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Maricopa Integrated Health System Reports 90 Percent Reduction In Pressure Ulcers
A retrospective analysis conducted by clinicians at Maricopa Integrated Health System (MIHS) found that a protocol of care using a standardized algorithm with advanced products reduced the prevalence of pressure ulcers by 90 percent, according to data presented this week at the 41st Annual Conference of the Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nurses (WOCN) Society.(1)
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Preventing Road Rage, UK
Figures from the British Institute for Anger Management reveal that the UK already has the worst road rage figures of any European nation, with 80% of drivers saying they"ve been involved in an incident and 1 in 4 admitting to committing an act of road rage themselves. Men are three times more likely to commit an act of aggression than women and over 60% of drivers say they have been intimidated by aggressive tailgating.
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Rolofylline Did Not Demonstrate Efficacy For Acute Heart Failure In Clinical Trial
Merck & Co., Inc. said that preliminary results for the pivotal Phase III study of rolofylline (MK-7418), the Company"s investigational medicine for the treatment of acute heart failure, show that rolofylline did not meet the primary or secondary efficacy endpoints. While Merck will continue to analyze the data with outside experts, the Company will not file applications for regulatory approval this year. The results from this study will be presented at a medical meeting later this year.
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Investigation Finds Problem Nurses Stay On Job Amid Nursing Shortage

Propublica/The Los Angeles Times found that "the board charged with overseeing California"s 350,000 registered nurses often takes years to act on complaints of egregious misconduct, leaving nurses accused of wrongdoing free to practice without restrictions ... It"s a high-stakes gamble that no one will be hurt as nurses with histories of drug abuse, negligence, violence and incompetence continue to provide care across the state. While the inquiries drag on, many nurses maintain spotless records. New employers and patients have no way of knowing the risks." Some of the article"s key findings include: "The board took more than three years, on average, to investigate and discipline errant nurses, according to its own statistics. In at least six other large states, the process typically takes a year or less. ... [It] failed to act against nurses whose misconduct already had been thoroughly documented and sanctioned by others. ... [It] gave probation to hundreds of nurses - ordering monitoring and work restrictions - then failed to crack down as many landed in trouble again and again. ... The board failed to use its authority to immediately stop potentially dangerous nurses from practicing. It obtained emergency suspensions of nurses" licenses just 29 times from 2002 to 2007 (Ornstein, Weber and Moore, 7/11). Meanwhile, the Orlando Sentinel reports on how the nursing shortage is affecting Florida: "Florida lacks enough new nurses to make up for the large numbers of nurses approaching retirement age within the next decade, according to a May report by the Florida Center for Nursing. The shortage is not just driven by the impending retirements of nurses, but also an aging baby boom population that will require more health care in the coming years." Mary Lou Brunell, executive director of the Florida Center for Nursing, said the shortage "poses a serious threat to the quality and availability of health care in Central Florida and throughout the state." The paper notes "the lack of qualified faculty and competitive wages for nurse educators are major obstacles. More than 12,000 qualified applicants were turned away from state nursing education programs in 2007-2008. Because salaries for nurses can be considerably higher than educators, many choose health care over teaching" (Quintero, 7/13). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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