
7. CMS awards grants for the development of
new quality measures.
8. California Governor signs into law a bill
requiring physicians on probation to inform their patients.
9. Updated information and CME credit approval
for HW USA's Oct. 4th Conference.
Sept. 17, 2018
1. Preventable Hospital Mortality - ASPF
Presentation.
2. COI -- Conflicts of Interest. A major
review article.
3. Turmoil at Cochrane.
4. Pharma Payments to FDA Advisers.
5. Doctors Receive $8.4 Billion from Pharma.
6. NEJM Will Not Retract Article Suspected of
Plagiarize.
7. Russian Bots Weaponize Vaccine Debate
Online.
Aug. 12, 2018 - Newsletter
1. CMS Places Recommendations on
Infectious Disease on Hold
2. CMS Asking for Comments
RegardingTransparency of Hospital Accrediation Surveys.
3. CMS Asking for Comments Regarding
Differing Payments Between Hospital Owned and Independent Physician
Practices.
July 26, 2018 - Newsletter
1. Health Watch USA Patient Safety Conference.
2. Doctors, Hospitals sue Patients for
Negative Comments.
3. Family Members are Hesitant to Express
Safety Concerns.
4. HHS Plans to Delete 20 Years of Critical
Medical Guidelines.
5. Fluoroquinolone Antibiotics are Over-
prescribed.
6. Can For-Profits Accomplish The Same Mission
As The Non-Profit They Acquired.
June 26, 2018 - Newsletter
1. Proposed CMS Regulation
2. MRSA Infections and Hospital Rankings with
a Focus on Kentucky.
3. China Rx: Is our Drug Supply Safe
4. Adverse Outcomes of Opioid Analgesics
5. European Medication Agency & Quinolone
Hearings.
6. AHRQ: Frequency of Drug Events are on the
Rise.
7. California's "Patient's Right To Know Act"
May 29, 2018 - Newsletter
1. CDC Re-stresses Contact Precautions for
MRSA
2. Miss-use of Antipsychotics in Nursing Homes
3. Dominant Hospitals Dictate Price
4. Monopolized Healthcare Reduces Quality
Increases Cost
5. Humana Offers Incentives for Hospital
Quality
6. Louisiana sent out 30,000 nursing home
evictions
7. HW USA's YouTube Presentations:
-- Open Notes
-- CDC on Hepatitis A, B, & C
-- HW USA's PACCARB Public Statement
-- China RX
Apr. 26, 2018 - Newsletter
1. CDC Releases New Vital Signs Report on
Resistant Bacteria.
2. CDC: Rare Superbugs are More Common Than
Previously Believed.
3. CDC says Its Steps Have Limited the Spread
of "Nightmare" Bacteria.
4. CDDEP: Human Antibiotic Consumption Up 65%.
5. Change in Habits Beat Opioids For Chronic
Pain Relief.
6. Opioid Makers Gave $10 Million to Advocacy
Groups
7. Patient Groups Take Millions From Drug
Makers.
8. Profiteers Lure Women Into Often-Unneeded
Vaginal Mesh Surgery.
Mar. 26, 2018 - Newsletter
1. U.S. Healthcare Prices Not Utilization
Drives High Cost.
2. High Expenses for Even the Insured.
3. U.S. Antibiotic Resistance Cost Doubled to
2 Billion Dollars.
5. 500 Doctors Elude Consequences.
6. The United States Has Two Opioid Epidemics
7. Dead in Bed.
8. Fluoroquinolone Overuse in the United
States.
9. When Antibiotics Become Toxic.
Feb. 26, 2018 - Newsletter
1. Newly proposed metric for Hospital Acquired
Pressure Injury.
2. Reporting of Medical Errors -- The Iowa
Study.
3. Reuters MRSA Report Wins AAAS Award.
4. Opioid Makers Giving Patient Advocacy
Groups Millions.
5. Conflict-of-Interest and the High Blood
Pressure Industry.
6. Inadequate Screening of Newly Hired Doctors
In Ohio.
Jan. 25, 2018 - Newsletter
1. Survival Tips In The Age of Drug-Resistant
Bacteria.
2. Medicare Penalizes 751 Hospitals.
3. Dangerous CRE Outbreak in Kentucky.
4. Infection Lapses Rampant in Nursing Homes.
5. Can Hospitals Be More Transparent About
Medical Errors?
Dec. 15, 2017 - Newsletter
1. Health Watch USA Presentation - The
Leapfrog Group Healthcare Ratings Summit
2. Health Watch USA 2016 Conference
Presentations (Ivan Oransky, Joycelyn Elders, Said Abusalem, Emily
Paterson).
3. A patient advocates story.
4. New Zealand Bans Vaginal Mesh.
Nov. 21, 2017 - Newsletter
1. 2017 Conference Presentation Videos.
2. Comment on Health Worker MRSA Carriers.
3. Letter to Senator Grassley Supporting
Transparency of Healthcare Accreditation Surveys.
4. One Billion Dollars Spent on Replacements
of 7 Cardiac Medical Devices.
5. Pharmaceutical Payments to U.S. Medical
Journal Editors.
6. Whistle-blowers & Double Booking of
Surgeries.
7. Poor Quality of Studies Used For FDA
Approval of Medical Devices.
8. Texas Health System Solving the Healthcare
Cost Transparency Problem.
9. Anthem Says No To Scans Done By
Hospital-Owned Clinics.
10. Maryland Launches Healthcare Cost and
Quality Site for Residents.
Oct. 23, 2017 - Preconference Newsletter
1. Chlorhexidine Bathing Does Not Work
Hospital-Wide.
2. Testimony before FDA Patient Engagement
Advisory Committee.
3. OpEd Regarding Healthcare Reform.
4. Health Watch USA's Nov. 3rd, 2017 Patient
Safety Conference.
Oct. 1, 2017 - Newsletter
1. PACCARB Public Comments.
2. Chlorhexidine is Not Essential Component in
Hand Rubs.
3. Results of the WHO Meta Analysis Regarding
Chlorhexidine is Questioned.
4. Senator Charles Grassley Pushes For
Hospital Inspection Reports.
5. Two in Five Americans Have Experience a
Medial Error Themselves or With Someone Close to Them.
6. The Joint Commission Rarely Revokes
Accreditation.
7. Many Kentucky Counties will have only one
insurer.
8. Many Corporate Investors Increase Common
Ownership in Hospitals.
Sept. 5, 2017 - Newsletter
1. Main hospital reports drastic decrease in
MRSA infections using universal screening.
2. Workload affects hand hygiene compliance.
3. We're kidding ourselves regarding hand
hygiene compliance.
4. Medical Journals and Fake News
5. FDA cracks down on stem cell clinics.
6. Hospital accreditation surveys to remain
hidden.
7. Is your surgeon doubled-booked?
8. Hospital staff turnover very high.
9. Hospital mergers continue.
Aug. 1, 2017 - Newsletter
1. The Research Evidence Behind Chlorhexidine
Recommendations.
2. Shoddy Research, Deadly Results.
3. National Trends of CAUTIs.
4. MRSA Testing in Healthcare Workers
5. MRSA Bloodstream Infections NOT Declining.
6. Strong Measures To Counter Belfast C. Diff
Outbreak.
7. CDC Antiobiotic Usage Report
8. Myth Regarding Drug Expirations.
9. Patients Right To Know About Doctors on
Probation.
10. Battle Over Essure.
11. More Duodenoscopes Recalled.
July 17, 2017 - Newsletter Issue 2
1. Chlorhexidine Recommendations
2. National CAUTI Trends
3. CDC Consumer Meeting
4. $27 Billion Sepsis Crisis
5. Zero Hospital-Acquired Infections Is
Possible
July 1, 2017 - Newsletter
1. Research Evidance For The Antiseptic
Chlorhexidine Prevention of Infections May Bee Overstated
2. Urinary Infections From Catheters are
Falling
3. Dangerous Implantable Medical Devices
4. Gastric Banding
5. Changes to ACA's Medicaid Financing Will
Create 168% Increase in Uninsured in Kentucky
6. Research Fraud Could Result in The Death
Penalty in China
June 15, 2017 - Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Evidence Mounts That Some Hip Implants Are
Toxic to the Brain
2. Prevention of Urinary Catheter Infections
in Nursing Homes.
3. New Protocols Reduce Missed Sepsis By 76%.
4. More than Half of Physicians are Employed
by Hospitals.
5. Price Gouging by ER's
disproportionately
Affect Minorities.
6. Medical Ethics In Conducting Clinical
Trials.
June 1, 2017 - Newsletter
1. Patient advocate Dr. Amy Reed dies of
iatrogenic complications from a medical device.
2. Chlorhexidine daily bathing did not work at
lead author's hospital.
3. First try antibiotics fail 25% of the time
in pneumonia.
4. Does the United States need a paradigm
shift to control MRSA.
5. Correlation between hospital quality and
YELP Reviews.
6. High spending physicians not associated
with higher quality.
7. A wider role of regulatory scientists is
needed.
8. John Oliver on For-Profit Dialysis.
9. Brain toxicity from cobalt and chromium
containing hip implants.
10. AETNA pulls out of the healthcare
exchanges.
11. Entire issue of JAMA on
conflict-of-interest.
May 1, 2017 - Newletter
1. Does the United States Need a Paradigm
Shift to Control MRSA.
2. Industry Influence of Healthcare Policy.
3. MRSA outbreak at UC Irvine.
4. A quarter of Nursing Home Residents are
Colonized with Multi-Drug Resistant Gram Negative Bacteria.
5. CMS is Proposing to Make Hospital
Accreditation Surveys Transparent.
6. Effects of Full Disclosure, Apology and
Rapid Compensation.
7. Wide Variation in Cesarean Section Rates.
Apr. 15, 2017 - Newletter - Issue 2
1. Does the United States Need a Better MRSA
Tracking System
2. REUTER'S Investigative Report: Money from
infection-control industry muddies research into beating back
superbugs
3. Universal Screening For the Superbug CRE
(CPE) Can Be Cost Effective
4. Preventable Hospital Deaths and Hospital
Accreditation
5. Flying Blind: Why do we keep blaming the
victims of medical errors?
6. Disruptive behavior by physicians
7. Why Selling Health Insurance Across State
Lines Will Not Work
Apr. 1, 2017 - Newletter
1. Is the Rude Surgeon a Risk to Patient
Safety
2. Should Hospitals & Doctors Apologize for
Medical Mistakes.
3. Should We Treat Medical Errors Like Plane
Crashes.
4. Another Estimate of Preventable Hospital
Mortality.
5. Is Congress Going to Move to Punish Anyone
Using the ACA and Medicare.
6. Doctors Recommending Unnecessary Tests.
7. Drug Industry Payments to 60% to 85% of
Doctors.
8. VA Medical Center Decreases MRSA by 80% to
85%.
9. MRSA in the United States may be Increasing
In Hospitals.
10. W.H.O. Deadly Drug Resistant Superbugs are
on the Rise.
11. MRSA Colonization Creates a Risk for MRSA
Infections.
12. FDA Warns of Rare but Severe Complications
of Chlorhexidine.
13. Preop Chlorhexidine Increased Ventral
Hernia Repair Infections.
14. Universal Screening for CRE Found to Be
Cost Effective.
15. Anti-bacterial Soap May Be Causing
Resistant Bacteria.
16. Hospital Floors May Be Spreading Bacteria.
17. California Stepping Up Investigation of
Hospitals With High Infection Rates.
18. Family Reports of Adverse Events May Go
Undocumented.
19. Star Cancer Researcher and Ethics Charges.
Mar. 1, 2017 Newsletter
1. Estimating Hospital Related Deaths Due To
Medical Error.
2. AHRQ Report on Hospital Mortality.
3. OpEd: Choosing A Hospital.
4. Association Between Hospital Financial
Penalties and Reduction in Readmissions.
5. Nearly Half of Death Certificates Are
Inaccurate.
6. Lisa McGiffert: Should hospitals be held
accountable for high infection rates?
7. Status of Dutch Working Party on Infection
Prevention.
8. Detecting and Isolating C. Difficile
Carriers Projected to Decrease Infections By Over 60%.
9. VA Report on Decrease in MRSA Infections,
87% in the ICU and 80% in Non-ICU settings.
