Today's Top 20 Clinical Leadership Articles
  • Surgeon general: Gun violence is a public health crisis

    The U.S. surgeon general has issued a 32-page advisory declaring gun violence an urgent public health crisis that necessitates a multi-pronged effort to reduce and prevent gun-related deaths and injuries. 
  • Arizona training program shapes confident, collaborative nurses, director says

    The second cohort of nurses training in Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Association's transition to practice program has commenced, the organization announced June 25.
  • Study challenges estimates of delayed ICH in older adults on blood thinners

    After an older person falls, even if they appear all right, they may still be at risk of delayed intracranial hemorrhaging — or post-injury brain bleeding. But, the rate at which these incidents actually occur may be lower than originally estimated, according to a study from Boca Raton-based Florida Atlantic University's Schmidt College of Medicine.
  • Transform Your Hospital Operations: A Virtual Summit

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  • A weekly huddle that reduces patient harm at 1 hospital

    In January, Lawrence + Memorial and Westerly (Conn.) established a weekly huddle between nurse leaders and other departments to help improve communication and reduce potential harm. 
  • California hospitals caught in the middle of anesthesiologist, CRNA debate

    Two California hospitals are in the spotlight after they were cited for issues related to care by certified registered nurse anesthetists — adding fuel to an ongoing debate over physician and advanced practitioner care, The Modesto Bee reported June 24.
  • 'Who will teach them?': 7 experts on bolstering the nurse educator pipeline

    Nurse educators are notably in high demand, but the desire to become one has been generally low in recent years. 
  • 'Aggressive nurse recruitment is growing,' 130+ nurse groups say

    The International Council of Nurses, an organization of more than 130 national nurses associations, is warning about some high-income countries recruiting nurses from vulnerable countries with critical health worker shortages. 
  • Surgical gloves: A vital strategy in the battle against HAIs

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  • 6 1st-of-its-kind procedures in 2024

    In the first half of 2024, six systems have performed first-of-its-kind procedures and clinical treatments.
  • Critics skeptical of states' proposals to ban public masking

    North Carolina and New York are among states weighing bans on public mask wearing amid heightened tension surrounding protests on the Israel-Hamas conflict. While lawmakers say such measures wouldn't target medical mask wearing, critics are skeptical about the practicality of a health exception, The Washington Post reported June 24.
  • Nonprofit hires nurses, reduces ED visits for vulnerable populations

    A New York supportive housing nonprofit organization cut emergency room visits of its residents in half and increased primary care use to 93%, Gothamist reported June 24.
  • Northwestern surgeons perform awake kidney transplant

    A 28-year-old patient stayed awake during an entire kidney transplant surgery at Northwestern Medicine, and he was discharged the next day. 
  • Summer COVID wave emerges: 5 notes

    As "FLiRT" coronavirus variants account for about 77% of infections, COVID-19 cases are ticking upward this summer, according to CDC data. 
  • UCSF shifts to doctorate midwifery program amid criticism

    The University of California San Francisco is ending its master's program for nurse midwives and moving to a doctorate program — and critics say it could make it harder for new midwives to enter the field, the San Francisco Chronicle reported June 23.
  • What your patient's family is telling you can make a difference. Are you listening?

    We who are fortunate to work in healthcare study and train for years to develop the knowledge, expertise and resulting confidence to make decisions that are in the best interests for our patients. It's a tried and true process; families rely on us to know what to do.
  • Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare performs 1st-of-its-kind procedure

    A multi-disciplinary team of experts at Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare in Memphis, Tenn., recently performed a surgical procedure known as "Jaw in a Day." The procedure was performed in partnership with the University of Tennessee Health Science Center and involved the removal of a tumor from a patient's face and full jaw reconstruction on the same day. 
  • EDs seeing higher gun injury cases than before pandemic: 4 notes

    The CDC found gun injury-related visits to emergency departments remained high for the fourth year in a row, especially among patients under 24.
  • How Allina Health cut length of stay for some patients by 18.8%

    Minneapolis, Minn.-based Allina Health cut its overall length of stay across 12 hospitals by a collective total of 10% over a one-year period. The average amount of time a patient waited to be discharged from an Allina hospital into a long-term care setting or skilled nursing facility also went down by 18.8% in one year, the system's new chief operating officer, Dominica Tallarico, told Becker's.
  • USPSTF recommends behavioral intervention for kids with high BMI

    The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force now recommends 26 hours of intensive behavioral intervention for kids 6 and older with a high body mass index.
  • Standardizing OR staff hand-offs boosts patient safety: Study

    After auditing 23 surgical cases, researchers found that hand-offs happened in 82.6% of cases, but only 34.4% of critical information was communicated through the exchange. A new surgical hand-off process for operating room staff, dubbed "SHRIMPS" could be the solution, according to a study published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.
  • CDC experts warn more bird flu patients may be on the way

    Some experts warn that the bird flu is at least two mutations away from widespread human infection and health systems may see some patients this summer, Medscape reported June 19.

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