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Michigan to fund infection control training for direct care workers
The Michigan Department of Public Health and Human Services will provide $50,000 in COVID-19 relief funding to make free infection control training available for direct care workers, the state said Oct. 22. -
17 states with hospital staff flu shot requirements
About one-third of states require hospitals to offer employees flu shots or track their vaccination statuses to help boost flu vaccination rates in healthcare settings, according to a new ranking from Kaiser Family Foundation. -
Outbreak tied to 57 COVID-19 cases contained, Brigham and Women's says
An outbreak potentially tied to 57 COVID-19 cases at Boston-based Brigham and Women's Hospital has been contained, according to a hospital news release Oct. 16. -
Kaiser cited over lack of COVID-19 airborne precautions
California officials cited Kaiser Permante for failing to treat COVID-19 as an airborne disease at a psychiatric facility in Santa Clara, reports CALMatters, a nonprofit, nonpartisan newsroom. -
West Virginia hospital outbreak tied to 59 COVID-19 cases
Fifty-nine cases have been reported in a COVID-19 outbreak at Huntington, W.Va.-based Mildred Mitchell-Bateman Hospital as of Oct. 14, reports WV MetroNews. -
Coronavirus can survive 28 days on some surfaces
The novel coronavirus can survive on common surfaces for up to 28 days, according to an Australian study published Oct. 12 in Virology Journal. -
Sturdy Memorial Hospital COVID-19 cluster cases jump 10 in week
A COVID-19 cluster at Attleboro, Mass.-based Sturdy Memorial Hospital has expanded from three cases to 14, reports The Boston Globe. -
OSHA fines 28 US hospitals, nursing homes for COVID-19 safety violations
The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration has cited more than 25 healthcare facilities for COVID-19 safety violations, totaling fines of at least $285,000. -
COVID-19 cluster at Brigham and Women's tops 50 cases
Boston-based Brigham and Women's Hospital has now reported 52 COVID-19 cases tied to an outbreak affecting two inpatient units. -
Massachusetts hospital bans visitors amid COVID-19 cluster
Attleboro, Mass.-based Sturdy Memorial Hospital banned visitors Oct. 1 after announcing a COVID-19 cluster involving three patients. -
Device used in cardiothoracic surgery poses infection risk, FDA warns
The FDA is warning healthcare providers of a potential infection risk linked to heater-cooler devices used during cardiothoracic surgery. -
First person cured of HIV dies at 54
Timothy Ray Brown — the first person to be cured of HIV in 2018 — has died of cancer at age 54, according to the International AIDS Society. -
Nurses call for more safety measures as COVID-19 cases tied to Boston hospital cluster climb to 42
Nurses at Boston-based Brigham and Women's Hospital are calling for more safety measures as a COVID-19 cluster tied to the hospital climbs from 19 to at least 42 cases, according to NBC10 Boston. -
Brigham and Women's works to control COVID-19 cluster affecting 10 in med-surg units
Boston-based Brigham and Women's Hospital is working to curb the spread of COVID-19 after reporting a cluster of cases in two of its medical-surgical units, reports The Boston Globe. -
COVID-19 viral load high in patient bathrooms, research shows
An analysis of global research shows that patient bathrooms, staff and public areas of hospitals contain high amounts of SARS-CoV-2 in the air, although the infectivity of these samples is still unclear. -
CDC issues guidelines for staph prevention in NICUs
The CDC has released new recommendations for prevention and control of Staphylococcus aureus infections in neonatal intensive care units. -
UW-Madison students consider purposely contracting COVID-19 amid quarantine
Some students living in quarantined Greek houses at University of Wisconsin-Madison say they are considering purposely contracting COVID-19, according to WKOW 27. -
This simple change could cut surgical infection risk in half
Switching the type of antiseptic used during a procedure may significantly reduce surgical infection risk, according to a study published in Annals of Surgery. -
2 nursing home employees say they were terminated for unknowingly spreading COVID-19
Two former employees at a long-term care facility in Florida say they were fired for coming to work while infected with the novel coronavirus, though the employees say they were unaware they had the virus, according to The New York Times. -
Online schooling dulls push for childhood vaccinations
Schools' shift to online classes is exacerbating the decline in childhood vaccinations, as the start of a new school year often serves as an impetus for parents to ensure their children have all required vaccines, reports Kaiser Health News.
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