10. Stewardship of fluoroquinolone and
cephalosporin in control of C. Difficile.
11. “Super-Spreaders’ cause most cases of
Ebola.
12. Terminal Cleaning – Ultra Violet Cleaning
Systems.
13. Power Morcellators – New GAO Report.
14. Dangers of Essure Contraceptive Devices.
15. Rude surgeons pose problems in OR.
Feb. 1, 2017 Newsletter
1. PACCARB Public comment on the need for a
better surveillance system to track multi-drug resistant organisms.
2. Amanda Rusmisell presents on the dangers of
the Essure Contraceptive Device.
3. Nightmare Bacteria CRE may be able to
develop multiple types of resistance.
4. 5% Carrier Rate for CRE found in DC Medical
Centers.
5. Woman dies in Reno, Nevada from totally
resistant CRE.
6. FDA bans antibacterial chemicals in soaps.
7. NEJM responds to consumer concerns
regrading research integrity.
Jan. 1, 2017 Newsletter
1. Kentucky Legislative Testimony On
Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria.
2. Increased Reporting of Resistant Bacteria
is Needed.
3. Letter to NEJM Requesting Critical Analysis
of the REDUCE MRSA Study.
4. Commentary on Conflict of Interest and
Efficacy of Hand Hygiene Monitoring Research.
5. Physician Data Bank and Future Malpractice
Risk.
6. Metal Poisoning from Hip Implants. Is the
FDA Doing Enough?
7. Opioid Maker Physician Perks.
8. One-Third of Long Term Opioid Users Maybe
Hooked.
9. CMS Hospital Acquired Condition Penalty -
769 Hospitals Penalized.
10. Market Power May Predict Hospital Prices.
Dec. 20, 2016 Newsletter
1. Preventable Hospital Mortality.
2. A Tale of Superbugs' Deadly Costs.
3. AHRQ published National HAC Scorecard.
Observe 21% Decrease.
4. Call to Ban Concurrent Surgeries.
5. By 2050 10 Million People May Die Each Year
From Resistant Bacteria.
6. 21st Century Cures Act Passes.
7. Rochester Hospitals Examined by FDA for Not
Reporting Power Morcellator Failures.
8. The Throwaway Scope.
9. Medicare Data Shows Steep Increase in Drug
Prices.
Nov. 22, 2016 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. The high cost of healthcare-associated
infections -- Reuters.
2. Multidrug resistance and Carbapeneum
resistant pseudomonas in children.
3. Burden of Healthcare-Associated Infection
sin Europe.
4. Medical device salesman in the operating
room.
5. Surgical robot purchases in the Cincinnati
VA Med. Ctr.
6. Tax exempt New York hospitals offshore
investments.
7. CMS finalizes off-campus facility
reimbursement.
8. Fewer hospitals earn Medicare bonuses.
9. A patient advocate tells her story.
10. Videos of presentations from the 2016 HW
USA Patient Safety Conference.
Nov. 1, 2016 Newsletter
1. How to obtain the medical care you need.
2. Antibiotic usage in hospitals from 2006 to
2012.
3. California State legislator introduces a
bill for reporting of infections caused by resistant organisms.
4. Dangers of medical staff scrubs and
hospital furniture in spreading infections.
5. Heart bypass device linked to spreading of
infections.
6. Healthcare Insurance premiums rising by
25%.
7. Employers shifting healthcare costs to
employees.
Oct. 4 2016 Newsletter
1. Is the funding of the pharmaceutical
industry actually a governmental bailout??
2. Comments given to the Sept. 2016
Presidential Advisory Committee for Combating Antibiotic Resistance
Bacteria.
3. UN Declaration on Antibiotic Resistance.
4. Scotland Uses the U.S. Healthcare System as
a reason to Nationalize Their System.
5. Many Large Advocacy Groups Are Quiet On The
High Cost of Drugs.
6. Is Obama Care Entering A Death Spiral.
7. Employers Requiring Employees to Pay More.
8. U.S. Supreme Court To Bar Nursing Home
Arbitration.
9. Chinese Clinical Trials Maybe 80%
Fabricated.
10. Hospital Employment of Physicians Did Not
Approve Quality,.
11. HHS Makes It Harder for Clinical
Researchers To Avoid Sharing Data.
12. Bedless Hospitals are On The Rise.
13. Thyroid Cancer is Over Diagnosed.
14. Hospital Readmission Rates are Dropping.
Sep. 10, 2016 Newsletter
1. U.S. healthcare reform needs reforming.
2. Two-thirds of healthcare costs are paid for
by the government.
3. Florida Blues Collect $472 million in
profit on ACA plans.
4. Health insurers performance under the ACA.
5. Presidential Advisory Council on Combating
Antibiotic Resistance Bacteria.
6. U.S. not tracking "Superbugs".
7. FDA yanks over-the-counter antibacterial
soaps.
8. CDC releases report on sepsis.
9. CMS releases new rules for condition of
participation.
10. The life changing magic of choosing the
right hospital.
11. 11 hospitals with the highest c-section
rates.
12. Too many hospitals neglect to adequately
staff ICUs.
Aug. 15, 2016 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. United States suing to block insurance
mergers
2. Fixing the insurance exchanges.
3. Hospital executives earn bigger bonuses as
VBP takes hod.
4. Expensive robotics may not be benefiting
patients.
5. CMS Star ratings of hospitals is now
online.
6. Patients' view of consent forms.
7. Nurses and doctors are unionizing against
corporate healthcare.
8. Overloaded nurses and the dangers at the
Univ. of Louisville Hospital.
9. Medicare's readmission penalties hit a new
high.
10. Are over-the-counter antibiotics causing
resistance to the antibiotic of last resort.
11. Webinar on the new superbug gene: MCR-1.
12. Which healthcare infections are resistant
in your state?
13. Decolonization and hand hygiene can reduce
MRSA infections.
14. More warnings on fluoroquinolone
antibiotics.
Aug. 1, 2016 Newsletter
1. Hospital facility fees irk patients.
2. Can we reduce medical harm.
3. OIG finds 30% of patients in rehabilitation
hospitals experience harm.
4. 53% of hospitals neglect key staffing
standards.
5. HHS removes pain question from federal
patient satisfaction surveys.
6. Surgeons disclosure of adverse events, not
followed by prevention discussions in 68%.
7. One rule clarification could change the
face of healthcare.
8. Health insurers tests feds with steep rate
requests.
9. California insurance on exchanges to jump
13.2%
10. Healthcare spending growith rates rises
again in 2015.
11. Co-ops focus on staying afloat as numbers
dwindle.
12. Microbiome therapy and the prevention of
C. Difficile.
Jul. 10, 2016 Newsletter
1. Health Watch USA's Comments to the
Presidential Advisory Council Against Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria.
2. MRSA surveillance of high risk patients
lowers MRSA infections.
3. Updated protocols for UK National Health
Service MRSA screening and isolation.
4. Sepsis is the most expensive hospital
condition to treat.
5. Superbug resistant to last line antibiotic
now in the United States.
6. Superbug found of the beaches of Rio De
Janeiro.
7. U.S. trained nurses have better outcomes.
8. Biden threatens to cut off research
funding.
9. Pharmaceutical Industry meals may cause
doctors to prescribe more expensive drugs.
10. Inpatient patient experiences are
associated with Patient Safety Indicators.
11. Consumer Reports lists hospitals with high
C-Section Rates.
12. Doctors and conflicts of interests with
the drug and device industry.
13. Scopes are still hard to get clean and may
still spread superbugs.
14. Heath policy of morcellation and the N of
1.
Jun. 20, 2016 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. 14 Top superbugs in the United States.
2. Totally Resistant Bacteria in the United
States, KY highest in MRSA.
3. The Outpatient Facility Fee Scan.
4. Justice Dept and Antitrust Problems in
North Carolina Hospital Systems.
5. Is Healthcare Hazardous to Your Health.
6. Over 100 Million Prescriptions Written.
7. Consumer Reports - Reports Hospital
C-Section Rates.
8. Medical Device Guardians Act Filed.
Jun. 10, 2016 Newsletter
1. Full Disclosure of Medical Errors
2. 14 Top Superbugs in the United States
3. 5% CRE Carrier Rate in DC Hospitals
4. Totally Resistant CRE found in the United
States
5. US Response to Totally Resistant CRE
6. Prevention of Urinary Catheter Infections -
CAUTI
7. Do We Need To Screen for CRE?
8. Zithromax is Overused in Children
9. Non-Profit Finances Now Online
10. John Oliver on Healthcare Financial Debt
11. Is the Insurance Industry Responsible for
Raising Premiums
12. IRS Says Some Accountable Care
Organizations Are Not Tax Exempt
13. Have Nursing Cuts at Univ. of Louisville
Made the Hospital Unsafe?
14. Are Patients the Healthcare System's Free
Labor?
15. 11 More Deaths From Medical Endoscopes
May 22, 2016 Newslettter - Issue 2
1. United Kingdom's final action plan on
antibiotic resistance.
2. 30% of antibiotics are prescribed
unnecessarily.
3. CRE carriers found in over 5% of patients
hospitalized in Washington, DC.
4. Healthcare uninsured in the United States
reported to be 9.1%.
5. Some Non-profit hospitals are making the
most money.
6. Federal District Court struck down
subsidies.
7. Insurance mergers are bad for consumers.
8. John Oliver on research integrity.
9. Medical Errors are the third leading cause
of death in the United States.
10. State of California fines lapses in
infection control at UCLA.
11. UCLA now posting drug company documents.
12. Drug seekers using transparency to find
easy physician prescribers.
13. United Healthcare displaying on the web,
patient doctor satisfaction scores.
14. Head of the FDA is concerned with the
Federal 21st Century Cures Act.
15. Hospitals shift CMS hip and knee implant
costs to the manufacturer.
May 1, 2016 Newsletter
1.
UK Chancellor -- Drug Resistant Bacteria Greater Threat Than Cancer.
2. Hospitals Not Testing Patients For Fear of Penalty?
3. Screening and Isolation of C. Difficile Carriers Lowers Infection
Rate More Than 50%.
4. The Microbiome is Important. Oral Bacteria Linked to Pancreatic
cancer.
5. CMS Proposes To Track Antibiotic Prescribing.
6. Leapfrog Releases New Hospital Report Card.
7. Hospital Star Rankings do Correlate With Risk of Dying.
8. C. Section Risks. Your Biggest One May be Your Hospital.
9. Surgeons Need To Tell Patients If They Doubled Booked Surgeries.
10. One in 25 Medical Papers Have Inappropriate Manipulation of
Figures.
11. More CRE Superbug Infections on Medical Endoscopes.
12. More than 1000 complications (out of 3647 patients) Spinal
Fusion Drug/Device (Infuse) Went Unreported For Years.
13. Healthcare Rendition -- Just sell your debt, and let someone
else collect.
14. Wide Variation in Healthcare.
Apr. 10, 2016 Newsletter
1) Health Watch USA's public comments on the
Presidential Advisory Committee on Combating Antibiotic Resistant
Bacteria.
2) The Superbug CRE found in the sewers of LA.
3) Nearly 25% of nurses in Mich are aware of
patients dying due to inadequate nursing.
4) NEJM's under attack for research integrity
problems.
5) Doctors who get Pharma $$ prescribe more
brand name meds.
6) The Union of Concerned Scientists advocate
limiting research disclosure.
7) US Senate investigates concomitant surgery.
8) More CRE found on scopes
9) Olympus profits on scope problems
10) Olympus pays kickback Settlement
Mar. 20, 2016 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Research Integrity
2. The Spread of C. Difficile in Hospitals is
1000X Faster Than in the Community.
3. An Unusual Outbreak of the Virtually
Untreatable Bacteria CRE in Kentucky.
4. Lax State Laws Make It Easier to Hide
Infections.
5. Superbugs Account for One in Seven
Infections.
6. Which Countries Have the Highest Rates of
Antibiotic Resistance (CDDEP).
7. Docs Who Get $$, Prescribe More Brand Name
Drugs.
8. AHRQ finds a 17% Decline in Hospital
Acquired Conditions.
9. U.S. Senate Holding Hearings on Concurrent
Surgeries.
10. The High Cost of a Hospital's Asking Price
Is Shouldered by the Uninsured.
11. Johnson & Johnson Pays Record Verdict For
Hip Replacement Devices.
