Archive for Hospital Administrators

Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Researcher Earns Competitive Grants for Work in Neural Tumors

Oct 12, 2011 No Comments

Shahab Asgharzadeh, MD, a physician-scientist in the Cancer Program at The Saban Research Institute of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, has received two competitive grants to continue his research aimed at finding gene-based treatment solutions for two deadly pediatric cancers that originate in the nervous system. Dr. Asgharzadeh’s investigations are focused on medulloblastoma, a highly malignant [...]

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Anesthesia Business Consultants Urges Anesthesia Providers to Revalidate Their Medicare Enrollment as Soon as Their Carrier Asks

Oct 10, 2011 No Comments

Anesthesiologists, nurse anesthetists and anesthesiologist assistants who last validated their enrollment in Medicare prior to March 25, 2011 are going to have to revalidate again by March 23, 2013. The revalidation is required under Section 6028 of the Affordable Care Act. According to this statutory provision, all providers and suppliers who were initially enrolled before [...]

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Robots Built into Plan at Parkview Regional Medical Center

Oct 07, 2011 No Comments

Parkview Regional Medical Center has included a fleet of delivery robots in its building design to solve the logistics challenge of covering nearly 1 million square feet in a timely and efficient manner. The hospital’s new TUG robots®, built by Pittsburgh-based Aethon, will transport medications, meals, linens, equipment, supplies and trash to and from patient [...]

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Stanford Opens New Brain Tumor Center

Oct 03, 2011 No Comments

A few hours after Marjorie Paulsen learned that a tumor was growing in her brain, she told her husband she didn’t want to go to sleep that night. “I’m afraid I won’t wake up,” she said. Paulsen knew nothing about how that tumor might be treated. She was reacting with that special fear that emerges [...]

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Beneficiaries, Boomers Remain Confused by Medicare

Sep 28, 2011 No Comments

The results of a survey released today by the National Council on Aging (NCOA) and UnitedHealthcare reveal that a large percentage of baby boomers and seniors ages 65 and over do not understand Medicare and are unaware of important recent or impending changes to the program. The study results reinforce the need for more education [...]

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Mayo Clinic Study Finds Widespread Medical Resident Burnout and Debt

Sep 21, 2011 No Comments

Feelings of burnout persist among internal medicine residents despite significant cutbacks in duty hours for doctors-in-training in recent years, a national study by Mayo Clinic found. A poor quality of life took a toll on performance: Stressors affecting well-being such as lack of a work-life balance contributed to lower test scores on a standardized exam. [...]

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Funding for Community Health Centers

Sep 16, 2011 No Comments

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced awards totaling $10 million to aid 129 organizations across the country that would like to become community health centers. These funds, made available by the Affordable Care Act, support organizations’ development as a future health center. Health centers improve the health of the nation [...]

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Mayo Clinic Wins Grant to Gauge Genetic Risk of Heart Attacks, Adverse Drug Reactions

Sep 02, 2011 No Comments

Mayo Clinic researchers will receive more than $3 million in a four-year grant from the National Human Genome Research Institute to translate recent genomic discoveries into tools for individualized medicine. Recent advances in the genetics of heart and blood vessel diseases will be integrated into electronic medical records so doctors can more accurately determine patients’ [...]

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Stanford Graduate School of Business Research: Must First Understand Medical Malpractice System in Order to Reform It

Aug 22, 2011 No Comments

It’s not hard to find critics of the medical malpractice system in the United States. There is widespread agreement that it simply does not do what it should. “It both fails to compensate patients who have suffered from bad medical care, and compensates those who haven’t,” writes Daniel P. Kessler, a professor at the Stanford [...]

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Using Social Marketing to Help Consumers Navigate New Health Care System

Aug 17, 2011 No Comments

New research out of the University of Utah (the U) David Eccles School of Business shows social marketing tools are crucial to the success of health care providers in their efforts to help consumers navigate the new Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA.) The research paper led and co-authored by Marketing Professor Debra Scammon [...]

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