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Source: www.fwicki.com --- 1 day ago
This week, the federal government will stop paying hospitals for the cost of treating preventable Urinary Tract Infections that develop in hospitalized Medicare patients. Many private insurers are expected to follow suit soon, in an effort to improve ... ... Source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov --- 4 hours ago
Related Articles High-power potassium-titanyl-phosphate laser photoselective vaporization prostatectomy for symptomatic benign prostatic hyperplasia. J Endourol. 2008 Jun;22(6):1311-4 Authors: Araki M, Lam PN, Wong C BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Potassium-titanyl-phosphate (KTP) laser photoselective vaporization prostatectomy (PVP) is a relatively new technology for the management of lower Urinary-Tract symptoms (LUTS) secondary to benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). We review our initial experience. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We prospectively evaluated our initial 12-month experience with 80 W KTP laser PVP. All had American Urological Association symptom score (AUASS), American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) risk score, serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA), maximum flow rate (Qmax), and postvoid residual (PVR) determinations and transrectal ultrasonography. RESULTS: There were 160 consecutive patients identified, with a mean age of 69.7 years (range 34-88 yrs) and a mean ASA score of 2.4 (range 1-4). The mean prostate volume was 72.3 cm(3) (range 20.3-261 cm(3)), with a mean PSA level of 2.2 ng/mL (range 0.1-17.9 ng/mL). Mean laser time and energy usage were 33.4 minutes (range 4-165 min) and 99.0 kJ (range 11.3-524 kJ), respectively. All were outpatient procedures with 96 (60%) patients catheter-free at discharge. Twenty-eight patients need catheter drainage for 1 week. Urinary-Tract Infections developed in 13 patients. Fourteen patient ... Source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov --- 29 days ago
Related Articles Variations in practice patterns regarding constipation in children with Urinary Tract Infections. Urol Nurs. 2008 Aug;28(4):279-83; discussion 284-6 Authors: Giramonti KM, Kogan BA Studies suggest a correlation between constipation and Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs) in children. Diagnoses and treatment of constipation are not clear. This clinical practice was documented in urology offices. Variation noted suggests more research is needed for evidence-based practice in this population. PMID: 18771163 [PubMed - in process] ... Source: ezinearticles.com --- 21 days ago
What is the simplest Urinary infection remedy available? Here are 5 effective and Free Urinary Tract Infection Remedies. ... Source: ezinearticles.com --- 30 days ago
Curing Urinary Tract Infections naturally is the choice of many people. If you're not comfortable with repeatedly taking antibiotics to help cure your UTIs find out what you can do at home to help alleviate all the symptoms and pain. ... Source: www.ecademy.com --- 2 days ago
Olive oil contains antioxidants that discourage artery clogging and chronic diseases, including cancer! Consuming great quality olive oil (virgin extra or Dop) can help you to lower bad type LDL cholesterol.In Portugal, Italy, Spain ,France and Greece recognized as meditterranean people, they have been using olive oil for so many things. Skin and muscles, to heal abrasions, and to soothe the burning and drying of sun and salt water, Some doctors have been used it as an antidote for pessimism, but there is no guarantee that olive oil can change your personality, but it improves your overall health in so many diffrent ways. So if you take a spoon or even better two of olive oil with lemon and coffee it prevents constipation . It is also good for Urinary Tract Infections and very good either for gastritis. Olive oil can slow down the aging process too. Kindest Regards! Victor Marques ... Source: www.ameinfo.com --- 19 hours ago
Dubai is suffering from high levels of bacteria in areas of its coastline close to the Offshore Sailing Club after months of illegal sewage dumping into the sea. Tests on the water found that it contained three times the legal levels of faecal coliforms - up to 70 per 100ml. The maximum allowed is 20 per 100ml. E-coli was also found. The bacteria can cause ear Infections, typhoid fever and hepatitis A while e-coli causes gastroenteritis and Urinary Tract Infections. ... Source: www.medicalnewstoday.com --- 4 days ago
UroToday.com - A study by Dr. Christopher Roth, et al., evaluated the occurrence of Urinary Tract infection in patients with ureteropelvic junction obstruction and megaureters with respect to the role prophylactic antibiotics play in their treatment. Urinary Tract Infections in this cohort were defined as culture-documented, symptomatic Infections. Only children with high grade hydronephrosis were included. A total of 92 patients met the study criteria. ... Source: rss.isiknowledge.com --- 31 days ago