Mar. 6, 2016 Newsletter
1. Deadly Infections on the Rise in U.S.
Hospitals
2. Making Healthcare Safer -- The CDC's New
Initiative to Combat Resistant Bacteria.
3. Video of the CDDEP on Resistant Bacteria.
4. Researchers report Chlorhexidine Wipes did
not prevent ICU infections.
5. Probiotic Use Being More Accepted by
Physicians.
6. Supreme Court Sets Back State Transparency
of Healthcare.
7. New GAO Report Finding Hospitals Face
Challenges Implementing Evidence Based Practices.
8. Many Dislike Healthcare System But Like
Their Care.
9. AHRQ Stops MONARCH Development
10. Consumer Union Removes the Paywall from
Their Hospital Rankings.
11. Olympus Pays Record Fine Over Medical
Device Bribery Scandal.
12. FDA Mandates New Warnings on Essure
Contraceptive Devices.
Feb. 20, 2016 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. HW USA's response to the CDC Letter
regarding the CAUTI Metric.
2. A presentation on antibiotic resistant
bacteria by the CDDEP.
3. CRE is found in up to 4.6% of Nursing Home
Admissions.
4. News worsening regarding totally antibiotic
resistant bacteria.
5. A coordinated approach to combating
antibiotic resistance is needed.
6. Is it time to dump chlorhexidine bathing.
7. Are antibiotic soaps safe?
8. Medical Errors are all too common --
Hartland Institute
9. NEJM: Better patient outcome measures are
needed.
10. Can electronic medical records prevent
patient harm?
11. The FDA is requiring more testing on
Metal-on-Metal implants.
Feb. 1, 2016 Newsletter
1. Only 5% of Surgeons Use the Best Techniques
To Prevent Transmission of Pathogens During Surgery.
2. Massachusetts Acts to Stop Simultaneous
Surgeries.
3. Incomplete Disclosure of Potential
Conflicts of Interest In a Chlorhexidine Study.
4.. Price Tag for Delivery Varies Widely.
5. 50 Hospitals Charge The Uninsured More Than
10 Times Cost.
6. Senate Report States Ineffective Monitoring
of Medical Device Safety Fails Patients.
7. Olympus to Recall and Redesign Scopes.
8. New Test May Differentiate Between a Cold
(Virus) and a Bacterial Infection.
9. Fewer than 20% of Nurses Were Found To
Comply With Standard Precautions.
Dec. 22, 2015 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Congressional funding of $375 million to
fight superbugs.
2. Fuoroquinolone (i.e. Cipro) antibiotics
need stronger warnings.
3. HW USA's comments on Maine's new regulation
regardinghospital reporting.
4. 758 Hospitals are penalized for HACs.
5. OIG to test the validity of NHSN data.
6. AHRQ reports a dramatic decrease in HACs.
7. The Commonwealth Fund release State
Scorecards.
8. Opioid overuse not involves more than a few
physicians.
9. The Profitability (or Not) of Harming
Patients.
Dec. 1, 2015 Newsletter
1. Management of Healthcare Workers Colonized
with MRSA.
2. APIC Ebola Preparedness Survey - A Year
After the Outbreak. .
3. Some Antibiotics Worsen MRSA Infections.
4. Kentucky Hospital Exemplifies the National
Nursing Shortage.
5. Doctors Fell Metal Allergy Not a Deal
Breaker for Implants.
6. Fluoroquinolones Need Stronger Warnings.
7. Kentucky Hospitals Settle Dept. of Justice
Action for Cardiac Device Implantation. National Settlement $250
Million.
8. Kentucky Now Retreating From Healthcare
Law??
9. Healthcare CEO's Average Salary Increased
to $3.95 Million.
10. United Healthcare May Exit the ACA
Exchanges.
11. Facility Fees Charged for Outpatient
Services are Curbed Only for Some.
12. Medicare Cuts back on Some Billing
Auditors.
Nov. 1, 2015 Newsletter
1. Drug resistant bacteria places cancer and
chemotherapy patients at risk.
2. Letter from CDC/CMS calls for adherence to
NHSN reporting standards and requirements.
3. Kaci Hickox, RN who was placed in forced
quarantine during the Ebola crisis, sues Chris Christie.
4. The Leapfrog Group hospital quality scores
have been released.
5. Wall Street Journal calls for a bigger
media role in assuring medical device safety.
6. Choosing Wisely campaign to reduce
overutilization of healthcare has a slow start.
7. Dartmouth Accountable Care Organizations To
close.
8. More healthcare insurance Co-Ops are
closing..
9. Chlorhexidine may not be advantageous over
other agents in pre-operative patients.
Oct. 10, 2015 Newsletter
1. The Presidential Council for Antibiotic
Resistant Organisms
2. Excellent results the Veterans
Administration has had with controlling MRSA
3. Is the CRE epidemic out-of-control,
with an estimated 9,000 cases over a two year period?
4. MRSA can live in homes for years.
5. The FDA requiring duodenoscope
manufacturers to conduct post market surveillance.
6. CMS Fines Hospital Laboratory - This
is a rare event.
7. Consumer Union posts the 12 worst
rated hospitals for infection control.
8. The Leapfrog Group posting C-Section
rates. Kentucky is the highest in the nation.
Sep. 20, 2015 Newsletter - Issue 2
1, Surveillance and Prevention of C.
Difficile
2. Surveillance and decolonization found to
decrease serious Staph Infections by about 40%.
3. Stopping Staph May Alter the Course of
Diabetes.
4. WHO Healthcare Associated Infection Fact
Sheet.
5. CDC Recommends Antibiotic Stewardship in
Nursing Homes.
6. Endoscopic Cleaning Machines Implicated in
Superbug Outbreaks.
7. Outpatient Facility Fees are Increase The
Cost To Consumers.
8. Physician Ownership by Hospitals Affects
Referral Patterns.
Sep. 2, 2015 Newsletter
1. Community Acquired MRSA
2. Cleanliness of Hospital Rooms
3. Revised CDC Ebola Guidelines
4. Evidence Tying Antibiotics to Type II Diabetics
5. CDC Fact Sheet on Sepsis
6. CDC Calling for Health Dept. Coordinated Care Between Facilities To Prevent Healthcare Acquired Infections
7. Concerns Regarding the CDC's NHSN CAUTI Metric
8. Questions Arise Regarding the FDA's Fast Track Approval Process
9. FDA's Medical Device Problem
10. Congress Urges GAO Investigation
11. VA Can't Rule Out Superbug Infection Caused by Scopes
12. Is There Enough Competition Between Medicare Private Health Insurance Plans To Prevent Skyrocketing Premium Costs
Aug. 15, 2015 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. The Dangers of Medical Devices and how post
market monitoring needs to be strengthened.
2. CMS Readmission Penalties
3. Yelp and ProPublic team up to review
hospital quality.
4. Significant concerns on the antibiotic
Levaquin.
5. Antiseptics can induce antibiotic
resistance.
6' MRSA control policy in 2002.
7. CDC releases recommendations on controlling
superbugs.
8. Lack of facilities not working together is
seen as a major hindrance in the fight against antibiotic resistant
organisms.
9. Bacteria which develop antibiotic
resistance may become stronger not weaker.
Aug. 1, 2015 Newsletter
1. Full disclosure of medical errors.
2. Kentucky close to achieving universal
healthcare.
3. CMS predicts faster spending growth
(Healthcare costs set to soar).
4. New Medicaid enrollees costing more
than expected.
5. Only 10% of new FDA approved drugs
offer substantial advantages.
6. Surgeons getting graded (Propublica's
surgical scorecard).
7. How your hospital can make you sick.
8. HHS proposes to improve care and
safety for nursing home residents.
9. Antibiotics not infection seen as
juvenile idiopathic arthritis trigger.
10. FDA and medical devices.
11. CMS proposing a new bundled hospital
payment for hip and knee replacements.
July 10, 2015 Newsletter
1. Dangerous metal poisoning from some
hip implants.
2. The way we count urinary tract
infections may not be accurate.
3. 10 tips on preventing medical errors
and infections.
4. Superbug infections are spreading and
getting stronger.
5. C. Difficile infections can be
reduced by up to 70%
6. A must see video on Hospital
Readmissions.
7. Hospital stocks soar with SCOTUS
approval of the ACA.
8. Patients having trouble paying for
high deductable plans.
9. Premiums expected to rise again.
Jun. 20, 2015 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. A consumer action calling for the FDA
to include the antiseptic chlorhexidine in their proposed rule to
collect more data on the antiseptics.
2. Kentucky has the highest use of the
antibiotic Cephalosporin in the nation.
3. The White House holds a summit on
antibiotic resistant superbugs.
4. The bloodstream infections, sepsis,
is costing Medicare $5.5 billion and affects almost 400,000 patients
per year.
5. A recent Op-Ed on the poor control of
MRSA in the State of Kentucky.
6. Training, recertification and
cretification of physicians with emphysis of on the Da Vinci Robot.
7. Atul Gawande, An avalanche of
unnecessary medical care.
8. FBI Investigaing Johnson & Johnson
Over Morcellators.
Jun. 1, 2015 Newsletter
1. FBI Investigates Medical Device
Makers (Morcellators & Retrograde Endoscopes).
2. U.S. Supreme Court Requries
Professional Boards To Not Be Controlled By Individuals They
Regulate.
3. Response to NEJM Conflict of
Interest Editorial.
4. Conflict-of-Interest in the CDC?
5. Medicare Hospital Payment Data Now
Posted.
6. New Study Supports Contact
Precautions in Nursing Homes
7. Up to Half of Research Studies are
Not Valid-- Editorial in The Lancet.
May 17, 2015 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Recent FDA recommendation which avoids
getting more data on chlorhexidine.
2. The dismal results of voluntary reporting of infections.
3. Concerns with giving infants antibiotics.
4. Using C. difficile vs. C. difficile and not drugs to fight
infections.
5. Hospital Sues Olympus Over Ducdenoscopes
6. PBS Frontline report on the Ebola Outbreak.
7. Employer Based Health Insurance is Growing the Fastest
5. OpEd on HealthCare Reform, Presentation on Morcellators and HW
USA highlighted at the 25th European Congress of Clinical Microbiology
and Infectious Diseases, Copenhagen, Denmark
May 1, 2015 Newsletter
1. CMS Releases Consumer Ratings of Hospitals.
2. Dr. Kraman's Commentary on Written Disclosure of Medical
Errors.
3. The High Rate of Superbugs in Nursing Homes.
4. Dr. Noorchashm's Testimony on Morcellation.
5. FDA Requiring Approval for Old Drugs, Skyrockets Prices.
6. Another Study Shows MRSA Screening is Beneficial.
7. Delayed Reporting To The FDA of CRE Infections From
Flexible Retrograde Endoscopes.
Apr. 12, 2015 Newsletter
1. Written Disclosure of Serious Events and
the Risk of Malpractice Claims.
2. White House Plan To Stop Drug Resistant Bacteria.
3. Smoking Makes MRSA Worse.
4. New study finds Surveillance and Decolonization Lowers MRSA
Infection Rates in Surgical ICUs.
5. New Blood Test May Distinguish Between Viral and Bacterial
Infection.
6. Informed Consent Process Questioned.
7. Graphic - Uninsured in Kentucky and the ACA.
Mar. 24, 2015 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Non-profits may not be what they seem.
2. Dallas nurse how contracted Ebola sues the Texas Health
Resources.
3. Charles Denham Settles Kickback Allegations.
4. Body Cameras for ER Doctors.
5. According to Dept. HHS - 16.4 Million More People Insured Under
the ACA.
Mar. 10, 2015 Newsletter
1. Burden of Clostridium Difficile (C.
Diff.) infections in the United States
2. Statins may be over recommended
3. Medical devices may be shielded from lawsuits
4. New website gives summary totals for what insurers pay.
Feb. 24, 2015 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Measles Vaccine
2. CDC Attacks Drug Resistant Organisms
3. CRE Emerges in South Carolina
4. FDA Finds Numerous Studies Flawed
5. Blake Griffin has MRSA
6. Hospitals Suing Low Income Patients
7. Hospital CEO Salary Compensation
8. The Public's Trust in Physicians
Feb. 1, 2015 Newsletter
1. New Regulation Will Help Stop Antibiotic
Resistant Bacteria.
