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The latest news and analysis about patient safety and healthcare quality.
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Featured Story | Study: SARS-CoV-2 Can Live for 72 Hours on Plastic, Stainless Steel Surfaces | Researchers from National Institutes of Health (NIH), CDC, UCLA, and Princeton University analyzed the aerosol and surface stability of SARS-CoV-2 and compared it with SARS-CoV-1, the most closely related coronavirus. The study looked at 10 experimental conditions involving the two viruses in five environmental conditions: Aerosols, plastic, stainless steel, copper, and cardboard. |
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News & Analysis | OSHA Relaxes Fit-Testing Enforcement Under Certain Circumstances | In a memo to OSHA regional administrators and state OSHA-designated offices, the agency said it was working in support of CDC and CMS guidance allowing the use of non-medical respirators when N95 or other such respirators were not available. In its guidance, CMS has also told its surveyors not to validate annual fit testing, if other requirements are met. |
ECRI Lists Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns for 2020 | ECRI has been gathering patient safety event data through its patient safety organization, ECRI PSO, since 2009. "We and our partner PSOs have received more than 3.2 million event reports. This means that the 10 patient safety concerns on this list are very real. These concerns are harming people—sometimes seriously," the executive brief says. |
We Need Your Input On Patient Safety and Quality | Please take a few minutes to complete the survey by clicking on the link below. The survey results will be compiled in a downloadable report, with highlights published in the next print issue of PSQH coming in May. |
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| Product Spotlight | The theft of drugs and medicines by staff has vexed the healthcare industry for centuries —and with the opioid epidemic diversion the stakes are higher than ever. Drug Diversion Prevention in Healthcare, Second Edition is loaded with tools and info showing you how to make a solid prevention plan. This new edition also contains case studies and real-life examples of how healthcare staff diverted drugs, how they were caught, and the steps taken afterwards. Written by diversion prevention expert Kim New, this book is designed to help nursing, patient safety, and hospital security officials foster awareness of drug diversion, fight the “it can’t happen here” mentality, keep staff accountable, and monitor and audit the drugs moving through your facility to ensure they reach the right patient. Order now! | |
Career Center | Post your open positions or find your next career move with the HCPro Career Center. | |
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