Evaluation of urine specific gravity and urine sediment as risk factors for Urinary Tract Infections in cats Bailiff, NL; Westropp, JL; Nelson, RW; et al. VETERINARY CLINICAL PATHOLOGY 37 (3): 317-322 SEP 2008 ... Source: www.sanluisobispo.com --- 8 days ago
The typical nursing home was cited for seven health and safety deficiencies last year, with for-profit homes more likely to have problems than facilities run by local governments or non-profits, federal investigators said Monday. More than 90 percent of nursing homes surveyed were cited for at least one deficiency last year - a rate that has changed little over the past three years. About 94 percent of the for-profit homes surveyed generated a citation, compared to 91 percent for government nursing homes and 88 percent for non-profits, said the inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services. The most common deficiencies centered on quality of care. That category includes such things as the appropriate treatment to prevent and treat pressure sores and Urinary Tract Infections. The most common quality-of-life deficiencies involved housekeeping and maintenance problems. Another common problem involved meals, with 43 percent of homes cited for problems with dietary services. ... Source: www.evliving.com --- 26 days ago
Women, anatomically, are more prone than men to experience a Urinary Tract infection (UTI), yet their lifestyle habits, such as carrying heavy purses and wearing high heels, can actually increase... This is a summary of the article. For the complete article, please visit the site. Thank you http://www.evliving.com/ ... Source: www.leesvilledailyleader.com --- 1 day ago
Francis A. Fraser recently opened a practice in Leesville to serve patients with urological needs. Fraser can provide treatment concerning kidney stones, prostate problems, urological cancers, erectile dysfunction, vasectomies, incontinence and Urinary Tract Infections. He is especially concerned with helping patients become more aware of prostate cancer, he said. "Most men over 50 should be examined regularly," Fraser said, especially if they have a family history of prostate cancer. Those with African descent also have a higher incidence of prostate cancer. The exam should include a Prostatic Specific Antigen (PSA) and a rectal exam, he said. The PSA is a blood test that measures antigens in the blood. A high level of antigens could indicate the need for a more invasive exam such as an ultrasound or biopsy. Treatment for prostate cancer can be one of three methods: conventional radiation, laproscopic or robotic, Fraser said. "Leesville, like most small towns, does not offer robotic prostatectomy," he added, though some forms of laproscopic or radical treatment are available. The symptoms of prostate cancer include a change in Urinary habits, pelvic pain, blood in the urine and a change in sexual habits, Fraser said. Symptoms can persist, and they can also be very gradual so it's possible to miss their onset, he added. Prostate cancer is usually slow-growing, though it can become more aggressive in men between the ages of 40 and ... Source: www.bio-medicine.org --- 1 day ago
Boston, MA--A simple blood test may help detect serious bacterial Infections (SBIs) like Urinary Tract Infections and blood stream Infections in young infants who come to the emergency department (ED) with fevers that have no clear cause. Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston, collaborating with investigators at George Washington University, show that a new diagnostic marker called procalc... ... Source: www.prospect.org --- 5 days ago
I wrote a bit about Medicare refusing to pay for medical errors earlier in the day, but I think this quote more clearly illustrates the absurdity of the situation: If an auto mechanic accidentally breaks your windshield while trying to repair the engine, he would never get away with billing you for fixing his mistake. On Wednesday, Medicare will start applying that logic to American medicine on a broad scale when it stops paying hospitals for the added cost of treating patients who are injured in their care. Medicare, which provides coverage for the elderly and disabled, has put 10 “reasonably preventable” conditions on its initial list, saying it will not pay when patients receive incompatible blood transfusions, develop Infections after certain surgeries or must undergo a second operation to retrieve a sponge left behind from the first. Serious bed sores, injuries from falls and Urinary Tract Infections caused by catheters are also on the list. Officials believe that the regulations could apply to several hundred thousand hospital stays of the 12.5 million covered annually by Medicare. The policy will also prevent hospitals from billing patients directly for costs generated by medical errors. Yep, Medicare, like almost all insurers, would pay for a second operation in which the surgeon retrieved a sponge he left somewhere to the right of the patient's liver. And there's a reason for it. If they wouldn't pay, and the doctor woul ... Source: www.fiercehealthcare.com --- 7 days ago