2. A New Study Questions the Effectiveness of Chlorhexidine
Bathing.
3. Dozes of Drug Studies are Flawed.
4. NPSF Calls For More Transparency.
5. John Hopkins States Hospitals May Be Profiting From CLABSI.
6. More Nurses Better Care. Why Is It Hard For Hospitals To
Hire Them.
Jan. 20, 2015 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. 10 Things you need to know about
Healthcare Associated Infections.
2. CDC Releases data on Healthcare Associated Infections
3. Is HAI funding based upon emotions?
4. Genetic Sequencing aids surveillance efforts.
5. Healthcare Costs are still on the rise.
6. Critiquing the USA healthcare system.
7. Cost effectiveness of infection prevention.
Jan. 1st, 2015 Newsletter
1. Ebola and MRSA
2. ECDC Data Shows Progression on Antibiotic Resistance in Europe.
3. KY Regulation Requiring Reporting of Dangerous Bacterial.
4. 23% of Adults in Massachusetts Experienced a Medical Error.
5. Medicare Paycuts To 721 Hospitals With High Rate of HACs.
6. FDA Medical Device Advisers Often Have Conflict of Interest.
7. Complex Statistics Used To Distort Some Research Findings.
Dec. 15, 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. CRE on the rise in India.
2. Ebola reveals a double U.S. Standard.
3. 30% less enroll in ACA exchanges than expected.
4. Health care spending in US 3.6% is lowest in decades but
expected to increase next year.
5. Financial ties of FDA device advisors are often not disclosed.
Dec. 1, 2014 Newsletter
1. Experts disagree on the best hospitals
2. Older US Adults have shortcomings in healthcare access and
coordination.
3. Reimbursement cuts shifting MRI scanning from outpatient to
hospital based.
4. The rate of Knee implants is skyrocketing.
5. Despite knowledge, providers are still not selecting the
optimal antibiotic for the prevention of resistance.
6. CED releases guidelines for EBOLA in the Emergency Department.
Nov. 20, 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Dr. Leana Wen's TedMed Resistance to
Presentation on Transparency in Medicine.
2. NNU Strike Over Ebola.
3. C. Difficile Spreads Beyond Hospitals.
4. ACA Has Lower Health-Care Enrollment Than Expected.
5. CMS Technical Expert Panel on Hospital Acquired Conditions.
Nov. 1, 2014 Newsletter
1. APIC Poll Found Only 6.5% of Facilities
Well Prepared for EBOLA
2. CDC Strengthens Guidelines for Treating Ebola Patients
3. Are antibiotics a false sense of security.
4. ACA Insurance Premiums are Increasing.
5. Doctors order unnecessary tests in ER despite Malpractice
Reform.
Oct. 15, 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Resources on Ebola.
NNU Nurses Conference Call.
NNU 'We were lied to'
CDC Flyer on Ebola.
Lessons Learned.
Are Hospitals Ready?
2. Kentucky New HAI Regulation Filed.
3. VA Drops MRSA Infection Rate by 72%.
Oct. 1, 2014 Newsletter
1. ASM Ebola Resources.
2. Nurses Concerned Hospitals Not Ready For Ebola.
3. Reduction in Antibiotic Usage Decreased Readmissions Due to
Infections.
4. Screening and Decolonization for Surgical Site Infection
Prevention - Pa Patient Safety Advisory.
5. Childhood Obesity Linked to Antibiotic Usage.
6. The new hip implants may not be better than the old hip
implants.
7. 13% of FDA Advisory Doctors are reported to have conflicts of
interest.
8. Was the USA's first Ebola patient given an unnecessary
antibiotic.
9. Opioid use in non-cancer pain may have low effectiveness.
10. Hospitals in States that participated in the Medicaid
expansion saved $5.7 billion.
11. CMS Post Sunshine payment data.
12. Consumer anger on the high cost of healthcare.
13. Big Pharma stating to market the C-Suite instead of doctors.
14. Nearly 500,000 may be moved off the ACA because of
qualification problems.
Sept. 15, 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. MDRI infection increases 1% for each day in the
hospital.
2. 78% of hospitals may be using inappropriate antibiotics.
3. Ebola may boost Infection Control Software.
4. New York proposes not HAI reporting regulations.
5. Feds reverse course. Are now posting HAC data.
6. Hospital administrative costs account for 25% of their healthcare
dollar.
7. ACA premiums are not decreasing.
8. Titan Spine offers a warranty.
Sept. 6, 2014 Newsletter
1. FDA Staph Workshop -- Jeanine R. Thomas,
President MRSA Survivors Workshop.
2. Relationship between surgical complications and hospital
finances.
3. CMS's new programs to reduce HACs
4. Senators Urge Removal of Power Morcellators.
5. Hospital to Offer Surgical Warranties for Knee Replacements.
6. Kentucky has fourth highest rate of MRSA Bacteremia in the
nation.
7. Healthcare Workers Exposure to Triclosan.
8. Daily antiseptic baths in ICUs may become less effective.
9. Healthcare spending increasing again.
Aug. 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Hospital Rankings Systems debated for a
New York Hospital.
2. NHSN data shows KY to have the fourth highest rate of MRSA
bloodstream infections.
3. Chlorhexidine (antiseptic) usage associated with Chlorhexidine
resistance in CLABSI."
4. K. Marimuthua and S. Harbarth review articles on MRSA
screening.
5. Search and Destroy strategy reported again to work.
6. Commentary points out flaws in Chlorhexidine studies.
7. How Kentucky Got Obamacare Right, Kentucky's uninsured down
8.5%.
8. Hospitals may lose billions in states that did not expand
Medicaid.
9. Data on Hospital Acquired Conditions no longer on Hospital
Compare.
10. Maryland hospitals may not be reporting all errors.
11. Power Morcellation to Remove Uterine Fibroids Being
Marginalized.
Aug. 2014 Newsletter
1. GAO able to obtain coverage for 11 of 12
factitious applications.
2. Nightmarie Bacteria increased fivefold in southeast U.S.
3. The Leapfrog Group releases 2013 Hospital Survey Results.
4. US Senate HELP Committee on Patient Medical Errors.
5. J&J pulls power morcellators.
6. The IOM calls for an end of the 510K medical device approval process.
7. Missouri Law OK's providers who did not pass a complete licensure
exams.
July 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Results of the United Kingdom's NHS C.
Difficile and MRSA Control Policies.
2. Weekly Bathing with Chlorhexidine in Military Trainees.
3. Low Dose Antibiotics May Promote Biofilms.
4. CRE Outbreaks in Florida.
5. Up To 1/3 of Knee Implants May Be Unnecessary.
6. US Healthcare System Last Among Developed Nations.
7. The Physician's Role in Hospital Governance is Mitigated.
8. Value Based Purchasing Saves BC/BX 500 Million in 2012.
9. Non-profit hospitals in Charlotte, NC region Thrive on Profits.
10 Commonwealth Funds Finds the Number of Uninsured is Dropping.
July 2014 Newsletter
1. Dangers of Uterine Morcellation.
2. Recovery of the Gut Microbiome Following Fecal Transplant.
3. CMS to Penalize Hospitals for High Rates of HACs.
4. HW USA Comments on the New HAC Proposal.
5. Should Joint Replacement Manufacturers Give a Warranty?
6. Box Warning on Antidepressants May Increase Suicide Attempts in
Young People.
7. Large Price Variation in Healthcare.
8. Healthcare Reform May Cut Premiums by 76%.
June 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Narcotic drug abuse in the elderly -
Peter Eisler.
2. ICHE MRSA Prevention Guidelines.
3. MRSA Colonized Patients Contaminate the Environment More Than
MRSA Infected Patients.
4. CRE Outbreak in Florida.
5. Phage Therapy.
6. Safety Problems in the Cleveland Clinic.
7. Sham Peer Review.
8. Commonwealth Fund - US Last Again.
9. Mass. Nurses Push for Financial Disclosure of Hospital Charges,
Investments and CEO Salaries.
June 2014 Newsletter
1. Ultraviolet Environmental Disinfection.
2. European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious
Disease.
3. New Antibiotic To Treat MRSA.
4. More Funding Needed for MDROs.
5. The Nursing Shortage.
May 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. CDC Radio/Web Presentation on Drug
Resistant Organisms, Antibiotic Overutilization and MERS.
2. HW USA Joins with APIC and Other
Healthcare Advocacy Organizatons to Support NHSN.
3. US and EU Progress in Fight Against
Drug Resistance.
4. Verticle Integration of Hospitals and
Physicains Leads to Higher Prices.
5. Kaiser Raises Prices Amid Large
Reserves.
6. Medtronic's Infuse Goes to Court
7. CU posts C-Section Rates.
May 2014 Newsletter
1.
CMS Strengthens Rules for Healthcare Acquired Conditions.
2. Hospitals Lower HACs But Much Work Needs To Be Done.
3. One in 20 Patients are Misdiagnosed.
4. Dr. Steven Tower on MoM Hip Implant Adverse Events.
5. The FDA Wants Stricter Rules for Pelvic Mesh Implants.
6. Routine Headache Neuroimaging is Overutilized.
7. Antibiotic Resistance Genes Are Widespread in Nature.
8. Chlorhexidine and Alcohol In Skin Antisepsis.
9. WHO - Antibiotics Are Losing Their Effectiveness.
Apr. 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. OIG Report on Out Patient Surgery
Facility Fees.
2. Morgan Stanly -- Insurance Premium Increases.
3. Summary of OIG Adverse Event Reports.
4. USA Today Report on Drug Abuse in the Medical Community.
5. Misdiagnosis Affects 1 in 20 Patients.
6. Experienced Nurses Are the Key To Shorter Length of Stay
7. The Dangers of Uterine Morcellation.
8. Insurance Company Price Transparency.
Apr. 2014 Newsletter
1. MRSA Surveillance.
2. HW USA You Tube Channel.
3. CDC Releases New Incidence Data on HAIs.
4. Update on CMS's Policy of Not Paying for HACs.
5. CMS to Release Physician Billing Data to The Public.
6. Renewed Effort Needed To Combat Drug Resistant Bacteria.
7. HW USA Comments on Dept HHS 2020 HAI Goals.
8. England Health Sec. States Hospitals Are Obliged To Report
Medical Errors.
9. Leaders of Academic Medicine Sit On Healthcare Corporate
Boards.
Mar. 2014 Newsletter - Issue 3
1. Bloodstream infections in community
hospitals.
2. CRE can survive weeks to months on dry surfaces.
3. Stethoscopes can spread bacteria.
4. Quote on Medical Overuse from a Top ACO Administrator.
5. Reducing Early Elective Deliveries.
6. The ACA is not succeeding but isn't failing either.
7. $178.900 bill for outpatient bunion surgery.
Mar. 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Public Reporting of Healthcare Associated
Infections in Kentucky
2. Lack of Standardization of Prevention Protocols My Contribute
to Multi-Resistant Drug Organisms.
3. Medical Overuse Presentation by Rosemary Gibson.
4. CDC links C. Difficile Infections in Children to Antibiotic
Overuse.
5. Kentucky is Number On (CDDEP) in Antibiotic prescribing.
6. Deaths Links to Cardiac Stents Rise as Overuse is Seen.
7. Map of America's Coronary Sent Hot Spots.
Mar. 2014 Newsletter
1. CDC Starts Campaign to Prevent C.
Difficile.
2. Rep Tom Burch Files a Public Reporting Bill on Healthcare
3. Hospital Facility Fees add Billions to Medical Bills - Kansas
City Star
4. Dr. Steve Tower Presents on the Dangers of MoM Hip Implants.
5. Progress in Healthcare Quality is Still Extremely Slow
6. On-Line Ratings are Becoming a Fact of Life
7. One Third of Skilled Nursing Home Residents are Harmed
8. Pharm Industry Payments to Doctors Plummets with Transparncy.
9. MRSA Infections Have Significantly Decrease at VA Nursing
Homes.
Feb. 2014 Newsletter - Issue #2
1. The Forgotten Role of Alcohol
2. Low Levels of Chlorhexidine May Increase MRSA Resistant
Carriers.
