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Archive for March 2012

Life-or-Death Situation VA Seeks Continued Improvement of Non-OR Airway Management

Role of RTs As a result, respiratory therapists increasingly began to perform out-of-operating room intubations, even when physicians and residents were present but lacked the appropriate certification. The change created some controversy, which ...

Life-or-Death Situation VA Seeks Continued Improvement of Non-OR Airway Management

On average, more than 30 times a day across the VHA, patients outside the operating room require emergency-airway management. It is literally a life-or-death situation, as failure to establish an airway can result in brain damage or death within minutes.

Harsh Environment in Southwest Asia - Not Just Burn Pits - Cause Health Problems in Troops

New Recommendations Clinicians who treat servicemembers who have been or will be deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan should consider adopting some components of the pre- and post-deployment medical surveillance procedures presented by Coleen Baird, M...

Harsh Environment in Southwest Asia - Not Just Burn Pits - Cause Health Problems in Troops

STONY BROOK, NY --While burn pits have been the focus of a controversy for years about causes of high rates of respiratory illnesses among military personnel deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, evidence increasingly paints a more complex — and far more difficult to address — picture.

Director of Award-Winning Residency Program Driven by Heart of Service

JACKSONVILLE, FL— The residency program at the Naval Hospital-Jacksonville was named  Clinical site of the year by the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in 2011, but the program’s director scoffs at taking personal credit.

Institutional Barriers Seen in VA MOVE Program Rollout

Researchers Look at GFR Patterns In Kidney Failure While the course of patients on dialysis have been extensively documented, little is known about patterns of kidney function decline leading to the initiation of long-term dialysis. A recent study...

Institutional Barriers Seen in VA MOVE Program Rollout

For the past five years, VA has struggled to implement a systemwide weight-reduction program to combat obesity rates among veterans receiving care. More than one-third of veterans receiving care qualified as obese in 2006, and VA believed that lowering obesity also would lower weight-related illness, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, osteoarthritis and hypertension — all of which occur in high rates among VA’s population. 1

FDA's Role in Protecting US Pharmaceutical Jobs Debated in House Subcommittee

WASHINGTON — What should FDA’s role be in the continuing globalization of the prescription drug market, and should the agency be obligated to consider the health of the American pharmaceutical industry in any decisions it makes?

Human Performance Optimization Used to Prevent Common Injuries in Troops

NATIONAL HARBOR, MD — The term “human performance optimization” (HPO) emerged from a 2006 DoD quadrennial review which identified a need to promote warrior wellness and apply emerging technologies to human performance.

VA Seeks to Increase Flu Vaccine Rates for Healthcare Staff after Last Year's Drop

After recorded seasonal influenza vaccination rates among VHA healthcare personnel plummeted 21% last year compared with 2009-2010, the agency has set an aggressive goal of vaccinating 85% of healthcare workers during the 2011-2012 flu season. ...
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