Recently, HHS announced a new infection control plan calling for more collaboration between agencies within its purview on infection surveillance. The plan focuses on three common hospital-acquired Infections, catheter-associated Urinary Tract Infections, central-line blood stream Infections and surgical -site Infections, for which CMS will no longer pay. It also addresses ventilator-associated pneumonia. HHS's got decent reviews--after all, cooperation is generally a good thing--but it hasn't excited some industry executives much. A new set of infection control guidelines is fine, but doesn't add much to what they already have, given the wide range of efforts under way by Premier, the Joint Commission and even state governments. It will take more direct action to help hospitals prepare for CMS's new reimbursement policy, they say. For one thing, hospital industry execs note that hospital governance boards will have to get involved if the industry is going to develop an effective response. Others, however, say the federal government is doing the right thing. The federal government can provide help in targeted areas, especially standardized infection definitions and added research around evidence-based HAI control, notes Daniel Varga, chief medical officer at St. Louis-based SSM Health Care. To learn more about this debate: - read this Modern Healthcare piece Related Articles: HHS plans infection-control initiative GAO says gov't needs ... Source: www.lasvegassun.com --- 3 days ago
Once in a while a Medicare patient will go to a hospital for treatment but suffer an additional malady in the process. These hospital-acquired conditions could include a sponge or other foreign object left in a person after surgery, an incompatible blood transfusion, or Urinary Tract Infections caused by catheters. Even though the medical facility was responsible, it would bill the federal health insurance program for the error. Besides the unfortunate patients, the ultimate losers in these scenarios are taxpayers. It shouldn’t be that way, something Congress to its credit realized and required the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to address. On Wednesday the agency that runs Medicare for elderly and disabled recipients began withholding reimbursement to hospitals for certain mistakes made by those facilities. The new regulation also bars hospitals from billing Medicare patients directly for those miscues. That means the hospitals will have to absorb those costs. As The New York Times reported, the savings to taxpayers will be only about $21 million a year, a paltry sum compared with the $110 billion Medicare spent on inpatient care last year. But the new regulation should send a strong message to hospitals that they will be held accountable for substandard medical procedures that could have been prevented. The regulation is part of a larger strategy by the Medicare agency to encourage greater patient safety in hos ...
Source: www.fortworthinjurylawyerblog.com --- 3 days ago
Not long ago, I wrote “ Texas Supreme Court Declines to Hear Case on Malpractice Caps ,” which is ironic, considering today’s news. Today, Medicare announced that it will stop paying medical bills for 10 preventable conditions in a congressionally-mandated attempt to save millions. Among those conditions are: * Bedsores * Infections after surgeries * Incompatible blood transfusions * Urinary Tract Infections caused by catheters * Operations to remove sponge left from first operation * Injuries from falls while at the hospital Amazingly, out of the 12.5 million people covered by Medicare, cutting these corners could prevent several hundred thousand hospital stays a year. On the positive side, doctors will stop getting paid for medical errors and this major change will hopefully encourage better medical practices. But I also see this as bad news for consumers. I wonder if the patient will get billed for the doctor’s mistakes instead? I would hope not. And worse than that, I wonder if the remedial procedures or treatment will ever even occur? Take for example, a piece of sponge left in a body after surgery. That’s about the clearest example of a medical error that exists. So if Medicare doesn’t pay for the second (and necessary)sponge-removal surgery, will the doctor just do the surgery for free? Probably not. If a doctor has the fear that goes along with the threat of a medical malpractice case, then a necessary second surgery might be ... Source: www.fwicki.com --- 15 hours ago
The policy will also prevent hospitals from billing patients for costs resulting from such medical errors as bed sores and Urinary Tract Infections. ... Source: www.topix.com --- 6 days ago
A new $1.7 million, four-year grant from the National Institutes of Health will help Michigan hospitals in their efforts to prevent Urinary Tract Infections. ... Find more results for Urinary Tract Infections on RSSMicro.com |
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