3. Carefusion and Chlorhexidine Controversy
4. NQF Conflict of Interest
5. Sticker Shock From Insurance Deductibles
6. More Doctors Shifting to Hospital Employment
7. ACOs Run by Doctors Could Put Some Hospitals Out of Bussiness
Feb. 2014 Newsletter
1. CareFusion pays US DOJ a 50 Million
Dollar Settlement
2. Deadly MRSA Strikes Southern Kentucky.
3. Infection Control Practices Not Implemented In Many ICUs.
4. NIH Sounds Alarm on Research Integrity.
5. Full Disclosure of Medical Errors.
6. Can the State Recoup Medicaid Expenses After Death.
7. Wisconsin Hospital Association Reduces Readmissions by 22%
8. Hospital Consolidation Picks Up Pace.
9. Hospital Charge to Cost Rations - Kentucky Has the 23nd Highest
Hospital.
10. Healthcare Spending in High Income Countries.
11. Asking Price Does Affect Medicare Payments.
Jan. 2014 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. VA Reports Continued Decrease in MRSA
Utilizing Surveillance.
2. AHRQ Update Preventing Pressure Ulcers.
3. Nurse Burnout and Understaffing Linked to Healthcare Infections.
4 Association of Fatigue with Decision Regret in Nurses
Jan. 2014 Newsletter
1. How long does it take for bacterial
resistance to develop - CDDEP
2. Antibacterial Soap Comes Under Fire.
3. Improved Hand Hygiene is Needed to Control C. Diff.
4. Protecting Americans From Infections Disease Outbreaks.
5. Probiotics May Help Prevent C. Difficile Infections.
6. Superbugs May Spread Via Air Currents.
7. Mass. Report. Hospital Consolidation and Mergers Drive Up
Costs.
8. Major Drug Company Will Stop Physician Drug Promotion Payments.
9. Unreported Robotic Surgery Injuries.
10. Medicare Names Best and Worst Hospitals For Hip and Knee
Replacement.
11. FDA Upgrades Medical Device Database.
12. AHA: Top 5 procedures to be discussed by patient and
physician prior to proceeding.
13. Propublica Post Hospital ER Waite Times.
Dec. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. USA Today MRSA Report.
2. CMS Posts MRSA and C. Difficile Data.
3. Quality and Access Problems with UK's NHS.
4. HAIs Decreasing in California.
5. Nurses Loosing Hospital Jobs.
6. Minimum Staffing Ratios for Nurses.
7. ACO Improving Quality.
8. Almost Half of Hospitals Do Not Plan to Form ACOs.
9. Medicaid Expanding Under the ACA.
10. Vermont Planning a Single Payer System.
11. Nearly 1 in 4 Americans Site Healthcare Cost as a Major Problem.
12. United Health Care is Cutting Doctors from Their Network.
13. Too Many Children are One Antipsychotic Drugs.
Dec. 2013 Newsletter
1. Medtronics Recall Possible Defective Cardiac
Guidewires
2. DePuy Settles Hip Implant Case for 2.5 Billion Dollars
3. Global Status of Antimicrobial Resistance
4. Choosing Wisely Campaign
5. The Statin Calculator Controversy
6. KYNECT Signs Over 56,000 -- 80% are Medicaid
7. Hospital Sticker Price Affects Medicare Outlier Payments
8. Insurers Limiting Networks, Cutting Doctor Fees
9. Large Discrepancies Found in Medicare Post-Hospital Care Spending
Nov. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Lancet Infections Disease Commission -
Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria
2. Tort Reform is not a Substitute for Healthcare Reform
3. The Controversy over the New Statin Guidelines
4. Medicare Hospital Payment Reduction and Bonuses
5. Medicare Value Purchasing
6. Outlier Asking Prices Driving Up Outlier Medicare Payments
7. Value Based Purchasing is Inevitable and That is Good
8. US Healthcare Outcomes are Down, Spending is Up
9. Johnson and Johnson - May Agree to 4 Billion Dollar Hip Implant
Settlement
10. Bill 2285 "Strategies to Address Antimicrobial Resistance (STAAR)
Act.
Nov. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Hospital Costs are Skyrocketing
2. Robotic Surgery May Have More Complications Than Thought
3. FDA Investigates Robotic Surgery
4. Commonwealth Fund Updates www.whynotthebest.org
Nov. 2013 Newsletter
1. MRSA Screening At the VA Causes Continued
Decline in MRSA Infections
2. Frontline Story -- Nightmare Bacteria
3. AHRQ Policy on Universal Decolonization
4. Gloves and Gowns Alone Do Not Stop All Hospital Infections
5. US Has a high rate of Inappropriate Antibiotic Usage.
6. Sepsis Costs more and Deaths are Higher in Teaching Hospitals.
7. Health Insurance Co-Ops are In Danger
8. Germany's Drug Approval Process
9. Removing Sales Reps From the OR
10. Hospitals Enter the Insurance Market
11. Hospitals With More Nursing Staff Have Lower Rates of Readmissions
12. Robotic Surgery Damaging Patients Rises With Marketing
13. Research Errors All Too Common
Oct. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 3
1. APIC Patient Empowerment Poster To Prevent
Healthcare Infections.
2. Gloves/Gowns and Hands Washing Alone are not Enough to Prevent
Infections.
3. Hospital Administrators Underestimate the Rate of Pressure
Sores
Oct. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. MRSA in Surgical Wards Reduced Surveillance
2. Cardiovascular Stent Overutilization Alleged in Kentucky
3. Mapping USA's Coronary Stent Hot Spots
4. Antibiotic Overutilization
Oct. 2013 Newsletter
1. MRSA in Surgical Wards Reduced by
Surveillance
2. Diverse Sources of C. Difficile HAI
3. National Burden of MRSA
4. Pediatric MRSA
5. U.S. Senate HELP Cmt on Sepsis
6. Cost of HAIs
7. Patients Colonized with MRSA more likely to get an infection.
8. Vanderbilt Having Nurses Clean Rooms
9. Nurse Staffing Bill Introduced in U.S. Congress
10. How Many Die Each Year of Adverse Events
Sep. 2013 Newsletter
1. Kaiser Family Foundation -Tobacco Surcharge
Calculator.
2. IBM to place 110,000 retirees on Health Exchanges.
3. KFF - Health Insurance Rates for 17 States have Been Published.
4. Medical Costs still Climbing.
5. 41% of Patient Rooms had 1 or more Surfaces Contaminated with MRSA
or C. Difficile.
6. Deep Infection, Most Common Reason for Total Hip Readmission.
7. Low-Risk Thyroid Cancer Over Diagnosed, Over Treated.
8. North Carolina Requires Hospitals to Post Prices (Ankle MRI varies
from $400 to $2100).
Aug. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. HW USA comment on CMS Proposed Facility Fee
Regulation
2. An Infection Outbreak in One Hospital Affects All Hospitals
3. Superbugs are Overpowering Antibiotics Faster Than CDC Predicted
4. Hospitals Earn A Profit From Adverse Events
5. Medical Tourism for Hip and Knee Replacements
6. Transitional Care Cuts Readmissions by 20%
7. KFF Health Insurance Federal Subsidy Calculator
8. Pres Bush Receives Angioplasty Performed Absent Symptoms
Aug. 2013 Newsletter
1. Antibiotic Resistance Much Higher Than CDC
Estimates
2. Drug Resistance is a Growing Threat
3. Kentucky has the Seventh Highest Increase in C-Section Rates in the
Nation
4. 146 Practice Standards are Called into Question
5. Health Insurance Competition Lowers Premiums
6. New Estimate of U.S. Hospital Deaths Associated With Medical Errors
7. Leapfrog Group New Hospital Error Calculator
8. Consumer Union; Your Safer-Surgery Survival Guide
9. Mistakes they Don't Want You To Know -- Forbes Mag.
10. Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Deaths at the University of Kentucky
11. More Diagnostic Tests in a Pediatric ER does not Improve Outcomes
12. Doctors Selling Practices to Hospitals -- CNN
13. 1.7 Million Medical Bill Bankruptcies
14. Organized Crime and Healthcare Delivery
15. CMS Proposed New Regulations for Facility Fee Discrepancies
Jul. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Coccidioidomycosis infections in the western United
States
2. The USPSTF recommends screening for Hepattis C.
3. The Tuberculosis Bacteria is becoming more dangerous.
4. The high cost of being born in the United States.
5. Kids on Speed.
6. Surgical Price Transparency Causes Bidding War in Oklahoma.
7. Hospitals Admit Mistakes and Save Money.
8. Medical Devices Can Be Vulnerable To Cyber Threats
9. The Astonishing Growth of Healthcare Jobs in America
10. Why our Healthcare lets Prices Run Wild
11. White House Delays Health-Care Rule
Jul. 2013 Newsletter
1. Full Disclosure of Medical Errors -- 25 Years
Since First Proposed.
2. One in 12 Patients in Canadian Hospitals Maybe Carrying a Superbug
3. Hepatitis C Screening is Recommended for Those Born Between 1945 to
1965.
4. MRSA Kills 28 Yr Old in Laurel County, KY.
5. CMS Prepares for Hospital Infection Control Inspections.
5. Hospital CEOs Awarded for Profit Over Quality.
7. 10 Hospital Patient Safety Checklists.
8. Improving Efficiency Scores While Maintaining Quality.
Jun. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. C. Difficile Linked to Outpatient Healthcare
Exposure.
2. Decolonization of MRSA Carriers prevents Surgical Infections
3. Active Surveillance Advocated for Deadly Coronavirus
4. University of Kentucky Sues Reporter Over FOI Request
5. Hospital Mergers May Be Driving Up Healthcare Costs
6. States Place Pricing Information on the Web
7. Medicaid Expansion, Lowers Mortality in Three States but
Oregon reports no significant effect on measured physical health outcomes.
Jun. 2013 Newsletter
1. Hospitals May Profit from CLABSIs.
2. MRSA Trial Evaluating Chlorhexidine Bathing.
3. Infection Rates at on Facility Affects Rates at Other Facilities.
4. Cause-of-Death Reporting BY Resident Physicians Not Always
Accurate.
5. US News Best Hospital Rankings May be Misleading.
6. California Exchanges Lower Premium Rates
7. The $2.7 Trillion Dollar Medical Bill - NYT
May 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Kentucky Hospital Rankings in the Herald
Leader
2. CRE Covered by Medical News
3. Are we entering into a post-antibiotic era ?
4. Deadly CRE Spreading Fast in Hospitals
5. Hospitals See Serge in Superbugs
6. State of New Jersey Sees Improvements in Adverse Events and
Infections.
7. Maine Releases Their 2013 Healthcare Acquired Infection Report.
8. Is Hospital Safety the Patient's Responsibility or the Hospitals?
9. HW USA Signs on to the APIC's Letter
to advocate funding for NHSN.
10. Costs Vary Widely for Same Hospitals.
11. CMS Datafile on Hospital Costs.
May 2013 Newsletter
1. Dr. Arjun Srinivasan presentation on Jack
Pattie Show on HAIs.
2. MRSA Colonization Predicts MRSA Infection in GI Surgery Patients.
3. VA Uses Three Tiered Approach to Clean Rooms of C. Difficile
Patients.
4. Hospital Facility Fees Face Competitive Pressure.
5. Government Oversight Committee on Healthcare Transparency.
6. Many Hospitals do Make Money on Adverse Events.
7. Is Hospital Safety the Responsibility of the Patient.
8. United States Sues Novartis Pharma for Allegedly Paying Kickbacks.
Apr. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Missouri Senate Passes Bill to Toughen
Reporting on Hospital Acquired Infections.
2. Many Hospitals do Make Money When Patients Developed Infections and
Adverse Events.
3. VA Uses a Three Tiered Approach to Clean Rooms of C. Difficile
Patients.
4. Hospital Facility Fees Face Competitive Pressure.
5. Doctor Owned Hospitals Fare Better Under the Healthcare Reform Law.
Apr. 2013 Newsletter
1. CLABSIs in ICUs may be related to the
facility's culture of safety.
2. KY Representative Tom Burch Calls for Mandatory Reporting of CRE.
3. CRE is on the Rise.
4. What NIH had to do to Control an Outbreak of CRE.
5. New research indicates that patients with diarrhea should be
isolated unit cultures are back to exclude a C. Difficile infection.
6. Possible spread of MRSA from Livestock to Humans.
7. Hospitals fail to take simple steps to prevent the spread of C.
Difficile.
8. Death rates rise at Critical Access Hospitals.
9. Large Increase in Insurance Premiums are expected.
Mar. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. CRE a Growing Threat in Kentucky.
2. Hospital Complaint Inspections are Now Online.
3. ProPublica Updates Dollars for Doctors.
4. CMS Updates Readmission Penalties.
5. National Academies Press - U.S. Health - Shorter Lives, Poorer
Health.
6. A World Without Antibiotics.
7. Large Increase in Premiums are Predicted by Health Insurance
Companies.
8. Nurses Worldwide Question Hospital Safety.
9. Nurse Understaffing Linked to Higher Infections in NICU.
10. Nursing Fatigue Lined to Errors.
11. 29 States Receive a Failing Grade in Price Transparency.
12. CDC has an New APP on "Solve the Infection".
Mar. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. MRSA Rates are Not Falling.
2. CDC Issues Advisory for new Super Bacteria - CRE.
3. Despite Efforts C. Difficile Rates are Not Decreasing.
4. Chief Medical Officer of United Kingdom Warns of Entering A
Post-Antibiotic Era.
5. CMS May Have Gaps in Oversight of Conflict of Interest.
6. Commission Advocates End of Fee for Service System.
7. C-Sections Rates Vary Between 7% to 70% at Different Facilities.
8. Leapfrog Group Posts New Data on Early Elective Deliveries.
9. I-Pone Helps Monitor Patients and Saves Money.
10. Choosing Wisely Targets 90 Dubious Tests.
11. Consolidation and Mergers May Increase Costs but Not Quality.
12. NEJM and MedPAC - Improving CMS's Readmission Value-Based
Purchasing Policy.
Mar. 2013 Newsletter
1. The Bitter Pill - High Cost of Healthcare
Time Mag
2. ER Admission Rates Vary 2,5 Fold in Different States.
3. Hundreds Sue Kentucky Hospital for Alleged Unnecessary Heart
Surgery.
4. Robotic Hysterectomies Increase but With Little Benefit.
5. Medical Groups Identity 90 Unnecessary and Overused Treatments.
6. Healthcare Associated Infections - Only 6 Outbreaks Reported to the
KY Health Depart. By KY Hospitals in 2012
7. The Superbug CRE is Spreading in the U.S.
8. DC Hospital Nurses fight Over Patient-to-Nurse Ratios.
9. Is the Patient Safety Movement in Danger of Flickering Out?
10. Women are Experiencing 29% More Hip Implant Failures Than Men.
Feb. 2013 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Presentation before KY House Health & Welfare
Committee
2. Tough CDC Regulations on Control of CRE
3. CDC HAI Improvement in Hospitals Over 5 Years
4. Employers Must Offer Family Care
5. Health Insurance Government Subsidies
6. Wide Rage of Prices For Hip Surgery
7. Kentucky Uninsured 28% and Climbing
Feb. 2013 Newsletter
1. One one MRSA outbreak and No C. Difficile
Outbreaks were Reported by Kentucky Hospitals in 2013
2. CRE op-ed -- The pending epidemic
3. One in five hospital based doctors report unsafe workloads
4. Employers may choose to pay a penalty than give employees health
insurance.
6. CMS release rules for drug and device companies to report gifts to
doctors
Jan. 2013 - Issue 2 Newsletter
1. Two Takes Hospital Faculty Fee Op-Eds
2. Success in Preventing CLABSIs - A case report of the best
performing hospital.
3. Regulations Enacted in NY to Prevent Sepsis
4. Rise in Bacteria Called Apocalyptic Scenario
5. Value Purchasing - Who is Getting Rewarded and Who is Getting
Penalized.
6. HW USA Comments on the Medical Loss Ratio Regulations
7. Hospitals Generate 2.3 Trillion Dollars in Economic Activity
8. NY Safe Staffing Bill Filed.
9. Non-Physicians May Prevent Physician Shortage
10. New Push for the Public Option
11. JJ Metal on Metal Hip Implants have a 36% 5 Year Failure Rate
Jan. 2013 Newsletter
1. Non-Payment of CLABSI - Letter to NEJM
2. Hospital Facility Charges - Washington Post, Cleveland.com,
Newsobserver.com, Seattle Times
3. CMS Readmission Penalty
4. Not a clear relationship between increased Spending and Quality
5. Healthcare Acquired Infections and MRDOs.
6. Spread of MRSA in Hospital Staff
7. MRSA and C. Difficile Acquired Infections Leading to Higher
Readmissions
8. Antibiotics Do Not Help Most Lower Respiratory Infections
9. NY Files Safe Staffing Bill
10, Wal-Mart Bails on Providing Insurance Coverage to Part Time
Workers.
11. Family Health Insurance Premiums and the Proportion they Pay are
Raising.
12. The Case is Made For Evidence Based Surgical Indications.
Dec. 2012 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. AMA calls for Patient Welfare to Take
Priority over Employer Interests, AMA & NYTs.
2. MRSA and C. Difficile Infections Cause Higher Readmission Rates.
3. New Zealand Hospital Address MRSA Colonization in Hospital Staff
Members.
4. 34 Ways To Lower Colon Surgery Infection Rates.
5. C. Difficile Started with Floroquinolone Use.
6. Dogs Can Identify C. Difficile in Stools.
7. Always Events.
8. Effects of Healthcare Consolidation and Integration.
9. Fraud in large Medical Corporations.
10. The "Medical Misadventure Diagnostic Code.
11. Fixing the Health Insurance Loss Ratio Saved Nearly $1.5 Billion.
12. Six of Every Seven Doctors Say the Healthcare System is Broken.
13. 18 States Planning to Run Their Own Healthcare Exchanges.
14. Dartmouth Atlas reports Differing Surgery rates in Different Parts
of the Country.
Dec. 2012 Newsletter
1. MRSA Recommendations from the 2012 DHHS HAI
Meeting.
2. 59% of Surveyed are Now Screening for MRSA.
3. Patients are Major Reservoir for MRSA.
4. MRSA Control in One Hospital Affects MRSA In Other Hospitals.
5. Alliance for Prudent Use of Antibiotics Joint Statement.
6. USA Today -- Killer Bug No Drugs -- CRE.
7. CDDEP Relaunches Antibiotic Resistance Map.
8. Leapfrog Group Releases Hospital Rankings.
9. Effectiveness of Screening Mammography in Preventing Infections.
10. Doctors Joining Hospitals to Receive Higher Medicare Pay.
12. CMS Posts New Website to Download Data.
13. New Government Whistleblower Law.
14. Projections Show Limited Savings From Meeting Quality Targets
Under the
Medicare Shared Savings Program.
Nov. 2012 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. MedPAC Considering Equal Pay for Free
Standing and Hospital Employed Doctors
2. Randomized Control Trials for the Use of Parachutes.
3. C. Difficile is on the Rise According to H-CUP Data.
3. 59% of Surveyed ICUs are Now Screening for MRSA.
5. Use of Antibacterial Soap.
6. P4P Reduces Mortality in England's Hospitals.
7. Surgical Mortality is Lower in Magnet Hospitals.
8. Humana Spending $500 Million to Buy Provider Network.
Nov. 2012 Newsletter
1. ACOs Produce Limited Healthcare Savings
2. Medicaid Provider Centene Sues Kentucky
3. ICU Medical Errors May Cause More Deaths Than Breast Cancer
4. Living Kidney Donors May be at Higher Risk to Develop Hypertension
and Cardiovascular Disease
Oct. 2012 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Nursing-Sensitive Value-Based Purchasing
2. Magnet Hospitals Have Fewer Surgical Deaths
3. Nurses Prevent More Medication Errors in Supportive Hospitals
4. Non-Payment for Care Related to CLABSI did not Reduce Infection
Rates ( Read Why )
5. Preventable Errors May Cost 1 Trillion Dollars a Year
6. Psychotropic Agents are Being Prescribed at an Alarming Rate
Oct. 2012 Newsletter
1. US News & World Report Ranking System
2. Joint Commission Conference on Medical Overuse
3. Comments on AHRQ Proposal for the Public to Report Adverse Events
4. Review: Unaccountable
5. PBS Money and Medicine
6. Health Care Cost Institute -- Costs are Rising
7. Are Employers Requiring Employees to Pay More for Insurance
8. NHSN Expanded for Infections in Nursing Homes
9. Private Rooms May Cut Infection Rates
Sept. 2012 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. IOM Report: Better Care at Lower Cost
2. Mass. Reform Lowers the Rate of Increase in Healthcare Costs
3. Healthcare Reform Tax Penalty to hit 6 Million, IRS will Not pursue
Americans without health insurance.
4. Non-payment of CAUTI results in little recoupment of funds.
5. CMS 2011 Finance and Accreditation Report.
6. Nurse Centric ACO are Proposed
Sept. 2012 Newsletter
1. USA Today Coverage of the C. Difficile
Epidemic.
2. California Releases Their MRSA Report.
3. Isolation and Screening Used to Control the KPC and CRE Epidemic.
4. Underreporting of HAIs in California.
5. Why Hospital Rankings Differ.
6. Shared Decision Making and informed Consent Improves Quality and
Cuts Costs.
7. US Spends far More on Healthcare than Any Other Nation.
8. Mass. Passes Law to Control Healthcare Costs.
9. Health Once Canceling Contract with KY Medicaid Provider Coventry
Care.
10. HCA Probed Unnecessary Heart Procedures.
11. ACO Cuts Readmission Rates by 30%.
12. New Law will Penalize Hospitals with High Readmission Rates.
Aug. 2012 Newsletter
1. MRSA has Doubled in the Five Years.
2. Nurse Burnout Linked to an Increase in Healthcare Associated
Infections.
3. New York Hospitals have Confidentially Reported 40,000 Adverse
Events Since 2007.
4. CUSP cuts Colorectal Surgery HAIs by 33%.
5. The Joint Commission Published Monograph on CLABSI Prevention.
6. Hospitals are Not Doing Enough to Avoid Cardiac Readmissions.
7. Experts Advise to Abandon Gastric Banding.
8. USPSTF Recommends Against Cardiac Stress Testing.
9. Mass. Legislature Passes Provision to Limit Healthcare Cost
Increases.
10. Virginia's Certificate of Need Laws are Challenged.
Jul. 2012 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Process and Mortality Measures Not Observed to Increase Quality --
NEJM
2. RWJF Hospital Mergers Generally Lead to Significant Price
Increases.
4. OIG Reports that only 1% of Adverse Events are Reported to States
By Hospitals.
3. Patients Reluctant to Disagree With Their Doctors.
4. Healthcare Costs Still Rising in Massachusetts.
5. Drugs for Anemia Made Billions but May Also Have Harmed Patients.
6. Insurance Companies Forming ACOs.
7. New York Hospital Dropping Health Insurance,
8. FDA Spied on E-Mails from its Own Scientists.
9. CLABSI drop in Ohio and Kansas.
Jul. 2012 Newsletter
1. CDC Releases Updated Guidelines for Control
of CRE
2. CMS Suspends Mandate for At Least One Member of the Hospital's
Medical Staff sit on the Hospital's Board.
3. Consumer Reports Releases New Hospital Rating System.
4. Hospital Care for Medically Indigent May Go Uncompensated.
5. CMS Office of Actuary, Growth in Healthcare Spending will be Faster
than the GNP.
6. Newly Graduated Nurses Have Trouble Finding Jobs.
7. HAIs fall by 20% in England.
Jun. 2012 Newsletter
1. Standardized Infection Ratio -- Poster
Presentation at the 2012 HAI Data Summit
2. The human bacterial flora
3. High Utilization of CT and MRI Scanners.
4. Insurance Companies Forming Accountable Care Organizations
5. Leapfrog Group's 2012 Hospital Survey
6. Only a Small Fraction of Doctors are doing CMS's Quality Reporting.
7. New Website:
www.haiwatch.com
May 2012 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Physicians Getting Shrinking Piece of
Healthcare Pie.
2. Bigger hospitals are associated with driving up healthcare prices.
3. Insurers and Private Equity Firms are Entering the Market.
4. Patients Give Poor Marks to the US Healthcare System -
NPR/RWJ/Harvard Survey
5. Presentation by Regina Holliday.
6. Excellent Graphic on the Cost of Medical Care.
7. CDC Calls for Hepatitis C Screening.
8. Link between Lowe Staffing and Nursing Home Deaths.
9. New Government Site on Healthcare Quality.
10. Infections Linked to Higher ICU Mortality and Higher Hospital
Readmissons.
11. Patient Web Rankings are Found to be Accurate.
12. Healthcare Reporting in Alberta, Canada.
May 2012 Newsletter
1) High Cost of Healthcare -- Employers may
elect to pay penalty.
2) Commonwealth Fund -- Prices Vary Widely.
3) Prices Variation of an Appendectomy
4) Medical Blue Book
5) High Cost of Healthcare is Unsustainable.
6) Gaps in Healthcare Still Persists.
7) Surgical Site Infection Monitoring.
8) Missouri Statement of Public Reporting of Healthcare Associated
Infections.
9) Overuse of Cesarean Deliveries.
Apr. 2012 Newsletter
1) MedPAC Calls for Cuts in Hospital Outpatient
Doctor Office Visits
2) Healthcare Varies Widely in Each State
3) Consumer Reports: Some Medical Devices are Dangerous and
Never Tested for Safety
4) Risks to External Radiation for Diagnostic Tests -- American Cancer
Society
5) 50% of Cancer Research Does Not Hold Up
6) Report from the Union of Concerned Scientists
7) Healthcare Costs on the Rise for Patients
8) Pressure Ulcers are Reservoir for MRSA
Mar. 2012 Newsletter - Issue 2
1) C. Difficile Mortality on the Rise - CDC News
Release.
2) High Cost of US Healthcare System Compared to Other Countries.
3) Medicare Billing Fraud.
4) Hospitals and Private Equity Firms.
5) Telemonitoring Decreases Readmissions to Hospitals.
6) Hospitals Demand Upfront Payment For Non-Emergency Visits.
7) Use of CT Scans Differs Between ER Doctors at the Same Hospital.
Mar. 2012 Newsletter
1) Healthcare Integration, Medicare Reimbursement and Loss of the
Independent Medical Staff.
2) Michael Bennett Publishes "My Father".
3) ICD-10 Billing is Delayed.
4) Problems With CMS Ratings of Hospitals ??
5) Should Infection rates after C-Sections Also Be Reported.
6) Case Report of HAI in a Prominent Reporter.
7) There is Still a Punitive Safety Culture.
6) Problems with Gastric Banding, Clean Surgical Instruments, Pain
Medication Prescriptions
7) CED Recommendations for controlling C. Difficile.
Feb. 2012 Newsletter
1) Health Watch USA Model Public Reporting
Legislation.
2) Approved and Planned Federal Public Reporting Infection Measures.
3) NHSN CLABSI Report Now on Hospital Compare.
4) Highly Resistant Bacteria in 37 States.
4) If a Cow Map Exists Why Not a MRSA or HAI Map.
5) Can Insurance Companies Survive ACOs
6) Do Bone Marrow Transplants Have a Role in Breast Cancer Treatment.
Jan. 2012 Newsletter - Issue 2
1) MedPAC estimates Mid Level Outpatient Visits
from Hospital Employed Doctors may be 80% Higher than those from independent
providers.
2) Organized Medicine asks for money saved from the decrease in the
OSC funds to fix the SRG.
3) 70% of Hospitals use a Full Employment Medical Staph Model &
Cardiology Doctors are Leaving Practice for Hospital Employment.
4) Mercy Hospital Report VAP (Ventilator Associated Pneumonia) rate of
Zero.
5) Innovation Summit Conference.
6) Medicare Coordinated Care Value Purchasing has not saved money.
7) Publicly reported infection numbers may be flawed -- A report from
Colorado and California.
8) AMA states clarity needed as to when to report Adverse Events.
Jan. 2012 Newsletter
1. OIG Report -- Hospitals Not Capturing Errors.
2. Dr. Jarvis Presentation on Surveillance Cultures.
3. AHRQ Report -- No Improvement in Hospital Safety Indicators Over a
10 Year Period.
4. Small Doctor Practices are Closing and Hospital Employment is
Increasing.
5. Avistin Effectiveness in Ovarian Cancer is Questioned.
6. The use of PSA testing for Prostate Cancer is Questioned.
7. California Releases Hospital Acquired Infection Report.
8. Doctor's Medicare Claims Data is Released to Rate Doctors.
9. MRSA Colonization Rate in Children Reported to be almost 3%.
10. The California Medical Association Comments on CMS Proposed
Regulations which Allow for a Single Governing Body in a Multi-Hospital
Network.
Dec. 2011 Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Commonwealth Fund's Report on Success
Strategies for CLABSI.
2. Risk Adjustment Does Not Explain Results Between Facilities.
3. Public Reporting in PA is Associated With Lower Hospital Mortality.
4. Most Reportable HAI are Preventable.
5. Vancomycin Prophylaxis -- May Not Always Be Good.
6. Private Rooms Found to Have a Lower Infection Rate.
7. Rates of MRSA Bacteremia May be Too Low to Be Used as A Tool To
Monitor Improvement.
8. Medical Over Usage, in the Treatment of Pain and in psychotropic
Drugs Used in Nursing Homes & Foster Care
Dec. 2011 Newsletter
1. Tennessee Hospitals Reduce Bloodstream
Infections.
2. Majority of Adverse Events That Were Reported by Patients Had Not
Been Reported By Staff.
3. Infection Rates Drop in Pennsylvania.
4. The Shield of PSOs is Under Attack.
5. Medical Expenses Push 10 Million More Into Poverty.
6. AHRQ Web Page on Full Disclosure.
Nov. 2011 Newsletter
1. The Leapfrog Group expresses concern about Accountable Care
Organizations (ACO)
2. The Commonwealth Fund Gives the United States Low Marks.
3. CMS Issues Final Update on Measures for HACs
4. 70% of Hospitals are Hiring More Physicians.
5. CMS States that Hospital Acquired Conditions on "Hospital Compare"
Website.
6. CDC States That Colonization Does Not Affect the Definition of a
Healthcare Associated Infection.
7. A Policy of Full Disclosure Lowers Stanford's Malpractice Premiums.
8. State of Maine MRSA Surveillance Data on Nursing Home Residents
Admitted to Hospitals.
9. Mich. Keystone Program Finds the Prevention of CLABSI and VAP is
Cost Effective.
Oct. 2011 Newsletter
1. US Ranks Last Among Industrialized Nations in
Preventable Healthcare Deaths
2. Metal on Metal Hip Prostheses are Breaking Down
3. Health Insurance Cost to Increase 8 to 9%
4. Avoidable Readmissions Cost CMS More than 17 Billion Each Year.
5. Nurses in England Complain of Under Staffing in 75% of Patients.
6. State of Maine MRSA Hospital Surveillance Data on High Risk
Patients.
Sep. 2011 - Newsletter - Issue 2
1. Consumer Advocates Call for Transparency in
Hospital Accreditation Process
2. Alcohol Wipes may not be Effective in Controlling C. Diff and
Norovirus
3. Checklists Save lives and Money
4. Tennessee Reports Decrease in CLBSI Associated with Public
Reporting
5. OIG Reports Hospitals are Not Effective in Capturing Adverse Events
6. CDDEP finds CA-MRSA growing in percentage along with the total
number of MRSA.
7. The Number of US Uninsured Grows to 49.9
Million
Sep. 2011 - Newsletter
1. HW USA and over 50 Consumer and Consumer
Organizations Call For Repeal of the Federal Law Prohibiting the Release of
Hospital Accreditation Surveys.
2. Poor Reporting in Patient Safety Organizations
3. MRSA Skin Infections on the Rise
4. C. Difficile Infections are More Common in the Elderly.
5. 70% of Central Line Infections Occur Within the Maintenance Period.
4. Vertical and Horizontal Healthcare Integration May be Causing an
Increase in CMS and Healthcare Costs
6. US Infant Mortality Rate is Higher Than 40 Other Countries
Aug. 2011 - Newsletter
1. Comment on MRSA Surveillance Cultures
Published in JACS
2. Healthcare Reform - Costing More and Covering Less People
3. Patient Toll of Hospital Acquired Infections
4. IOM rules Under Attack
5. Physician Shortage Projected to be as Much as 25%.
6. Medicare Proposes Cutting Physician Fess by 29.5% and Some Imaging
Fees by 50%.
July 2011 - Newsletter Issue 2
1. Hospitals Run by Doctors Have 25% Better
Quality
2. Funding for Antibiotic Resistance is Low
3. Angioplasties Reported to be Overused
4. Wrong Site Surgery Takes Place 40 times a Week
5. CDC Published Outpatient Infection Prevention Guidelines
6. Chantix may Increase Cardiovascular Risk
7. Full Disclosure Lowers Malpractice Costs
8. Medicare's Policy of Non-Payment of Healthcare Acquired Conditions.
July 2011 - Newsletter
1. HW USA Gives Testimony on HAI to the Kentucky Joint VMAPP Committee
2. For Profit Medicaid Managed Care Reported to have Higher Costs and
Lower Quality
3. Kentucky Ranked Worse than Average on AHRQ State Healthcare
Snapshots (and is getting worse)
4. AHA Reported to State CMS Lacks Authority to Enforce ACO Anti-Trust
Actions
5. Disclosure of Medical Errors Lowers Lawsuits
6. Illinois Appellate Court Finds Facility MRSA Rates are Discoverable
7. 5% of All Patients Treated in a Boston Hospital ER are MRSA Culture
Positive
8. Patient Reporting of Adverse Events is 70% Reliable
9. Medicare Not Financially Sound, Trust Fund Exhausted in 2024
10. One in Three Employers May Drop Health Insurance
11. Medical Studies May be "Spun" Up to 50% of the Time
12. Medicare Claims Data Shows CT Scan Over Usage
13, CMS Non-Payment of Healthcare Acquired Conditions Policy Saved
18.8 Million Dollars form Oct. 2008 to Sept. 2009.
June 2011 - Newsletter
1. Healthcare Integration - Will the
Physician Loss his Voice
2. Healthcare Costs Continue Brisk Growth
3. Physicians Writing Cardiovascular Guidelines Have Conflict
of interest.
4. Vermont Passes Universal Healthcare & Considers No-Fault
Malpractice.
5. Lower Nursing Staffing Levels are Associated with Higher
Rates of Citations.
6. Only 15 KY Hospitals Have Signed on to Partnership for
Patients.
May 2011 - Newsletter
1. HW USA and 19 other Organizations
Submit Comment for ACO.
2. Norton Healthcare System receives NQF Award for
Transparency
3. Maternal Mortality on the Rise
4. Vermont Legislature Passes Healthcare Reform with
Consideration of a No-Fault Malpractice System.
5. Most Uninsured are Unable to Pay for Hospital Bills.
April 2011 - Newsletter Issue 2
1. CMS Posts Data on Hospital Acquired
Condition
2. AHRQ Lists Hospitals Participating in CUSP
3. Commonwealth Fund & WhyNotTheBest Website
4. 90% of Hospital Errors Not Identified
5. VA National MRSA Data Published in the NEJM
6. RWJ study - Lower Nurse Staffing higher Infection Rates
7. Senator Grassley - Submits Bill to Post Physician Billing
Data on the Web
8. 72% Feel Healthcare Needs to be Overhauled
9. MedPac Recommends Medicare Precertification for CT and MRI
Scans
10. Blue Cross Blue Shield Anti-Trust Investigation
April 2011 - Newsletter
1) CMS Responds to HW USA Inquiry
Regarding Survey Visits
2) Superbug with a 50% Mortality Rate
3) Reductions in Nursing Staff Increases Patient Mortality
4) Nevada Considers Public Disclosure of Harm
5) Gastric Banding May Cause More Complications Than Wight
Loss
6) Physician Sunshine Act
7) How Much Does Overutilization Cost Medicare ?
8) Arizona to Defund Medicaid
Mar 2011 - Newsletter Issue 2
1) Cost of Prevent Increases from $10 to
$1500
2) AHRQ - Study Confirms the Importance of Nursing
3) Alcohol Wipes Harbor Bacillus cereus
4) NQF Expands Medical Device Events
5) Dialysis Patients are High Risk for CLBSI
6) Dartmouth Atlas on Patient Choices
Mar 2011 - Newsletter
1) Update on HB 291 and SB 72 on
Healthcare Acquired Infections
2) MRSA cases on the rise in Illinois
3) State of Maine Issues its MRSA Prevalence Report
4) Keystone Project reduced Ventilator Associated Pneumonia by
70%
5) Bankruptcy is linked to healthcare costs
6) Hospital billing data may not be accurate in identifying
infections.
Feb 2011 - Newsletter
1) House Bill 291 Filed - Public Reporting of
Healthcare Acquired Infections.
2) Op-Ed Lexington Herald Leader on HAI, Op-Ed Courier Journal on
Revising Heathcare Reform.
3) Survey of Physician Disclosure of Medical Errors.
4) Surgical Checklists Reduces Malpractice Claims.
5) Higher Spending Hospitals have a Lower Patient Mortality.
6) Wall Street Journal Sues to Open Physician Medicare Billing
Records.
Jan 2011 - Newsletter
1) Senate Bill 72 Filed - Public
Reporting of Healthcare Acquired Infections
2) KY Top Four State for MRSA Resistance ( > 60% of Staph is
MRSA )
3) Cost of Healthcare Errors Calculator Posted by GE
4) JACS - The more days you wait for surgery in a hospital the
greater the chance for a hospital acquired infection.
5) Mass. finds the larger the hospital system the higher the
cost.
6) Joint Commission finds over 2/3 of hospital events
associated with hospital leadership problems.
7) On 8000 individuals have signed up for the insurance
exchanges.
8) Medicare and Medicaid Going Broke - By 2010 31% of Federal
Budget.
Dec 2010 - Newsletter Issue 2
1) Major Ky Hospitals Support Public
Reporting of HAI
2) KY Top Four States for MRSA Resistance ( > 60% of Staph is
MRSA )
3) Keystone Project Zero Central Line Catheter Infections for
18 Months
4) California Hospitals - Under Reporting HAIs???
5) Surgical Checklists Reduce Medical Errors.
6) CMS Holds Hospital Boards Responsible for Healthcare
Quality.
7) Gag Clauses Placed in Contracts by Device Manufactures.
Dec 2010 - Newsletter
1) OIG Report - One in Seven Patient
Suffer Medical Harm.
2) CMS Proposes to Self-Reporting for Survey Visits.
3) HW USA Published Policy on Surveillance Cultures for MRSA.
4) 2010 Conference Presentations and PowerPoints are Online.
Nov 2010 - Newsletter
1) CDC Director -- Evidence
Indicates HAIs should be rare unacceptable events
2) White Paper (CDC, SHEA, APIC, IDSA) -- The four pillars for
control of HAIs.
3) Kentucky Joint Committee on Health and Welfare --
Presentation on HAIs.
4) Medicaid patients have higher ER utilization rates.
5) Over utilization and safety of CT Scanners.
6) New Super Resistant Bugs.
7) The doctor shortage and the role of nurses.
8) Drug Companies making payments to doctors and nurses
public.
Oct. 2010 - Newsletter
1) HW USA Joins the NQF and
submits a new Serious Reportable Event.
2) HW USA attends summit on "Progress Toward Eliminating
Healthcare Associated Infections"
3) Rosemary Gibson speaks at HW USA Oct Meeting
4) Joint Commission Annual Report on Quality and Safety
5) New Mutli-Drug Resistant Organism has Appeared.
6) Record Number of Americans are Uninsured.
Sept. 2010 - Newsletter
1) New Website on Never Events
2) Health Watch USA in the Washington Post
3) Joint Commission Stresses the Importance of Public Pressure
in Increasing Healthcare Quality.
4) New Data on the Cost of Healthcare Acquired Infections from
ARHQ
5) One in Four Patients are Rehospitalized for The Same
Condition.
6) Medicare May Have Significant Budgetary Shortfalls
7) Private Insurance Premiums Are Increasing More Than
Expected.
Aug. 2010 - Newsletter Issue 2
1) Report form the 9th Annual Quality
Colloquium - Harvard University
2) C. Difficile Infections - Washington Post
3) MSRA Rates May Be Improving - JAMA
3) Malpractice Costs and Error Disclosure - Annals of Internal
Medicine
4) Google Technology Identifying Sanctioned Doctors
Aug. 2010 - Newsletter
1) Medicare Viability Extended to 2029
2) Home MRSA Testing Available in England
3) New Articles on MRSA Surveillance
4) General Surgeon Shortage
5) CMS Value Purchasing in the RHQDAPU Initiative Now Includes
HACs
July 2010 - Newsletter
1) US Last in Healthcare Rankings -
Commonwealth Fund
2) US Maternal Mortality Rate is On The Rise
3) CMS Considers New Reportable HAI (SSI & CLABSI)
4) Poor Infection Control in Surgery Centers
5) MRSA Develops More Resistance
6) CDC Advocates Public Reporting of HAI
7) State Plans for HAI Are On the Web
8) Transparency Reduces Malpractice Costs
June 2010 - Newsletter
1) VA Hospital's National MRSA Study
Results.
2) AHA - Advancing Excellence in Patient Care.
3) APIC Survey on Hospital Control of C. Diff.
4) Public Reporting of HAI in Illinois is Making a Difference.
May 2010 - Newsletter
1) National Academy for State Health Policy
reports on States Adopting Medicare Regulations for their Medicaid
programs.
2) ARHQ - Hospital Acquired Infections - Getting Worse ??
3) Importance of Nursing Staffing and Good Patient Outcomes -
The California Experience with Nurse to Patient Ratios - Linda
Aiken, RN PhD
4) Did the FDA with held safety data on imaging studies??
5) Leapfrog Group Releases 2009 Hospital Survey.
Apr. 2010 - Newsletter
1) Healthcare Reform - Insurance Companies &
Provider Integrati0n
2) Health grades 2010 - Patient Safety Study
3) OIG Report 93% of adverse events did not generate reports in
surveyed hospitals.
4) MRSA Colonization rates of 4% to 6%, C. Diff now leads
MRSA, Public reporting of hospital acquired infections is
producing results in Pennsylvania.
Mar. 2010 - Newsletter
1) Healthcare Reform - The Final Push
2) Healthcare Acquired Infections - Update
3) How states Spent Their HAI Grant
4) Hospital Acquired Conditions, Poor State of Voluntary
Reporting - OIG
5) High Insurance Premiums
6) High Tech, High Cost, Low Payoff
7) Concern over Radiation Safety
Feb. 2010 - Newsletter
1) CDC Supports Public Reporting of
Healthcare Acquired Infections
2) US Government Provides Health Insurance for Over 50% of the
Population
3) Patient Safety Organizations are Slow to Come On-Line
4) Canadian Premier Goes to USA For Heart Surgery
Jan. 2010 - Newsletter Issue 2
1) Hospital Acquired Infections - Recent
Articles of Interest and New Support for Universal Screening of MRSA
2) Mayo Clinic Abandoning Medicare.
3) Expanded National Practitioner's Databank.
4) CT Scans and Risk of Causing Cancer.
Jan. 2010- Newsletter
1) Is the US falling behind the world in
MRSA prevention??
2) Washington, Ohio and Tennessee are posting facility
infection rates online.
3) Physician employment by hospitals is increasing the cost
charged to patients.
4) High Value hospitals may get paid more.
5) 23% of US citizens report being uninsured for at least part
of the year.
Dec. 2009 - Newsletter
1) MRSA USA 600 - A superior Strain with
five times the death rate
2) Public and government pressure reduce HAI in Massachusetts
3) Community associated MRSA on the rise in hospitals.
4) CAUTI - CDC issues prevention guidelines.
5) New GAO report gives poor rankings to 10 Kentucky nursing
homes.
6) Health insurance rates double since 2000.
Nov. 2009 - Newsletter Issue 2
1) Transparency and Never Events in the
House and Senate Healthcare Reform Bills.
2) Central Line Associated Infections reduced by over 80%.
3) Colorado Hospital Association's Principles on Never Events.
4. The High Infant Mortality Rate in The USA.
5) The Shortage of US Surgeons.
6) The Joint Commission has a Competitor.
7) MRSA Carriers Have a Higher Post-op Infection Rate.
8) C. Diff rates lowered at a Lancaster, PA Hospital.
9) MRSA Getting Deadlier.
10) 45,000 Deaths Linked to a Lack of Health Insurance.
Nov. 2009 - Newsletter
1) The High Cost of Healthcare Waste -
Thomson Reuters.
2) Healthcare Performance Report - Commonwealth Fund -- KY
45th.
3) Underreporting of Adverse Events - The Medical Data Bank
and the Joint Commission.
4) Healthcare Acquired Infections - NM MRSA Projects shows
positive results.
Oct. 2009 - Newsletter Issue 2
1) Pay for performance (HQID) has
improved quality measures by 18.6%.
2) Dartmouth Atlas reports that Medicare utilization and costs
vary widely between different US Regions.
3) Children covered by Medicaid may have reduced access to
healthcare.
4) Medical tourism is thriving because of the high cost of US
Healthcare.
5) A review of the three proposed healthcare reform packages
regarding never events and the public reporting of healthcare
acquired infections.
Oct. 2009 - Newsletter
1) PHC4 Report 38% of hospital
readmissions from HAI or complications.
2) Kaiser Foundation - 42% feel they are better off if
healthcare reform passes.
3) NEJM large variance in what is spent on healthcare in
different US Regions.
4) By 2020 Family Health Insurance Coverage is projected to
cost $23,842.
Sept. 2009 - Newsletter
1) CDC Reports New Estimates on the Cost
of Healthcare Acquired Infections
2) NEJM Reports the Majority of Physicians Support Either a
Public Option or Single Payer System
3) AP Reports 30% of Americans have a form of Government
Insurance.
4) President Obama Statement on Transparency and "Competitive
Pressure".
Aug. 2009 - Newsletter
1) US House Healthcare Reform Bill HR
3200 addresses Healthcare Acquired Infections and Medicaid
Non-Payment of Never Events.
2) Courier Journal Chief Editorial Editor calls for KY
Legislature to address public reporting of HAI.
3) Robert Wood Johnson Study finds high rate of nurse
turnover.
4) AHRQ reports on the high cost of health insurance and that
15% of Kentuckians are uninsured.
5) BBC reports wait times in the UK Healthcare System may be
longer than once thought.
Referenced Material
a) HB 3200 S1751-Medicaid Non-Payment of
Never Events.
b) HB 3200 S1461 -Public Reporting of
HAI
c) KY Healthcare Status - 2008
July 2009 - Newsletter Issue 2
1) Public Reporting of Healthcare
Acquired Infections is Indorsed by Major Medical Organizations
2) American College of Surgeons report Higher Than Expected
Post Op Infections.
3) 30 States Now Implementing Public Reporting of Healthcare
Acquired Infections.
4) KHA Quality Transparency of Risk Adjusted Hospital
Mortality Rates.
5) The uninsured are responsible for Nearly 20% of ER visits.
6) United Kingdom healthcare system has been reported to have
higher cancer mortality rates.
July 2009 - Newsletter
1) USA Today Hospital Mortality and
Readmission Tool
2) Hospital Acquired Infections - CDC State Template, CJ News
Article, SHEA recommendations.
3) Tobacco - Free Radicals & Long-term Effects of Secondhand
Smoke
4) Wait times in UK and Canada, Problems with For-Profit
Medicine.
June 2009 - Newsletter
1)
Rand Corporation Categorizes Healthcare Reform
Efforts
2) Health Insurance Policies Costing Doctors Billions to
Comply With
3) Up to 40% of Angioplasties Unnecessary???
4) Healthcare Acquire Infections ( MRSA and C. Dif )
Increasing Faster Than Expected
May 2009 - Newsletter
1) Patient Safety Measures Have Worsened
2) Reduction in Hospitalizations Touted as Way to Save the
Healthcare Dollar
3) Office of Health Reform Personnel Appointed
4) Healthcare Acquire Infections
4) Rural Healthcare Needs
6) The Nursing Shortage
Apr. 2009 - Newsletter Issue 2
1) Leap Frog 2008 Hospital Survey
Released
2) Hospital Acquired Infections - CU Launches New Website
3) Drug Company Gifts to Doctors
4) ACS Statement on Medical Tourism
5) Hospital Readmissions are Common for Medicare
Apr. 2009 - Newsletter
1) Downlowd Newsletter
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